From The American Prospect <[email protected]>
Subject About those anti-Mamdani editorials
Date November 4, 2025 9:16 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Election Day ends an era of scathing takes.??? ??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

View this email in your browser [link removed]

[link removed]

****NOVEMBER 4, 2025****

****On
the

**Prospect??**website****

[link removed]

Trump Lost the Politics of the Shutdown [link removed]

But he may win the policy anyway, as a gang of Democrats prepares to squander their leverage based on a vague assurance. **BY** [link removed]

**DAVID DAYEN**

[link removed]

Antisemitism Real and Fake [link removed]

Both kinds are on the
rise, and feed on each other.**BY** [link removed]

**ROBERT KUTTNER**

[link removed]

Despite Vow to Protect Health Care for Veterans, VA Losing Doctors and Nurses [link removed]

The impact of understaffing, facility closures, and waiting times has been "dire."??

**BY** [link removed]

**MARCUS BARAM**

****Meyerson on TAP****

**The anti-Mamdani editorials, considered**

**The Washington Post**has been even more hysterical than

**The Wall Street Journal**.

Today
marks the end of a distinct period in the editorial-page history of our three elite national newspapers: the Anti-Candidate-Mamdani Era of

**The New York Times**,

**The Wall Street Journal**, and

**The Washington Post**. As of tomorrow, it will be succeeded on all three editorial pages by the Anti-Mayor-Elect-Mamdani interval, which will in turn be followed on January 1st by dropping the word "Elect."

The

**Times** has pulled back somewhat from its initial scathing take on Mamdani, due doubtless to its realization ("its," in this context, probably means that of its publisher A.G. Sulzberger) that most of the paper's younger readers and some valued subsets of its readers (those in academia and the arts) actually support Mamdani. Such considerations never concerned the

**Journal**, of course, which appeared to operate under the assumption that an anti-Mamdani editorial or column a day would keep a Mamdani victory away.

I haven't done an actual count, I confess, but
I think the

**Post** ran either a close second to the

**Journal**, or perhaps even tied with it, in the frequency and vituperation of its anti-Mamdani columns and editorials. Today-Election Day-it ran both an editorial

**and** a column predicting Mamdani's Gotham gulags were lurking around the next corner, while the

**Journal** ran two columns but no editorials.

Perhaps the most recurrent theme in all these editorials and columns was that Mamdani's proposed 2 percent tax hike on that share of a taxpayer's yearly income that exceeds $1 million would lead to mass millionaire flight from New York. Despite the abundant evidence that shows millionaires have not fled due to previous tax hikes of greater than 2 percent, the editorialists returned to this theme again and again. I haven't read a single editorial in those papers that pointed out that the universal child care that the proceeds from that tax would fund addresses a much more pervasive threat of-and reality
of-flight from New York: that of families with young children who can't afford the costs of child care and housing in our largest city. Or that the flight of young people poses more of a threat to New York's vibrancy than that of their elders (which description covers most millionaires). Or that the case for providing free universal child care and preschool to children ages 1 to 5-the most important years for their development-is at least as compelling as the case to provide free universal education to children ages 5 to 18, which we've done since the 19th century.

At the direction of owner Jeff Bezos, of course, the

**Post** has sacked its former editorial staff and roughly 90 percent of its columnists and brought in a slew of right-wingers in their stead. In the last couple of weeks, the approach of Election Day has led its editorialists to unfurl their true colors, in many ways as doctrinaire right-wing as the

**Journal**'s,but with cruder prose and a sterner
refusal to consider opposing arguments or explanations. The

**Journal**has a tradition of giving a weekly column to a centrist or leftist; its current centrist is William Galston, who has accurately chronicled the economic reasons why many New Yorkers-mistakenly, in his view-support Mamdani.

No such context has appeared anywhere on the

**Post**'s editorial pages. Today, it ran an editorial [link removed] asking why Mamdani was winning, and answered that question in this way:

Supporters of free markets have failed to articulately make their case in New York, and Mamdani's success is a warning to business-friendly Democrats that they'll have to do better. It's not enough to say socialism is bad; defenders of the American system have to show why people's lives are improved by economic freedom-and why many American failures are often the result of
government intervention rather than a free market run amok.

prospect.org/donate

This begs the question of why supporters of free markets have had so much trouble in New York, and why the prospects of public provision of child care and social housing are so widely embraced. The editorial completely ignores that Mamdani has run his campaign exclusively on an affordability agenda, in a city that is the capital of a world capitalism in which only the rich are thriving. It's the dysfunctions of capitalism that move electorates leftward, not the absence or inadequacy of pro-capitalist argumentation (see, for instance, the Great Depression and the New Deal, knowledge of which has somehow eluded the new crew at the

**Post**).

In case the

**Post**'s editorial politics are still unclear, it ran another editorial today filled with dread that moderate Democrat Abigail Spanberger, the all-but-certain victor in today's gubernatorial election in Virgina, might occasionally govern
as a liberal. It warns her against raising any taxes to address the state's needs, or, worse still, supporting the elimination of the state's "right-to-work" law, which, it argues, keeps the state from "[t]aking away that right [to not be part of a union] from working people to decide for themselves." That 70 percent of the public, in every recent poll, supports unions, but just 6 percent of private-sector workers have been able to unionize, precisely because employers and the courts have found ways to keep workers from the ability to decide for themselves, is not a matter that the

**Post**editorialists believe worthy of their consideration.

For whom, exactly, are these

**Post**editorials and columns written? Certainly not the residents of Metro Washington. Ninety percent of District of Columbia voters backed Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential contest (only 68 percent of New York City voters backed her), and the D.C. suburbs of Maryland and Virginia gave her
overwhelming majorities, too. The

**Post**, to be sure, is trying to cultivate a national digital readership, but surveys not just of

**Times**but also

**Journal**readers show those papers' readers are disproportionately Democrats, and I strongly suspect that's true of the

**Post**'s as well. The paper's Metro D.C. readership doubtless includes a vast host of policy experts who could provide alternative arguments to those the

**Post**produces, a fair number of them actually grounded in fact, but none are permitted to appear on their pages.

We can be confident that at least one

**Post**reader-owner Jeff Bezos-is a fan of the paper's editorial pages, for reasons of both ideology and self-interest: I note that Amazon, of which Bezos is both the founder and the largest individual shareholder, has donated to Trump's ballroom, one clear way to win our sultan's favor. One might think that Bezos's wealth-which

**Forbes**magazine pegged at $215 billion when it
released its annual World's Richest Humans list [link removed] this week, ranking him third after Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg-might create a concern for appearances among the paper's editorial writers that would deter them from writing pieces like last Thursday's gem [link removed] arguing we spend too much on food stamps. Not the folks at the

**Post**, however: They're happy to go full Ebenezer Scrooge.

**-HAROLD MEYERSON**

Follow Harold Meyerson on Twitter [link removed]

prospect.org/donate

To receive this newsletter directly in your inbox, click here to subscribe
[link removed]

**Click to Share This Newsletter**

[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

The American Prospect, Inc., 1225 I Street NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC xxxxxx, United States
Copyright (c) 2025 The American
Prospect. All rights reserved.

To manage your newsletter preferences, use our preference management page [link removed].

To unsubscribe from all American Prospect emails, including newsletters, follow this link to unsubscribe [link removed].

Sent to: [email protected]

Unsubscribe [link removed]

The American Prospect, Inc., 1225 I Street NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC xxxxxx, United States
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis