Zohran Mamdani opened his term by turning his campaign slogans into binding policy. He revived the Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants and handed it to Cea Weaver, an architect of New York’s toughest modern tenant laws, signaling that aggressive enforcement against abusive landlords will be central, not symbolic. At the same time, he moved to speed construction, not just regulation: one task force will comb through city-owned land to fast-track sites for new housing, while another is charged with tearing down the red tape that slows permits, inflates costs, and keeps units empty.
Framed by Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez as a moral fight for dignity, Mamdani’s agenda now becomes a live test of democratic socialism in America’s largest city. Tenants, developers, and national parties will all be watching whether his promises produce safer, cheaper homes—or a new front in the country’s bitter war over class and power.