The mayoral election in New York City is about to spark the strangest American political dynamic since the mid-19th century. Socialist Zohran Mamdani’s victory Tuesday has put the Democrats in the unenviable position of having to decide what their party is, and how it moves forward into the 2026 midterm election cycle.
By virtue of Mamdani’s election and campaign endorsements by high-profile Democrats, he is now the putative leader of his party. This gives Republicans the opportunity to demand that their opponents in every local, state and federal race explain whether they embrace or denounce Mamdani’s socialist ideology, which now defines Democratic Party. This situation is far more perilous for Democrats than the identity crises they faced after Richard Nixon’s defeat of Hubert Humphrey in the 1968 election and Nixon’s shellacking of George McGovern four years later. The party’s socialist ideological and policy schisms are growing deeper and wider, creating the same conundrum faced by the Whig Party in the years before the Civil War.