City in Uproar — New Yorkers RAGE A

New York’s new mayor didn’t wait a single day.

In less than two hours, Zohran Mamdani signed a flurry of executive orders that could rewrite the rules of power between tenants, landlords, and developers.

Socialists are celebrating. Conservatives are sounding the alarm.

Zohran Mamdani’s opening move as mayor is more than a housing policy shift; it’s a declaration of class war in plain daylight.

By reviving the Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants under veteran organizer Cea Weaver,

he’s building an institutional weapon aimed directly at negligent and exploitative landlords, promising to turn scattered tenant complaints into coordinated enforcement.

For renters who’ve spent years feeling powerless in crumbling buildings, this looks like long-awaited retaliation.

For property owners, it looks like the start of a hostile era.

But Mamdani didn’t stop at punishment; he went after the system that keeps housing scarce.

The LIFT Task Force will comb through city-owned land, racing to unlock new sites for development,

while the SPEED Task Force is tasked with tearing down the bureaucratic delays that make building slow and expensive.

Backed publicly by Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Mamdani is turning his democratic socialist label into governing doctrine.

Whether this becomes a model for a new national left or a cautionary tale that

Republicans weaponize in 2026 will depend on one brutal test: can he actually make New York more livable before the backlash overtakes the hope.