Consider This from NPR - Can progressive mayors save the Democratic Party?
Episode Date: November 23, 2025New York City’s mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani built a coalition of voters who were engaged by his charisma and his campaign’s focus on key issues such as affordable transportation, housing and childc...are. Mamdani has pointed to Boston mayor Michelle Wu, who was just re-elected in a landslide herself, as inspiration and for being “the most effective Democrat in America.” What can be learned from how progressive mayors like Wu and Mamdani are energizing voters?For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.This episode was produced by Jordan-Marie Smith and Henry Larson. It was edited by Sarah Robbins. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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When Zeran Mamdani won the New York City mayoral race decisively this month,
the contest was closely scrutinized to understand how a Democratic socialist
managed to pull off the turnout of such a broad coalition of voters
and what it might mean for Democrats nationwide.
Mamdani's rise has been a global phenomenon, too.
It made the news across Europe.
That was audio from A.R.D. R.A.I.
and France 24 networks.
And in France's left-wing party called France unbowed,
progressive politicians like Claire Lejeune
saw Mamdani's campaign as an inspiration.
For victory of Zohan Mandani is a beacon of hope.
It's a message echoes not only in the U.S.
but also for us in France.
And one surprise supporter emerged Friday,
President Trump.
In an unexpectedly friendly meeting with Mamdani in the Oval Office,
the president said this to him.
Being the mayor of New York,
especially now, because I think you're at really a turning point, one way or the other.
You could go great, or it can go in a different direction.
And I think you really have a chance to make it great.
With Mamdani's rise, there's also been a surge of attention on the mayor of Boston, Michelle Wu.
Mamdani has called her the most effective Democrat in America.
Wu is Boston's first female and first Asian-American mayor,
and she was re-elected this month in a landslide.
Consider this.
With so many eyes on these races, many people are asking,
can charismatic progressive mayors save the Democratic Party?
Looking at Mayor Wu's record in Boston as a case study,
along with Mamdani's campaign, may offer some insights.
We went to Boston to try to understand more
about how mayors like Wu and Mamdani have been energizing voters.
From NPR, I'm Sasha Pfeiffer.
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It's Consider This from NPR.
Like Zaraan Mamdani's campaign in New York,
Mayor Michelle Wu's campaigns in Boston have addressed affordability,
especially in housing and transportation,
and her style has focused on making a personal connection with voters.
I live just outside Boston, and I wanted to gauge whether progressive mayors like Wu and Mamdani could, as their supporters believe, be successful models for future leaders of the Democratic Party, now widely viewed as leaderless.
We have exited the red line onto Park Street Station. We've stepped out onto Boston Common.
So I took the red line on the T, the subway system, to the Boston Common, a famous tourist destination in a city with the history.
of progressive politics. In recent years, the common has had a homelessness issue.
Mayor Wu has pushed to get people housed, and she's dismantled a large tent encampment
in another part of the city. A visitor from Spain, Fernando Garrido, was impressed by what he
saw. When we walk and we do running by the city this morning, we didn't see any homeless
people. And that surprised us because in other cities of the states, usually we saw a lot of
homeless people, like in New York, in San Francisco.
But the issue still exists in Boston.
Boston's south end, another neighborhood has quite a problem in one area.
In fact, there is an Instagram account, and it's just a collection of photos of people
shooting up on the street.
People are really upset about what's happened to their neighborhood, and they feel like
they're not getting enough help from the city.
And homeless people often leave one area only to move to another.
In Somerville, a city a few stops away on.
the red line, I passed a group of people on a park bench surrounded by bags and backpacks and
takeout containers, plus something new. And near them is a dropbox for used needles. It was the city's
response to complaints that Davis Square has become a congregating spot for homeless people,
many of whom are believed to have come here because they no longer can camp out in Boston.
It's a national problem that is playing out right here in the Boston area.
I ran into Somerville residents Mark and Susan Rubenfield
and asked what they thought of the needle drop box.
I think it's a great thing.
I think anything that sort of, you know...
A step in the right direction.
A step in the right, yeah.
But Mark said when societal problems creep too close to home,
people's ideals get tested.
One of the challenges here is that as progressive as Somerville is,
When it hits your backyard, you get a lot of, oh, well, all of a sudden, I'm not sure I want that in my backyard.
Solving the nation's homelessness problem requires more housing.
So Mayor Wu created a tax break program to encourage converting office buildings into residences.
Its first completed conversion recently opened in downtown Boston, and real estate agent Christopher Palazzo gave me a tour.
Nice to meet you.
Chris, Sasha.
Pleasure to meet you, Sasha.
It is a walk-up.
It was an empty office building that's now 15 apartments.
He says most have been rented out.
You get the exposed brick, beautiful, big windows, nice city view.
It's great downtown real estate, but not affordable for all.
This unit right here is currently listed for 3350.
For a studio.
for a studio.
Palazzo says it at least makes a small dent in the city's housing shortage.
You know, any little bit that you can, you know, chip away at is great.
And I think that this is doing that.
You know, any time you can add to the inventory, it's going to help.
I went to talk about all this with Mayor Michelle Wu.
I'm walking into Boston City Hall.
It's a big hulking concrete building built in the 1960s.
The architectural style is called Brutalist.
It's a building Bostonians love to hate.
surrounded by a sea of brick and concrete.
But this is where the mayor is, and we're going to go talk with her.
We met the mayor in a conference room next to her office.
Hello, hi, Sasha. Nice to meet you.
Welcome.
Thank you.
We asked if we could quickly record some sound in her office,
and her answer was a window into the responsibility she's juggling inside and outside City Hall.
My husband and baby are in the office right now,
so I don't hear screaming, but maybe at the end I will check.
Mayor Wu has a 10-month-old daughter, as well as two young sons.
Many Bostonians admire that she's an ethnically diverse working mom.
They also think she has national leadership potential.
But many are upset with her about rising property taxes, high rents, bike lanes, and other local issues playing out nationwide.
I asked her what her approach could teach other Democratic leaders across the country.
It is often easier in politics to do nothing.
it's hard to propose change, to identify what the tradeoffs are, and then ultimately to make that
decision that we're going to take a step forward. That doesn't mean we don't ever revisit it again.
It doesn't mean that we got it perfect and right the first time. But to always continue holding
everyone together in the same conversation about what's working and what we need to improve
is a function of city government that builds trust that's much needed in the world right now.
and maybe that's only possible to do at the pace of real life and our family's needs at the local level.
How much do you think are the limits of what you can accomplish as a mayor,
given that the legislature has to sign off on a lot of what you want to do?
We're also surrounded by the context of what's happening at the state and national level and around the world.
And that has had a real influence on what we're able to do,
even with all of the resources that we're pouring into housing and housing production at the local.
level. On public transportation, yes, we are at three bus routes that are free in the
city of Boston, fare free to our residents. They have become the highest ridership routes. They have
made a huge difference in our economic connectivity. And we have to do more. We have to do it
faster. But we also have to really focus on making the hard decisions that deliver and can be
felt in people's lives. But some of those decisions are out of your control because the state
legislature would have to approve them. So how applicable are whatever you've been able to
accomplish to other cities who have those same limitations? There's always a push and pull of what
resources can come to tackle big challenges and what authorities and community processes and legislative
processes have to be accomplished. And how to pay for them? Where the dollars will come from for sure,
especially under this environment that we're in. With federal funding cuts to the cities. With outright
a tax where we are having to go to court and battle to hold on to long-standing grants that
communities have relied on for decades for public safety, public education, housing access,
food security. However, I think Boston's example shows that every single day, you can still do
something. It might have to be really creative. It might have to be a new program. It might have
to bring in outside partnerships. The Department of Justice has sued Boston over its immigration
policies. Many people, many of your supporters, admire you for the way you've stood up to Trump
and defended the city. But you also have to walk a tightrope by not making Boston more of a target
of the Trump administration. How are you walking that tightrope? We at the local level have to
fight against our own federal government. I have been in deep conversations with our most
impacted community members. And what I hear loud and clear from our immigrant residents from the
organizations that they work most closely with is that silence in the face of oppression is not an
option. But as Democrats try to pick a new leader, some people are very excited by progressive,
liberal, democratic socialist views, other think it's going to turn us into a collapsed economy
like Venezuela. How are you trying to decide which direction do we go in and what advice you would
give to other mayors who want to follow your lead? I grew up in an immigrant family and
didn't know a thing about politics throughout my childhood. And so I'm not one to ever be
attach to a particular label or term of art or word.
I think people are hungry right now to see government working again.
As you try to figure out how to push back on the Trump administration,
we've seen, for example, California governor Gavin Newsom decide to do it in the style that Trump does it,
bombastic tweets.
Many people think that's effective.
Other people think it's childish and brings government down to a lower level.
How are you finding the right way to push back without undignifying the office?
The most important thing is to be in direct contact with our residents to understand what our community needs
and to try to be a platform to advocate for that as honestly and authentically and forcefully as possible.
Sometimes that can lead to a charge or an accusation that I spoke too soon or came on too hard
or pushed back in a way that someone disagrees with.
but I would rather be accused of charging forward too much with critiques of the tone or manner
compared to sitting back silently, doing nothing, and letting harmful things happen.
This is a time for all of us to stand up, to do what we know is right,
and to build the relationships and coalitions that we have each other's backs.
Parting words of advice for other people who want to try to learn from your Democratic leadership,
if they hope it can be applied to other cities?
Well, I guess there'd be two pieces of it.
One is the truth matters.
And in a time where there are so many different takes on what reality is,
the best and only way to get the truth is to be out in the community,
out in the streets, hearing directly from residents.
And then the other bit I would say is don't sit back.
We all need to be impatient.
Impatient.
Impatient.
Every bit of delay.
and waiting for someone else to come in and fix something or, you know, maybe we can just
tolerate the situation a little bit longer. This is what has led to such a breakdown in
trust and connection. We have to build that back up block by block, institution by institution,
city by city. That's why I believe local government and our local communities will always be
the ones leading the way. Mayor Michelle, Lou, thank you for your time. Thank you.
After our conference room interview, we briefly visited her office.
and we were surprised to see an upright piano.
It is how I channel my many feelings that can come from what I have to do
and the experiences that I get to have.
You can tell what kind of a day it has been by what music is on the piano.
After leaving City Hall, we rode one of the city's three free busers.
The city says more than half its riders are low income.
So our bus number 23 leaves in four minutes.
One rider, Northeastern University student, Pramuk Kaushik, says he rides it often and
appreciates the money he saves.
Oh, that's really, really helpful.
It's very good for my pockets.
Being an international student, we do come with a lot of loans and stuff.
So not paying for transport, it's one of the most beneficial thing for us.
Another student on the bus, Harshit Bandari, has reservations about
reservations about the government providing services for free.
I don't think is a good idea because people are going to be dependent and it's going to be like
the norm to them.
The bus route is only four miles but it took almost an hour to go from beginning to end
during afternoon traffic. Two little kids in the back were snoring by the time they reached
their last stop.
This bus is a glimpse of working-class life in Boston. It shows
why the affordability message resonates with voters and why Democrats focused on lowering
costs could be the future of their party. That includes Michelle Wu, Zeran Mamdani, and Seattle's
progressive mayor-elect, Katie Wilson. But their ideas are expensive and face strong opposition.
And, as we heard on the bus, even in liberal Boston, some people say too many government subsidies
are a problematic thing. Another rider, David Lumpkins, said no single policy.
politician, Michelle Wu, or otherwise, can be a savior.
I'm not so sure if she's paving the way for a future Democrats.
I think she's doing the best she can.
She's doing everything under her own power that's within a control.
Mayor Wu told us she emphasizes action over perfection.
She said she's accomplishing what she can locally while hoping for national change.
In New York, Mamdani says he's willing to work with anyone who can help make life affordable in his city.
What we heard is that as the public feels so despondent about government,
even if progressive mayors are having only limited success,
their small moves are resonating.
And their ability to connect with voters and understand their concerns
is giving them big wins and generating interest from the West Wing.
This episode was produced by Jordan Marie Smith and Henry Larson.
It was edited by Sarah Robbins.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Sasha Pfeiffer.
