Jessica Gould, Jimmy Vielkind, Andrew Giambrone and Walter Wuthmann

Gothamist
The launch of “2-Care” will start in “high-need areas,” building on the city’s existing pre-K and 3-K programs. NYS socialist legislators want to 'tax the rich' to raise the billions that a full implementation will require.

New York socialist lawmakers are looking to deliver on the promises made in Zohran Mamdani's winning campaign for NYC mayor, Courtesy of NYS Assemblymember Phara Souffrant Forrest

 

1 Hochul & Mamdani Announce Push for Free Child Care for NYC 2-year-olds

2. New York Socialist Lawmakers, Inspired by Mamdani’s Win, Aim To Seize on New Session

Hochul & Mamdani Announce Push for Free Child Care for NYC 2-Year-Olds

New York City children as young as 2 years old could get access to free child care under a proposal Gov. Kathy Hochul and Mayor Zohran Mamdani unveiled Thursday.

The launch of “2-Care” will start in “high-need areas,” officials said, building on the city’s existing pre-K and 3-K programs. The expansion is one part of a multipronged plan to increase state support for child care, which the Democratic governor said is needed to control rising costs of living and keep people in the workforce.

“Families have been crying out for help,” Hochul said at the Flatbush YMCA. “If we can take this stress point off the plate of all the other struggles they have, my friends, then we are making New York state and New York City the best places in the nation to live, to raise a family, to grow a business and to prosper.”

Hochul said Thursday that the state would fully fund the first two years of the city’s 2-Care program. She also announced funding to extend pre-kindergarten programs around the state, expand pre-K and 3-K in New York City, and increase the amount of funding for the state’s existing child care subsidy program.

The plan represents one of the first major moves Hochul and Mamdani are making together to address the city's affordability crisis. It comes in the first few days of the Mamdani administration and as Hochul seeks re-election. Mamdani campaigned for mayor on delivering free child care for kids between 6 weeks and 5 years old, which he has estimated would cost about $6 billion a year.

“This is a day that so many believed would never come, but it is a day that working people across our city have delivered through the sheer power of their hard work and their unwavering belief,” Mamdani said.

Mamdani said he expects the first 2-Care programs will launch in the fall with 2,000 slots and initially cost $75 million. A city official said the new slots would be through an expansion of the city’s current practice of contracting with home-based providers and day care centers. Mamdani promised to make the program universal, serving all families who want a slot for their 2-year-olds, by the end of his administration. Advocates have said a truly universal 2-Care program would have to serve 60,000 children.

Rebecca Bailin, executive director of the organization New Yorkers United for Child Care, called it “a historic moment for New York families.”

“By bringing together the governor and mayor around a shared commitment to child care, tens of thousands of families could finally get the relief they desperately need,” she said in a statement Thursday.

Significant questions remain.

The expansion was announced days after the Trump administration froze about $3.6 billion in federal child care subsidies for the state. The state is also grappling with federal cuts to health care funding.

“The state really needs to be concerned not only about affordability, and that is a major issue, but also our competitiveness and our outmigration,” said Andrew Rein, president of the Citizens Budget Commission, a fiscal watchdog. He warned against raising taxes and suggested the state should redirect spending from other areas.

Hochul’s office said the total cost of the new child care pre-kindergarten investments is $1.7 billion, which would be funded with “pre-existing resources.” Democrats including Mamdani have called on the state to raise taxes on the wealthy to pay for the program.

Hochul said state receipts were up, and that she would include more details in a budget presentation scheduled for Jan. 20.

“We have managed our finances quite well,” she said. “We have been smart about setting aside money to be able to fund some of my ambitious plans, but within our means.”

Walter Wuthmann / Gothamist / Jan. 7, 2026

The democratic socialists in the New York state Legislature are returning to Albany for the start of the new session with one fewer member but possibly more clout than ever.

Former state Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani’s rise from socialist backbencher to mayor of the nation’s largest city shocked political observers and thrust his affordability agenda into the spotlight. Mamdani’s former colleagues say they’re now trying to capitalize on the moment.

“I can feel the whole movement locking in,” said state Sen. Jabari Brisport of Brooklyn. After years of talking about taxing the rich and universal child care, he said, “we are in a political moment where we can actually seize this opportunity and push really far on those fronts.”

This session will test whether Mamdani and the handful of state lawmakers aligned with the Democratic Socialists of America can gain widespread support for their policies. Those include raising taxes on the state’s highest earners to pay for priorities like universal child care and free buses, which Mamdani campaigned on delivering in New York City, even as they will require state-level backing.

The group of eight lawmakers, who are part of the DSA and collectively known as Albany’s “socialists in office,” makes up just a tiny portion of the 213-member Legislature. They count their major legislative victories as passing clean energy investments and raising the minimum wage.

The coalition is supporting a suite of bills to raise billions of dollars in new revenue by taxing affluent New Yorkers and corporations. For example, the “Fair Share Act,” sponsored by Assemblymember Phara Souffrant Forrest of Brooklyn, would add a 2% surcharge on people making over $1 million in income a year.

Souffrant Forrest estimates the proposal could raise $4 billion in new annual revenue.

“ We have bills, we have tax ideas,” she said in an interview. “It's really just finding out which one we can really work with, with the climate that we have currently.”

Previous plans for taxing wealthy New Yorkers have been stymied at the state level. While both chambers of the Legislature have previously supported an income-tax hike, Gov. Kathy Hochul has called the issue a “non-starter.” Business groups say higher taxes will cause high earners to leave the state.

But in recent weeks Hochul has signaled she may be open to increasing the state’s corporate tax rate. Mamdani and the DSA-aligned lawmakers have proposed raising that rate, but Hochul has not specifically backed the bill.

One goal these legislators and the governor share is enacting a universal child care program. Mamdani made the promise of free child care a key focus of his mayoral campaign. Hochul pledged to “put our state on a pathway to universal child care” as part of her State of the State address last year.

But the socialist lawmakers say they see a tough fight ahead.

“The need for child care is in the billions,” Brisport said. That deficit grew larger this week when the Trump administration froze $10 billion in child care subsidies to Democratic-led states, including New York.

Brisport argues the only way to raise enough revenue is by increasing taxes on high earners and corporations.

“I know the governor has been hoping for a unicorn to come through and pay for it, but there is no other way out but to raise revenue,” he said.

Mamdani’s campaign volunteers have pledged to continue organizing to help the new mayor win support for the policies that have floundered in Albany for years. Brisport said that will take the form of mobilizing “hundreds if not thousands of New Yorkers to knock doors of thousands of other New Yorkers and get them to put pressure on their legislators and the governor to tax the rich for universal child care.”

All but one of the DSA-aligned state lawmakers represent parts of New York City. Assemblymember Sarahana Shrestha, who represents the area around Kingston, said her mid-Hudson Valley district “is one of the most fired-up parts of the state” in terms of supporting progressive policies.

Shrestha, the first New York state legislator of Nepali origin, said her election in 2022 is proof the DSA’s messaging resonates across the state. “There was the same sort of scare tactics: socialist, DSA, not from here, etc.,” she said. “None of that worked.”

Assemblymember Emily Gallagher of Brooklyn, another member of the coalition, said she hopes Mamdani’s election will encourage people to join their progressive movement.

“Because it is popular, and it will be effective, and we need all hands on deck,” she said.

 

 

 
 

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