[IRF] Zohran Mamdani’s triumph in New York shows that a genuine alternative is possible - Aliran

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[IRF] Zohran Mamdani’s triumph in New York shows that a genuine alternative is possible - Aliran

5 Nov 2025 || Kua Kia Soong

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In an era when politics has become synonymous with opportunism, spin and compromise, Zohran Mamdani shows us that a politician who refuses to bend his ideals to fit the prevailing winds of expediency can still beat the odds.

In the heart of capitalist America, this young New York assembly member has emerged not merely as a rising star of the left but as a model of moral consistency. And now he is mayor of New York.

Beyond his obvious talent, charisma and youthful energy, three enduring qualities mark Mamdani as a politician of uncommon integrity: his fidelity to socialist principles, his fearless anti-imperialism and his unyielding defence of the working class.

Integrity amid the temptations of capitalism

To be a socialist in the United States – the citadel of capitalism – is no small feat.

To remain one, while sitting in the legislature of one of its richest cities, is even rarer.

Yet Mamdani does so with clarity and conviction. Representing a district in Queens, he champions universal housing, free public transport and healthcare as rights, not privileges – all while surrounded by the lobbying machinery of Wall Street, real estate developers and billion-dollar companies.

While many politicians who start on the left have compromised their socialism and drifted toward the centre, Mamdani has remained steadfast. He has shown that principle is not incompatible with pragmatism, and that genuine public service means refusing to serve capital.

His actions echo the socialist conviction that democracy must extend beyond the ballot box into the economy itself – a message too often diluted by career politicians who treat socialism as a slogan rather than a structure.

Integrity in the face of imperialist pressure

If Mamdani’s socialism makes him exceptional, his anti-imperialist courage places him in a class of his own.

Few American politicians dare to speak the truth about Palestine – and fewer still do so in New York, a city with more Jewish residents than Jerusalem and where politicians on both sides of the divide are funded by Aipac, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

Yet Mamdani has done exactly that, condemning the Israeli occupation and the ongoing genocide in Gaza with moral clarity and without equivocation.

His refusal to bow to the pressure of pro-Israel lobbies or to the fear of political ostracism demonstrates a level of moral integrity that transcends political calculation.

He reminds us that justice cannot be selective, that human rights do not end where donor interests begin, and that silence in the face of oppression is complicity.

In this, Mamdani has become a beacon of conscience in a political landscape where even ‘progressives’ often mute their criticism of imperialism when it threatens their careers.

Compare this to the sad spectacle in Malaysia, where many politicians who once called themselves ‘socialists’ have lost their voice when it comes to the struggles of other nations such as Cuba and Venezuela, still being sanctioned by US imperialism.

Having compromised themselves through alliances with liberal democratic parties and corporate elites, they have bartered away their anti-imperialist credentials for cabinet posts and patronage.

Consistency in defending the people

Zohran Mamdani’s third defining quality is his unwavering consistency in fighting for the working class – a struggle that pits him directly against billionaires, corporate landlords and the political establishment that serves them.


Whether confronting New York’s real estate barons, opposing police overreach, or demanding public ownership of utilities, Mamdani has refused to be silenced or co-opted.

His fight is not episodic or symbolic; it is structural and sustained.

In contrast, much of Malaysian politics has become theatre – populist gestures during elections followed by quiet accommodation with the very corporate powers they claim to oppose. Developers and tycoons shape urban policy, while the needs of the poor are treated as afterthoughts.

The few who once championed socialist causes have long since traded their banners for the blue and yellow of liberal alliances, citing ‘realism’ as the justification for betrayal while appearing afraid to tackle wealth inequality.

Mamdani, by contrast, embodies what realism should mean in politics: a commitment to the real lives of ordinary people, not to the illusions of market freedom. His integrity is not only moral but strategic – for he understands that the only durable politics is one rooted in justice and truth.

Why Mamdani succeeds where others falter

Mamdani’s success in New York points to several lessons for socialists in liberal democracies like Malaysia:


Authenticity builds trust: Voters, even in capitalist societies, respond to integrity. Mamdani’s refusal to pander has earned him credibility that transcends ideology. Malaysian socialists, too often preoccupied with tactical alliances, have lost the moral distinctiveness that once inspired working people.

Local struggles matter: Mamdani’s socialism begins in the community – rent justice, transport access and public housing. By rooting socialist ideals in immediate community needs, he transforms abstract ideology into everyday relevance. Malaysian socialists could regain traction by re-embedding themselves in grassroots economic and environmental struggles rather than electoral bargaining.

Moral courage is political strength: Mamdani’s unapologetic anti-imperialism and solidarity with Palestine in the face of Zionist aggression proves that moral courage can attract rather than alienate. In Malaysia, where anti-imperialism once unified the left, such conviction has withered under the pressure of pragmatism. Mamdani’s example suggests that principled internationalism can still be a rallying force if pursued consistently.

Mamdani’s victory – a call to renewal

Zohran Mamdani embodies what politics can still be: principled, compassionate and unafraid. His brand of socialism – unapologetically moral, locally grounded and globally conscious – is not nostalgia for a lost left but a blueprint for its renewal.

In an age when politicians everywhere are content to manage decline and compromise with the corrupt, Mamdani insists on imagining transformation.

His example challenges socialists in Malaysia and beyond to rediscover the courage of conviction – to believe once again that politics grounded in truth, integrity and solidarity can still move the world.

At a time when cynicism has replaced conviction, Mamdani reminds us that socialist integrity itself is revolutionary. His steadfastness in upholding socialist ideals. His moral courage in defending Palestine and other countries under imperialist threats. His consistency in fighting for the working class. These are the qualities that distinguish a politician from a careerist.

Malaysia – and indeed the world – needs more Zohran Mamdanis. Leaders who do not count the cost of truth. Leaders who serve the people rather than their patrons. Leaders who refuse to forget that politics, at its best, is the practice of hope grounded in justice, equality and democracy.

Dr Kua Kia Soong, a former MP, is the director of Suaram.

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