Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsZohran Mamdani Reminds Me of Someone. His Name Was Mario Cuomo.
Which candidate, running as an underdog in New Yorks Democratic primary election, said the following?
Once the middle class goes over to the right with the rich, they bludgeon the poor. The whole society suffers because of the social disorientation that produces crime, deterioration, everything evil. You cannot live with a large part of this state or nation deprived. It cant be done. You cant build a wall between you and them and say maybe theyll go away. You cant leave it to the rich to do the right thing, any more than we could leave it to the business people to provide safe quarters for the garment workers a hundred years ago. Thats why people burned to death in factories. You need unions the same way you need policemen. You need laws that say to the rich, youre gonna have to share some of your wealththats why we have the income tax.
You might well assume that those are Zohran Mamdanis words. But they were spoken to me by Mario Cuomo, the father of Andrew Cuomo, in April 1982, during his underdog gubernatorial campaign against Ed Koch, which I was profiling for The Village Voice.
Koch had defeated Cuomo five years earlier in New York Citys mayoral election, partly by pitching the death penalty, which Cuomo bravely resisted. And now Cuomo was polling seven points behind Koch statewide. Yet, somewhat like the underdog Mamdani in 2025, Mario Cuomo was drawing positive attention in 1982 by campaigning with tremendous energy, charm, and eloquence. To the surprise of the Democratic Party establishment of that time, Democratic primary voters in 1982 spurned the overdog Koch for the underdog Cuomo, somewhat as primary voters now have spurned the overdog Andrew Cuomo for the underdog Mamdani. The similarities, and the ironies, are instructive.
Once the middle class goes over to the right with the rich, they bludgeon the poor. The whole society suffers because of the social disorientation that produces crime, deterioration, everything evil. You cannot live with a large part of this state or nation deprived. It cant be done. You cant build a wall between you and them and say maybe theyll go away. You cant leave it to the rich to do the right thing, any more than we could leave it to the business people to provide safe quarters for the garment workers a hundred years ago. Thats why people burned to death in factories. You need unions the same way you need policemen. You need laws that say to the rich, youre gonna have to share some of your wealththats why we have the income tax.
You might well assume that those are Zohran Mamdanis words. But they were spoken to me by Mario Cuomo, the father of Andrew Cuomo, in April 1982, during his underdog gubernatorial campaign against Ed Koch, which I was profiling for The Village Voice.
Koch had defeated Cuomo five years earlier in New York Citys mayoral election, partly by pitching the death penalty, which Cuomo bravely resisted. And now Cuomo was polling seven points behind Koch statewide. Yet, somewhat like the underdog Mamdani in 2025, Mario Cuomo was drawing positive attention in 1982 by campaigning with tremendous energy, charm, and eloquence. To the surprise of the Democratic Party establishment of that time, Democratic primary voters in 1982 spurned the overdog Koch for the underdog Cuomo, somewhat as primary voters now have spurned the overdog Andrew Cuomo for the underdog Mamdani. The similarities, and the ironies, are instructive.
https://newrepublic.com/article/197226/zohran-mamdani-wins-mayor-primary-mario-cuomo
I thought this was a pretty interesting opinion piece.
6 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies

Zohran Mamdani Reminds Me of Someone. His Name Was Mario Cuomo. (Original Post)
Quiet Em
Wednesday
OP
hlthe2b
(110,441 posts)1. We really needed another Mario, but we got Andrew, instead...
--and Chris has not exactly lived up to Mario's legacy either.
But, then again, look at RFK Jr... Pretty damned tragic.
SocialDemocrat61
(5,075 posts)4. Andrew has a lot of daddy issues
and has done his best to tarnish his fathers liberal legacy
Quiet Em
(2,066 posts)5. I've been thinking about this article and your reply a lot today.
I think some big influencers in the Democratic Party are completely missing the message from the people.
We are looking for Marios, not Andrews, not RFK Jrs. And not other men who seem to be leaning more into appeasing the MAGA warped mindset and abandoning our core goals and beliefs. We want fighters. Not MAGA appeasers.
Scrivener7
(56,199 posts)2. He did a lot of good.
UTUSN
(74,620 posts)3. Good one!
electric_blue68
(22,113 posts)6. Wow, some quote! TY.