
Fadlullah Wilmot || 14 November 2025
Zohran Mamdani’s election as Mayor of New York City marks a historic breakthrough — not only for those who believe in justice, equality, and meaningful political change but also as a pointed rebuke to rising Islamophobia. His victory underscores the enduring power of principled, community-based politics to inspire hope in an era of global cynicism.
Yet this triumph carries vital lessons and stark warnings. Mamdani’s bold defiance of the New York Democratic Party establishment was imperative; failure to take such a stand risks the party ceding ground to right-wing Trumpian and anti-Muslim anti-migrant populists in the US like the Faragists in the UK and the Hansonists in Australia. A more mature response requires reflecting on the trajectory of Barack Obama, whose presidency, despite its initial promise, was ultimately constrained by political and corporate pressures. Mamdani’s ascent serves both as inspiration and caution: lasting change demands unwavering vigilance and refusal to surrender principles upon assuming power.
Beyond Sectarianism: Embracing Complexity and Justice
Some Muslims, rather than recognizing the positive, attack Mamdani for being a Shia, holding democratic socialist views, or supporting certain personal moral issues, thereby missing the vastness of the Islamic ethical tradition rooted in justice, mercy, harm reduction, and service to humanity. Leading voices such as Imam Tom Facchine, Sami Hamdi, Yasir Qadhi, and Imam Omar Suleiman advocate a politics of wisdom, integrity, and pragmatism for Muslims engaging in Western democracies. Their guidance reconciles moral clarity with political realism, rejecting sectarian fracture and promoting principled engagement in pursuit of justice.
Facchine champions genuine grassroots power-building over symbolism; Hamdi stresses strategic influence for justice and transparency; Qadhi warns that sectarianism weakens collective strength; Suleiman highlights the faith-driven imperative to resist all forms of oppression. Together, these perspectives affirm unity, harm reduction, justice, and solidarity against genocide and ethnic cleansing as core Islamic values informing political participation.
The Dangers of Co-option: Lessons from History
Mamdani’s victory is monumental but faces the common risk reformists encounter: absorption and dilution by entrenched institutional forces. Progressive leaders often confront pressures to balance irreconcilable interests, appease elite donors, and engage in symbolic gestures devoid of systemic change. Sustainable progress demands constant grassroots pressure to keep leaders accountable and movements active beyond electoral cycles.
A Possible Surrender to the Status Quo: NYPD Leadership and Grassroots Power
As Mamdani assumes office, his decision to reappoint Jessica Tish—deeply connected to the city’s affluent real estate elite—as NYPD commissioner reflects the tension between establishment accommodation and grassroots expectations. Norman Finkelstein warns this is a critical misstep akin to Salvador Allende’s failure to confront the military in Chile, which led to his overthrow. The NYPD under Tish symbolizes a powerful state instrument capable of obstructing progressive agendas, from Palestinian solidarity to labor and tenant rights.
Finkelstein calls for democratic, participatory decision-making involving Mamdani’s large volunteer base through block, tenant, and university committees, preparing for confrontations with entrenched economic and political powers. Transparency, community empowerment, and education about elite resistance are essential to defend and advance progressive change.
The Western Context: Confronting Vested Interests and Media Control
Across Western democracies—including the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia—progressive parties face persistent challenges from entrenched corporate donors, lobbyists, and powerful interest groups, including the Zionist lobby. These actors influence policymaking and political discourse, extending their grip into social media platforms where corporate takeovers, like TikTok and others, alongside algorithmic manipulation and banning of dissenting voices, suppress grassroots activism and alternative narratives. This control over digital public spaces reinforces inequality, political polarization, and undermines democratic engagement.
The capitulation of major parties to these interests risks alienating voters further and accelerating the rise of right-wing populism across the West. Mamdani’s example underscores the urgent need for progressive forces to rebuild authentic grassroots power, reject elite capture, and pursue bold policies on economic justice, racial equity, and digital freedom, vital to safeguarding democracy from oligarchic control.
Lessons from Political Fragmentation: US, UK, Australia, and Beyond
The fragmentation of traditional parties in the US, UK, and Australia echoes widespread disillusionment with political establishments compromised by donor influence, lobbyist agendas, and media monopolies. Control exercised by influential groups such as the Zionist lobby and algorithmic gatekeepers in tech exacerbates this crisis. Movements inspired by leaders like Jeremy Corbyn, Bernie Sanders, and Zohran Mamdani represent a collective yearning for alternatives prioritizing transparency, grassroots democracy, and inclusion.
With major parties struggling to secure more than one-third of the vote in key elections, large portions of the electorate seek principled and participatory alternatives. This reality demands that progressive forces confront internal conservatisms, break free from donor-driven politics, and reclaim public discourse. Without such renewal, populist and oligarchic forces risk deepening division and weakening progressive influence throughout Western democracies.
Complicity and Challenges Facing Mamdani’s Leadership
Mamdani’s leadership emerges amid intersecting challenges shaped by both Western and regional political dynamics. The complicity of many Arab and Muslim states as pointed out by voices like Sami Hamdi, Chris Hedges, Ilan Pappé, Norman Finkelstein, and Avi Shlaim] exemplifies how authoritarian regimes prioritize regime survival and Western alliances over principled solidarity with oppressed peoples. These governments often suppress grassroots activism and limit international support for justice-driven efforts.
Mamdani must navigate domestic pressures exerted by powerful donors, lobbyists, and media monopolies within the US alongside a geopolitical context where key Muslim-majority countries actively silence dissent and prioritize transactional politics. This regional paralysis exposes progressive leaders like Mamdani to isolation and intensified opposition on multiple fronts.
His leadership thus demands unwavering vigilance, strategic courage to confront local and global vested interests, and a sustained commitment to grassroots empowerment transcending sectarian and geopolitical divisions.
A Call for Courage, Organization, and Accountability

Zohran Mamdani’s victory symbolizes a powerful call to build politics rooted in justice, inclusion, and grassroots empowerment. For Muslims, it requires transcending sectarian divides to engage with integrity; for progressive movements in Western democracies, it demands internal renewal, speaking truth to power, and mobilizing for structural reform.
History teaches that symbolic wins without systemic transformation breed disillusionment. The lesson from Obama’s presidency and the cautionary message to Mamdani are clear: political victories require relentless accountability, coalition integrity, and resistance to co-optation.
Mamdani’s rise offers a hopeful model of courageous, conscientious political leadership contingent on unwavering commitment to grassroots power-building and principled struggle.
Haji Fadlullah Wilmot is a Director at the Islamic Renaissance Front. He formerly served at universities in Indonesia, Malaysia and Australia but after the tsunami in Aceh became involved in the humanitarian and development sector. He has worked in Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, Cambodia, Vietnam, Solomon Islands, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Jordan, Lebanon, Kenya, Sudan, Somalia, Afghanistan and Iraq. As a volunteer with the Australian Muslim Advocacy Network he is now monitoring anti Muslim hate speech in the electronic as well as social media that is exploding in response to right wing posts about what is happening in Gaza and also works with organisations supporting Muslim converts.