Mamdani Shows How To Frontrun, Defuse, And Reframe Right-Wing Outrage
Democratic politicians have a chronic problem: they keep accepting Republican framing instead of creating their own. They run scared of Fox News, moderate their positions to appease the unappeasable, and let political consultants convince them that authenticity is dangerous. They are so worried about how Fox News will portray anything they say, they try not to say anything interesting at all.
The costs of this approach became painfully clear in 2024. There was a brief shining moment last summer when the Harris Walz campaign appeared to be scoring real damage to the Trump Vance campaign by not falling into this predictable pattern. Instead, they were being authentic, calling out how fucking weird the MAGA world’s positions actually were, and it was working.
It was highlighting just how ridiculous the GOP’s policies are, and how damaging they can be. And yet, within weeks, Democratic political consultants killed it.
Over the line came a lot of praise, but also some suggested tweaks. First, said veteran Democratic numbers man Geoff Garin, summarizing their analysis, stop saying, “We’re not going back.” It wasn’t focused enough on the future, he argued. Second, lay off all the “weird” talk — too negative.
In retrospect, not letting Tim Walz be Tim Walz was a huge blunder. When he spoke in a relatable way, people got it. He was authentic and real and, even if he made an occasional policy blunder, you got the sense that he actually cared. But the traditional Democratic advisors couldn’t stand that level of risk. They ran so scared of any potential “gaffe” that might give Fox News or the NY Post fodder, that they’d rather silence the candidates who actually resonate with people.
There were also efforts to curb some of his signature lines, including casting Trump and Republicans as “weird,” which slipped out of Walz’s speeches.
“He was encouraged to stop focusing on the ‘weird’ criticism,” said another former Harris aide. “I think it is fair to ask whether, even if ‘weird’ wasn’t quite right, his instinct about how to approach Trump, to make him seem small, and a huckster, wasn’t closer to correct than the more self-serious tone that may have made us sound too in defense of the status quo.”
Mockery yields results. As does not being afraid of the way the other side is framing things. They’re going to call any Democrat a “socialist” or “communist” anyway. Stop letting Fox News decide how you act. People are hungry for someone who will actually say what’s really happening, rather than playing it safe and political.
Instead, the Democrats tried to run as “traditional Republican lite,” spending much of the campaign appearing with Republicans like Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, which came off as incredibly inauthentic and designed only to appeal to people who want Republicans to like them. It turned off Democrats and didn’t attract any Trump supporters.
That’s part of why Zohran Mamdani is so refreshing in the NYC mayoral race. He’s been incredibly natural and authentic in making it clear he absolutely loves NYC and he won’t cave to misleading framing by either Republicans or the traditional Democratic political consultants. Now, winning a NYC mayoral primary is different from winning a national election—the media environment and stakes are different—but the core lesson about authentic messaging still applies.
Over the weekend, he put out a hilarious video that demonstrates this clearly:
In it, he notes that he’s on a short planned trip to Uganda, where he was born and raised, to celebrate his wedding from earlier this year with family and friends who are still in Uganda. The video is very good political theater. It takes criticism from the screeching class on X who keep telling him (obnoxiously) to “go back to Africa” and turns it into a joke.

The traditional Democratic consultant would say to try to keep this trip quiet overall, or cite “privacy” in not providing details. Mamdani makes it a joke, points out how he’s listening to his critics, and then caps it off with a knowing wink to the fact that some of his haters won’t want him to come back:
But depending on your perspective, don’t worry or I’m sorry: I’ll be back by the end of the month.
In the video he also says “I want to apologize to the haters, because I will undoubtedly be coming back.”
But, even better, he spends the latter half of the video jokingly suggesting potential NY Post headlines to exaggerate his celebratory trip (I’ll leave the best joke to those who watch the video itself rather than posting it here), but tonally, it’s perfect.

This does so many important things well that Democrats often fail it. It defuses a non-controversy before the MAGA world can turn it into a faux controversy. It uses sarcasm and humor to disarm people. And it comes across as someone authentic who loves his family and friends… as well as NYC.
This approach offers a model that Democrats desperately need: don’t accept the frame your opponents set, create your own. Use humor to deflate pompous attacks. Be authentic about who you are and what you care about. Trust that voters can handle complexity and honesty.
The alternative is what we got in 2024: a sanitized, consultant-approved campaign that felt disconnected from real people and real problems. Until Democrats learn to reward politicians who take authentic risks instead of those who play it safe, they’ll keep losing to candidates who may lie constantly but at least sound like they believe what they’re saying.
Filed Under: authenticity, campaigns, democrats, framing, outrage, tim walz, zohran mamdani


Comments on “Mamdani Shows How To Frontrun, Defuse, And Reframe Right-Wing Outrage”
I generally agree with this post, but I have one trivial question: Who’s the person in the photo on the wall behind Mamdani?
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The video was filmed inside Little Flower, a small cafe in Astoria, and the photo on the wall is a portrait of this woman. The caption for Little Flower’s Instagram photo translates to “Paradise is under the feet of mothers,” so I’m guessing the photo is the cafe owner’s mother.
(For the curious, I found the location by searching for references online to a bakery named “Noel’s” in NYC, which can be seen in the background of the video. That led me to the Instagram account for Noel’s NYC, which primarily sells their goods at Little Flower. Looking at interior images on Google Maps and Yelp confirmed it was the right location. The portrait was posted twice on Little Flower’s Instagram.)
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Might be his mother.
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That does not look like award-winning director Mira Nair.
Yep, humor can be a big seller
I think one of the most ingenious lines I heard in that regard was from the German pop singer Roberto Blanco (of afro-cuban origin) on a beer tent stage for the CDU (I think), the conservative party in Germany. His address contained the quip “Wir Schwarzen müssen zusammenhalten”, “We the black have to stick together”, with black also being the party color of the CDU.
That kind of framing was utterly disarming, quite more so than this “don’t worry or I’m sorry” bit from Mamdani.
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I think a better translation for that German would be “We Blacks gotta stick together!” or “Us Black People gotta stick together!”
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Yeah. It seems as though David posted the literal translation and missed what was meant by doing so (in the same way that “Bonjour” is said to mean “hello” in French, but literally translates to “good day”).
Nice to see someone learned the lesson
Every single ‘consultant’ or aide that advised the Harris/Walz team to ‘tone it down’ need to be blacklisted from the industry for life, as assuming they didn’t go in there planning to sabotage the Harris election on behalf of the republicans they are so bloody incompetent and out of touch as to be literally worse than not hiring a consultant at all.
Good on Mamdani for refusing to ‘play nice’ and act like a doormat like so many democrats seem to do in this situation, all spineless appeasement does is signal to republicans that you want to be treated as a punching bag and lose the respect of voters who now have no reason to expect that you’ll stand up for them since you’re not even willing to stand up for yourself.
That said were I in his shoes I’d probably delay any trips out of the country for at least a few more years, given who’s running the border at the moment and how much they hate him I would not put good odds on him being allowed back in the country if he goes on a trip overseas, whether he’s a mayoral candidate or even the actual mayor at the time.
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In a sense, I almost hope that would happen, because it would put a nice, bright spotlight on the Trump admin’s absolutely batshit border policy. When it happens with regular people, it doesn’t get any traction, but a NYC mayoral candidate? Fuhget about it.
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What’s the betting that Trump actually doesn’t deport Mamdani, and then point to that single case as evidence his racist policy is nothing at all to do with brown people and everything to do with “criminals”?
Mamdani is a younger Obama.
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Basically, he is who the right were falsely scaring people about Obama:
-socialist
-Muslim
-born in Africa
none of which apply to Barack Obama, but all factually and truthfully apply to Zohran Mamdani, and Leftists such as myself are eating it up, because we wish what the right-wing was saying about Obama was true, and now we got that wish granted in Mamdani!
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Did the shoot your dog or something? He’s much more genuine and human than Obama.
Re: Too Bad I Can't Vote For Him
If he were eligible to run (he’s not a native citizen) I would vote for him for President. After a term or two as mayor he can probably try to make it to the US Senate for New York though.
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Let’s hope the current racist policy on Presidential eligibility gets loosened to allow naturalized Americans to try for the top job. As you suggest, Mamdani would likely make a far better POTUS than any we’ve had thus far excepting , perhaps, FDR.
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Not in the slightest.
Obama deported more people than Trump, it’s just that Trump is meaner.
Obama left the campaign trail to vote to grant immunity to the telcos for violating the privacy of every American.
Obama expanded the surveillance state.
Obama exploded the drone program.
Obama waged a war on whistleblowers.
Obama killed the teenage kids of someone he assassinated without due process.
Obama was not a great president, it’s just that the bar is very low, and Mamdami is NOTHING like Obama.
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…that you know of.
Genius campaigning.
Well, FWIW, his family were amongst those Asian Africans who were kicked out of Uganda in the 70s by the Trump pre-run, Uganda’s President Idi Amin. (Or another way of putting it is Donald Trump is for all intents and purposes the reincarnation/re-run of Idi Amin.)
Yes, he appeals to young people’s sense of humor.
His plans are horrible though, city owned supermarkets??? 30 dollar minimum wage?
So strange to read the support of him here.
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City-owned supermarkets are little different than privately owned co-ops and the minimum wage must be raised to account for the higher cost of living, both in general and within New York City in particular. (Related suggestion: Sit down for a few minutes and pick apart the phrase “cost of living”.) I don’t see how his proposals are “radical” or whatever unless you’re a wealthy person who might lose a tiny fraction of said wealth to some slightly higher taxes that you already avoid paying.
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Heaven forfend the city should put reasonable supermarkets in a food desert.
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Nah, he’s GOAT’d with the sauce.