The leaked files outline a coordinated strategy rather than a loose collection of wishes. DSA organizers discuss “testing” boycotts and divestment at every level of city life before exporting the model nationwide.
This approach involves weaponizing municipal contracts, public pensions, and nonprofit regulations to punish any perceived connection to Israel. It also means daring opponents to label such actions as discrimination.
Mamdani’s past rhetoric, including his comparison of the NYPD’s “boot” to the IDF, now appears less like an isolated comment and more like a warning. Whether he fully embraces the plan or simply drifts toward it, the stakes are considerable.
New York is not merely a campus or a niche city council. It serves as the cultural and financial capital of the country, home to the largest Jewish population outside Israel.
If City Hall becomes a staging ground for an aggressive anti-Israel experiment, the consequences will extend far beyond the Hudson River. The effects will ripple through national politics, philanthropy, and even foreign policy.
Americans would be forced to confront a difficult question: where does activism end and extremism begin? The distinction becomes increasingly blurred as such strategies move from discussion to implementation.
The coordinated nature of these plans suggests deliberate effort rather than spontaneous expression. Observers will watch closely to see how this approach unfolds and what resistance it encounters along the way.