Saturday, April 18, 2026

Something to Know - 18 April

How old are you?  I assume you are a long-time regular voter.   Some of you started reading this newsletter back in 2004, it became a diversion after I retired.   Do your political and policy tendencies reflect  what you felt 25 years ago, or have you changed?  Read this article and sense where you are today or how you've changed.   The Atlantic magazine has good stories for all.



An Oligarchy of Old People

How elderly Americans amassed disproportionate wealth and power

illustration with 3 figures standing on top of a stack of abstract green bills: one with a cane, one with a walker, and one pulling up a long ladder out of the reach of the figure on the ground
Illustration by Ben Hickey

Gerontocracy has always thrived in undemocratic places—Communist people’s republics, Gulf monarchies—where only death could pry power from the ruling elders. American gerontocracy is exceptional for being freely elected. Donald Trump will soon be an octogenarian, and is president in part because the preceding octogenarian, Joe Biden, did not want to admit his senescence. The median senator is 65, and the oldest, 92-year-old Chuck Grassley, has not ruled out running for reelection in 2028. The typical general-election voter is a spry 52, but in primary elections, which decide the majority of political contests, that number rises to 59. Half of all the money donated to political campaigns comes from Americans age 66 and older.

Although political gerontocracy has operated overtly, the rising economic power of the elderly has escaped much notice. Over the past 40 or so years, American wealth has grown ever more concentrated among the oldest generations. In 1989, Americans over age 55 held 56 percent of it; today they hold 74 percent. During that same period, the share of wealth held by Americans under 40 has shrunk by nearly half, from 12 to 6.6 percent. The color of money is now gray.xMuch of this shift is the result of demographic change: 18 percent of Americans are senior citizens today, up from 13 

percent in 1990. But even at the household level, Americans over 55 have accrued wealth more rapidly than those who are younger. Among those 75 and older, the numbers are particularly striking. In 1983, their household net worth was only slightly above the national average; by 2022, it was 55 percent higher.

For nearly a century, some of the central debates in American politics have been over inequalities—between rich and poor, male and female, Black and white. When the Baby Boomers were children, older Americans were widely viewed as vulnerable. “Fifty percent of the elderly exist below minimum standards of decency, and this is a figure much higher than that for any other age group,” Michael Harrington wrote in his 1962 book The Other America, often credited with inspiring the War on Poverty. “This is no country for old men.”

Three years later, in 1965, Medicare was created. A major expansion of Social Security followed in 1972. These changes were remarkably effective: The share of elderly people living in poverty dropped by more than one-third within a decade. But because these programs are broad-based entitlements, they have transferred huge sums to the prosperous, too. The portfolios of that latter group, meanwhile, have been swelled by a rising stock market and rising home values, outcomes that may not be entirely replicable for younger generations. As a result of all of these factors, intergenerational inequality between old and young has not merely reversed. It has accelerated.

Most current Social Security and Medicare beneficiaries will receive more from the program over their lifetime than they paid in taxes, and the extra money will necessarily come from the pockets of younger generations. The two programs now pay out more than $2 trillion a year, more than one-third of all federal expenditures. Their sustainability was a subject of major debate during the Obama years, when the national debt was much lower than it is today and interest rates on that debt were close to zero. Financially, the matter is more urgent now. The trust funds for Social Security benefits and Medicare’s hospital insurance are projected to become insolvent in roughly seven years.



Yet even noticing the looming threats has become taboo for the two major political parties. One of Trump’s shrewdest political realizations was that entitlement reform—once a priority for fiscal conservatives—was a losing issue. Instead, he has pledged not to touch entitlement spending and lavished seniors with even more government money. His One Big Beautiful Bill Act created a special $6,000 tax deduction for seniors, which will cost taxpayers $91 billion over the next four years. The same bill cuts $1 trillion in spending on Medicaid, which is expected to leave some 5 million working-age Americans uninsured.

This bodes poorly for intergenerational peace. Respect for elders is being replaced by resentment of elders. A majority of young Americans no longer believe in the American dream. Many Millennials and Gen Zers expressly blame the Boomers for that, accusing them of hoarding wealth, jobs, and power. Many of these accusations are inchoate, but they are not entirely baseless.

The best rebuttal to the gerontocratic critique is that young Americans do not appreciate how good they have it. Although people of working age possess a smaller share of the national wealth, they are richer in absolute terms than Boomers were at their age. The median 35-year-old Millennial earns 38 percent more in post-tax, inflation-adjusted income than the typical Boomer did at the same age, according to research by the economist Kevin Corinth. Gen Zers have only begun their careers, but so far they are earning more than their Millennial predecessors. This trend shows up in wealth statistics, too. When Boomers were between the ages of 25 and 43, they had a median net worth of $58,000 (in 2022 dollars); Millennials at the same stage of life had a net worth of $85,000. So why are young Americans so depressed about their economic future?

The pathologies of the housing market are one reason. The typical home today costs five times the median annual income, up from 3.5 times the median annual income in 1984. Boomers got lucky: When they were young, they could afford to buy houses that then appreciated fantastically in value. But that luck was arguably manufactured by Washington, which engineered the rise of 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages and created tax deductions for mortgage interest and property taxes.

These government subsidies still exist today. But even with them, younger Americans cannot buy houses at the same rate that Boomers did. In a paper titled “Giving Up,” the economists Seung Hyeong Lee and Younggeun Yoo predicted that Millennials will enter retirement with much lower homeownership rates than the generations before them—74 percent compared with 84 percent for Boomers. Some 15 percent of Millennials, they noted, had already given up on homeownership by age 30. These Millennials, they found, work less, spend more on credit, and are more likely to buy cryptocurrency or make other risky investments. Feeling locked out of owning a house casts a malaise—one made worse by the anxiety that the welfare state they currently support will become stingier when they eventually need it.

Older generations used the levers of government to create this situation. In high-cost cities, the building of new homes and apartment complexes is often derailed in local planning and zoning-board meetings. In 2019, the political scientists Katherine Levine Einstein, Maxwell Palmer, and David Glick published a study examining who attended such meetings in the Boston area. The attendees, they found, were likely to be longtime homeowners who oppose new development. Preventing construction kept the value of their assets high—at the expense of younger, prospective homeowners.

Homeowner preferences hard-coded into state constitutions decades ago now further sustain the gerontocracy. In 1978, Californians voted by referendum for Proposition 13, which severely limited the property taxes that existing homeowners would have to pay—so long as they remained in place. In one study, the law was estimated to have caused a 15 percent increase in California housing prices all by itself. As longtime homeowners profited, the lost tax revenue forced reductions in school spending.

California is not unique, and housing is not the only means by which the older generations have effectively pulled up the ladder behind them. Preferences for the elderly over the young are a fixture of public budgets nationwide. Across all government programs—federal, state, and local—$2 are now spent on seniors for every $1 spent on children.

According to Tim Vlandas, an Oxford political economist, advanced democracies around the world are reaching the point of “gerontonomia”—his term for a stagnating political economy set up to prioritize elderly citizens. These citizens punish their elected governments for inflation, which lessens the value of savings and pension payments. They are much more tolerant of unemployment, because they no longer work; slow growth, because their wealth has already accumulated; and high public debt, because their descendants will pay it. The result, Vlandas argues, is lower wage growth for those still working, and also worse outcomes for their children, as a result of lower social investment over the course of their lives.

Graying democracies everywhere have made generous pension commitments that they are struggling to maintain. In the United Kingdom, the “triple lock,” a rule that in most years mandates that state pension payments increase more than inflation, seems politically impossible to change. In France, people protested for months against Emmanuel Macron in 2023 over the raising of the retirement age from 62 to 64.

Yet these challenges are especially acute in America. Because Social Security still has a trust fund to draw on, voters may not realize that benefits already exceed contributions. But this fund, which stood at $2.9 trillion in 2021, is on pace to dwindle to zero by about 2033. The Trump administration’s immigration crackdown will hasten the arrival of exhaustion day by cutting the number of tax-paying workers who support retirees’ benefits. Once that trust fund is gone—absent a tax increase on current workers or some other change—beneficiaries would suffer an immediate 23 percent cut in payments. A similar process would leave the Medicare Part A program, which covers hospital stays for the elderly, insolvent at about the same time.

The national debt will by then be gargantuan. Previously unthinkable ideas—such as means-tested Social Security benefits, confiscatory wealth taxes, even health-care rationing—might be contemplated. The bill coming due for the senior welfare state might not trouble this president, but it could well be the defining problem for the next one.

Some people would like to start the fight over how to resolve it now. Among them are radical thinkers who contend that in order to defeat economic gerontocracy, Americans must first defang the elderly ruling class. In his forthcoming book, Gerontocracy in America, the 54-year-old Yale law and history professor Samuel Moyn calls for destroying this “tyranny of the minority,” set up by “old people with enormous private power who hold society in chains.” Power, he argues, needs to be seized back, leaving “the elderly divested of political power, wealth, and property.”

Moyn wants to create mandatory retirement ages, perhaps starting as low as 65, for elected officials and people with some desirable private-sector jobs. Then he would come for the money, increasing taxes on both income and accumulated assets to dilute the share of elderly wealth. Most astonishingly, he proposes diluting older Americans’ political power too, by literally valuing the votes of young people more, on the theory that the latter will suffer the consequences of political decisions for much longer. (This proposed social engineering is both harsh and vanishingly improbable. The modern legal principle of “one person, one vote” exists for good reason.)

Still, Moyn’s ideas underscore the need for an equitable post-Boomer settlement, one that will be easier to find if we start the search sooner rather than later. In the 20th century, the United States realized it was too rich and too decent a country to allow its elderly citizens to live in penury. And it made an enduring commitment to address that problem, one that has unequivocally succeeded: There has never been a better time to be a senior citizen in America. And yet the U.S. has made no comparable commitment to working families, who are stymied not only by expensive housing but also by child-care and higher-education bills. Child poverty in America persists at levels alarmingly higher than in other advanced democracies

Initiatives such as Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal and Lyndon B. Johnson’s Great Society established what current workers in a decent country owed to retirees. A new social contract can be struck that would deliver at least some optimism for today’s workers. Curing gerontonomia would require redirecting some public funds from programs aimed at the elderly, such as Social Security, to family benefits, education, and infrastructure. But an intergenerational recalibration can come about in gentler ways than Moyn’s: The wealthiest Social Security recipients, for instance, could forgo some of their scheduled benefits, which could instead be contributed annually to “baby bond” accounts for America’s children, a source of capital to be used in adulthood.

And not every solution rests with the welfare state. Cutting through housing restrictions would generate enormous social benefit, if America’s elderly ruling class were to allow such a feat. Today’s gerontocrats will eventually die. But their legacy will be a mess to sort out.



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Juan Matute
R.B.R.
C.C.R.C.


Friday, April 17, 2026

Something to Know - 17 April

While the Middle East is in its perpetual spirit of neighbors hating it neighbors, something that has gone on for endless centuries there is the Trump/MAGA mess here at home.   It now seems the GOP is in dire straits of losing biggly in the upcoming mid-term elections, and that both the Senate and the House will swing to the Democrats; at least the House for sure.   The MAGGOTS are desperately trying to push and grab policies and programs before they are thrown out.   Of course they are doing so clumsily, but it is entertaining.    The major problem is that the leader at the top seems clueless about how badly things are going, and the big mobster is not bothered by his sycophants who dare not tell him the truth.   The only evidence he cannot hide is his increasing hair loss.  Screen writers, book writers, and documentarians are confidently producing material that will serve as relevant historical commentary.


Heather Cox Richardson from Letters from an American heathercoxrichardson@substack.com 
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Apr 16, 2026, 9:57 PM (11 hours ago)
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Congress is back in session, and there is a frantic feel in the air. Republicans appear to be assessing the fall of Hungarian prime minister Victor Orbán, Trump’s increasingly erratic behavior along with his abysmal job approval numbers, rising prices, and an unpopular war in Iran that currently does not appear to have a solution that will not result in the U.S. losing face.

In Hungary, incoming prime minister Péter Magyar is setting a bar as he appears to want no part of playing business as usual with Orbán’s cronies. A center-right politician, Magyar appeared as a guest on state television after his party’s dramatic win—Orbán’s state media had not let him appear on it before the election—and said he intended to suspend the station’s news service because state media does not provide the journalism that the country deserves. He said that he would end the state subsidies for Orbán’s right-wing-allied university and that Hungarian president Tamas Sulyok, a close ally of Orbán, was “unfit to serve as the guardian of legality” and “must leave office immediately.”

Republicans appear to be trying to grab all the turf they can before the midterm elections.

Today the Senate passed House Joint Resolution 140, a bill that overturns a 20-year mining ban upstream from the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness (BWCA) in Minnesota. Representative Pete Stauber (R-MN) introduced the measure, which passed the House in January. It clears the way for a subsidiary of Chilean mining giant Antofagasta to engage in copper-sulfide mining, which produces sulfuric acid, above the pristine BWCA. Those waters include 1,175 lakes and over 1,200 miles of rivers and streams. According to outdoor writer Wes Siler, about 165,000 people visit the BWCA annually, generating $1.1 billion in economic activity and supporting 17,000 jobs.

The Republicans’ attack on the BWCA for the benefit of a foreign billionaire feeds President Donald J. Trump’s ongoing crusade against Minnesota. Trump’s secretary of transportation, Sean Duffy, is targeting New York today as well, saying that the federal government will withhold $73.5 million from the state because it has refused to review the commercial driver’s licenses of almost 33,000 immigrants. New York officials say they are complying with federal law.

Trump is also continuing to try to exert his personal power over the government, threatening again to fire Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, whose term as chair ends in May but who has said he will continue on the board until the administration drops its trumped-up criminal investigation of him over alleged cost overruns on the renovations of Treasury buildings.

As Jacob Rosen and Olivia Gazis of CBS News noted, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard is supporting Trump’s attacks on those he perceives to be his enemies by sending to the Department of Justice two criminal referrals yesterday. One is for the former government official who was the whistleblower over the July 2019 phone call in which Trump told Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky he would release money the U.S. Congress had appropriated for Ukraine’s defense against Russia’s 2014 incursion…but only after Zelensky did him the “favor” of smearing Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden.

The whistleblower told the intelligence community inspector general: “I have received information from multiple U.S. Government officials that the President of the United States is using the power of his office to solicit interference from a foreign country in the 2020 U.S. election. This interference includes, among other things, pressuring a foreign country to investigate one of the President’s main domestic political rivals.”

Gabbard’s second referral is for the inspector general, Michael Atkinson, who found the complaint “credible” and “urgent” and set in motion the process of sharing it with the congressional intelligence committees, which led to Trump’s first impeachment.

As Representative Jim Himes (D-CT), the top-ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, noted, the effort to criminalize whistleblowing from 2019 for what was Trump’s well-established behavior is most likely an attempt to chill future whistleblower complaints.

There certainly appears to be concern on the part of MAGA loyalists that they are in danger of losing power, and that might mean legal repercussions. Testifying before the Senate Budget Committee today, Director of Office of Management and Budget Russell Vought denied that he had held back funds Congress had appropriated. Doing so is called “impoundment,” and it is illegal, but the administration has been engaged in it since it took office in January 2025.

Vought is a Christian nationalist and a key author of Project 2025, which sets out to dismantle the federal government. Today Vought said his job was to make sure money was spent “consistent with our agenda.” Senator Jeff Merkley (D-OR) told Emine Yücel of Talking Points Memo: “They absolutely impounded. He just lied to America.” “He has no respect for the American Constitution and the separation of powers,” Merkley said. “This is an authoritarian government operating as if the president is king. And if we want to save our democracy, we have to save ourselves from the strategy that Mr. Vought implemented.” Republican senator Chuck Grassley (IA) also reminded Vought: “Congress has appropriated money, and you don’t have the authority to impound it.”

Today Representative Thomas Massie (R-KY) posted on social media that an opinion from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which reviews and approves surveillance warrants against foreign actors and agents in the U.S., “raises serious concerns about FBI implementation of FISA 702,” the law that allows warrantless surveillance. Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) reposted Massie’s comment and added that he, Wyden, has sent “a classified letter to House and Senate colleagues about a secret interpretation of surveillance law that every American should be concerned about.”

This exchange seems to suggest that FBI director Kash Patel has authorized FBI agents to use surveillance on Americans without a warrant, illegally.

Churchill Ndonwie of the Miami Herald and Garrett Shanley of the Times/Herald Tallahassee Bureau reported yesterday that attorneys for the immigrants being held at the Florida detention center called “Alligator Alcatraz” said in court that after a judge protected the detainees’ right to use their phone and access their lawyers, the guards cut off their access to phones and beat and pepper-sprayed detainees, openly defying court orders to respect their civil rights. The facility is operated by the Florida Division of Emergency Management but must operate according to Department of Homeland Security standards.

Prosecutors in Minnesota today charged Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer Gregory Donnell Morgan Jr. with two counts of second-degree assault after he pulled alongside a car on a highway in Minnesota and pulled a gun on the occupants. There is a nationwide warrant for his arrest. Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty told reporters: “There is no such thing as absolute immunity for federal agents who violate the law in the state of Minnesota.”

Today the new Department of Homeland Security secretary, Markwayne Mullin, announced that acting director of ICE Todd Lyons will be leaving his position at the end of May. Illinois governor J.B. Pritzker posted: “Todd Lyons led a secret police force for Trump where masked agents attacked our own American streets, violated Constitutional rights, and shot our own citizens. We’ll hold you accountable too.”

Josh Kovensky of Talking Points Memo noted that in their panic over polls and the popularity of Democratic candidates, Republicans are trying to reclaim their base by turning back to Islamophobia and hoping a culture war will drown out concerns about gas prices, corruption, the Iran war, and Trump’s erratic behavior. Representative Andy Ogles (R-TN) posted that Muslims—who first came to the American colonies in the early 1600s, by the way—“don’t belong in American society,” and House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) called “the demand to impose Sharia Law in America…a serious problem.”

But there are signs that Trump is weakened enough that even past supporters are sliding away. At the beginning of his administration, Trump favored Chinese billionaire Justin Sun, who flattered Trump and poured as much as $90 million into the Trump family’s cryptocurrency ventures, becoming one of the largest investors in World Liberty Financial, founded by Trump’s sons. The Securities and Exchange Commission had sued Sun for securities and market manipulation in 2023, but in March 2026 it quietly settled the lawsuit for a payment of a $10 million fine.

On Tuesday, Sun accused Trump’s World Liberty Financial of setting up a trapdoor that allows company officers to freeze accounts. Sun says he has been unable to sell since September 2025, a freeze that a blockchain tracking group says has cost Sun about $80 million. On social media, Sun called out “the bad actors at [World Liberty Financial].”

According to Rob Wile of NBC News, World Liberty Financial responded by suggesting Sun himself had engaged in misconduct. “See you in court pal,” it posted.

Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, a sovereign wealth fund, was reviewing its investments even before the Iran war hit its finances, and yesterday Andrew Beaton of the Wall Street Journal reported that it is “on the verge of pulling” its funding from LIV Golf, the rival to the PGA Tour it launched with Trump’s blessing—and mostly on his golf courses—in 2022.

Meanwhile, Trump posted four screeds about the proposed White House ballroom today after U.S. District Judge Richard Leon, appointed by Republican president George W. Bush, stopped its above-ground construction but permitted construction of the below-ground bunker to continue. In one of his missives, Trump complained:

“The White House doesn’t have a Ballroom (No Taxpayer Money!), which Presidents have desperately wanted and desired for over 150 years, but a Trump Hating, Washington, D.C. District Court Judge, a man who has gone out of his way to undermine National Security, and to make sure that this Great Gift to America gets delayed, or doesn’t get built, is attempting to prevent future Presidents and World Leaders from having a safe and secure large scale Meeting Place, or Ballroom, one with Bomb Shelters, a State of the Art Hospital and Medical Facilities, Protective Partitioning, Top Secret Military Installations, Structures, and Equipment, Protective Missile Resistant Steel, Columns, Roofs, and Beams, Drone Proof Ceilings and Roofs, Military Grade Venting, and Bullet, Ballistic, and Blast Proof Glass—which all means that no future President, living in the White House without this Ballroom, can ever be Safe and Secure at Events, Future Inaugurations, or Global Summits. This Magnificent Space will allow them to carry out their vital duties as the Leader of our Nation. Furthermore, the Ballroom, which is being constructed on budget and ahead of schedule, is needed now. Almost all material necessary for its construction is being built and/or on its way to the site, ready for installation and erection. Much of it has already been paid for, costing Hundreds of Millions of Dollars. If somebody, especially one with no standing, had a complaint—Why wasn’t it filed many months earlier, long before Construction was started? The Public Record was open for all to see. Everybody knew that it was planned, and going to be built. This highly political Judge, and his illegal overreach, is out of control, and costing our Nation greatly. This is a mockery to our Court System! The Ballroom is deeply important to our National Security, and no Judge can be allowed to stop this Historic and Militarily Imperative Project. Thank you for your attention to this matter! President DONALD J. TRUMP”



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Juan Matute
R.B.R.
C.C.R.C.


Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Something to Know - 14 April

Do you remember the focus given to the election for NY City mayor.   You may recall all the anti-Mamdani negative comments; Muslim, Socialist, and all the established and anti-progressive hysteria.   This newsletter on Mamdani's first 100 days in office shows what can be achieved when the government focuses on the people.   We see a government full of old politics and cronyism in many cities, states, and our country.   This is not thinking outside the box.   We have this ability.   We only need to insist on electing honest and focused leaders to obtain what democracy allows.   It is so refreshing to write about something that is not Trump.

Christopher Armitage from The Existentialist Republic cmarmitage@substack.com 

10:50 AM (27 minutes ago)
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Within eight days, he and Governor Kathy Hochul announced $1.2 billion for universal childcare, funded entirely from existing state revenue.¹ The investment includes a 1,000-seat expansion of the 3-K program and 2,000 full-day, full-year seats for two-year-olds, the first time New York City has offered care at that age. Families in lower-income neighborhoods will receive spots first. The seats run from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., 260 days a year, making the program functionally full-time childcare rather than a school-day schedule.² By fall 2026, a parent in the Bronx who currently spends $26,000 a year on daycare will spend zero.³ Hochul deserves equal credit here. The money came through a city-state partnership, both levels of government investing at the same time.⁴

At his hundred-day rally, Mamdani announced five city-run grocery stores, one per borough, starting at La Marqueta in East Harlem.⁵ La Marqueta sits on city-owned land under the Metro-North viaduct, the same spot where Fiorello LaGuardia opened a public market in 1936 so working families could buy cheaper produce.⁶ The stores will contract with third-party operators, pay union wages, and sell staple goods at subsidized prices. In the half-mile radius around La Marqueta, nearly 40 percent of households receive public assistance or SNAP benefits.⁷ Grocery prices across the city have risen 66 percent since COVID.⁸ The first store could open by the end of 2027, with all five operating before the end of Mamdani’s term.

Government-run retail is one of the oldest and most ordinary functions of public administration in this country. Seventeen states operate government-owned liquor stores, many of them profitably, generating revenue that funds schools, roads, and public health programs. North Dakota has run a state-owned bank since 1919, turned a profit every year for over a century, and returned $335 million to the state in 2024 alone.⁹ Hundreds of American municipalities own their electric utilities and broadband networks. When these operations generate revenue, that money funds other public services. When they don’t, they still deliver something essential to the community, the same way schools, buses, fire departments, and police do. Safe food at affordable prices, like freedom of movement and public safety, is exactly the kind of thing government exists to provide.

His administration recovered $9 million in restitution for workers and small businesses cheated by employers, including a $5 million settlement for cheated delivery workers.¹⁰ He expanded protected time off for 4.3 million workers and delivered $34 million in repairs, settlements, and judgments for tenants fighting negligent landlords.¹¹ His Department of Consumer and Worker Protection proposed the first municipal click-to-cancel rule in the country, allowing the city to fine businesses that trap consumers in hard-to-cancel subscriptions and recurring charges.¹² Each of these creates an enforcement mechanism at the city level that functions regardless of what the federal Department of Labor or HUD does or fails to do.

On housing, Mamdani revived the Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants, which the Adams administration had defunded and sidelined, and appointed longtime tenant organizer Cea Weaver to run it.¹³ On his first day in office, his administration intervened in a private landlord bankruptcy case covering 93 buildings to protect the tenants inside them.¹⁴ He launched the LIFT task force to inventory city-owned land suitable for housing development, with a report due by July, and the SPEED task force to cut permitting barriers that slow construction.¹⁵ He ordered “Rental Ripoff” public hearings across the city to collect testimony from tenants about illegal fees, retaliation, neglected repairs, and economic discrimination, with agencies required to produce a public report and action plan.¹⁶ He appointed six of the nine members of the Rent Guidelines Board, which sets allowable rent increases for roughly two million New Yorkers in rent-stabilized apartments, and has signaled his intent to pursue a rent freeze when the board votes in June.¹⁷

Mamdani inherited a $12 billion budget deficit from the Adams administration, which the City Comptroller described as the largest gap since the Great Recession.¹⁸ The previous administration had systematically underbudgeted essential services. Adams budgeted $860 million for cash assistance in fiscal year 2026 when projections put the actual cost at nearly $1.7 billion.¹⁹ Mamdani’s response combined transparency with aggressive cost reduction. His administration appointed Chief Savings Officers at every city agency, required each to identify savings of 1.5 percent for fiscal year 2026 and 2.5 percent for fiscal year 2027, and agencies identified more than $1.7 billion in savings.²⁰ The switch to the NYCE PPO healthcare plan for city employees saves $411 million this year and $791 million next year.²¹ He secured $1.5 billion from the state through the Hochul partnership to cover expenses Albany had shifted onto the city.²² His administration terminated the McKinsey contract that had cost $9 million, began insourcing IT and consultant contracts across agencies, and audited dependent eligibility on employee health plans to remove ineligible dependents, projected to save an additional $100 million.²³ Combined, these actions cut the deficit nearly in half. The Comptroller called the resulting budget significantly more transparent and accurate than anything the previous administration produced.²⁴

The first-quarter crime numbers are where a skeptical reader should pay close attention. The city recorded 54 murders, the lowest first-quarter total since CompStat tracking began in 1994, down 28 percent from the prior year.²⁵ Brooklyn murders fell 57 percent. Manhattan fell 44 percent. Staten Island recorded zero murders across 178 consecutive days, the second-longest streak in recorded history.²⁶ Shooting incidents matched the prior year’s record low. Major crime dropped more than 5 percent across every borough. Burglaries fell 21 percent. Robberies fell nearly 8 percent.²⁷ Crime in public housing fell 7.2 percent, with record lows for murders, shootings, and robberies within NYCHA developments.²⁸ The NYPD seized more than 1,000 guns in the first quarter alone.²⁹

These numbers reflect trends built across multiple administrations and no honest person credits them to any single mayor. They do, however, demolish the argument that investing in people instead of policing makes a city dangerous. A democratic socialist funded universal childcare, opened grocery stores, expanded tenant protections, and limited ICE enforcement, and the city got safer.

On immigration, Mamdani barred ICE from entering city property, including schools, shelters, hospitals, and parking garages, without a judicial warrant.³⁰ He reversed the Adams-era order that had allowed federal immigration authorities into the Rikers Island jail complex.³¹ His administration launched a Know Your Rights campaign in 10 languages and distributed 30,000 flyers through houses of worship.³² When a Columbia University student was detained by ICE, Mamdani made a direct appeal to Trump and secured the student’s release.³³

On corrections, Mamdani committed to closing Rikers Island and ordered full compliance with the city’s ban on solitary confinement.³⁴ He appointed Stanley Richards as Department of Correction commissioner, the first formerly incarcerated person to lead the department in its history.³⁵ His administration opened a long-delayed therapeutic center at Bellevue Hospital to treat incarcerated people.³⁶

Mamdani filled 100,000 potholes at the fastest repair pace in eleven years.³⁷ He restored four bike and bus infrastructure projects the previous administration shelved and announced fast bus lane expansion across 45 priority corridors.³⁸ He committed to containerizing all residential trash citywide with a funded timeline, after the previous administration’s effort stalled without a deadline or a budget.³⁹ He launched an initiative to install public restrooms across all five boroughs.⁴⁰

His administration established the Office of LGBTQIA+ Affairs.⁴¹ He invested $20 million in early childhood mental health and moved homelessness outreach away from the NYPD.⁴²

Whether the first hundred days become a foundation or a high-water mark depends partly on Albany. The budget gap Mamdani inherited from previous city and state administrations constrains new investment, and his largest revenue proposal, the wealth tax, requires the governor and state legislature to act. But the trajectory is already set. By fall, 2,000 two-year-olds will have full-day, full-year childcare seats that did not exist in January. By 2027, a city-run grocery store will open in East Harlem selling subsidized food on the same spot where LaGuardia built one ninety years ago. Those cost money the way fire departments and public schools cost money: because delivering the service is the point.

Your city and state can do everything mentioned here and even more.

You can go find your city councilmember and state house representative. Tell them what you want, in person, persistently, and specifically.

A quick note: we need 10 subscribers every article to keep all this going. We reached that number yesterday, 18/30 days now. If you can be a member then you are personally keeping the activism machine running for MILLIONS of monthly readers!


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Juan Matute
R.B.R.
C.C.R.C.