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Can a Mamdani Rise and Shine in India?

Mathew John Mathew John
08 Dec 2025

The primary trigger for this rumination is a comment that, in Zohran Mamdani's epic victory in the recent New York Mayor race, the anti-Hindutva forces in our backyard visualise the beginning of the end of the Modi era, "even though the Mamdani episode has happened more than 8000 miles away." Short of walking on water, every conceivable competency and virtue has been conferred on the 34-year-old political greenhorn who has taken the world by storm.

His irresistible charm, transparent goodness, intellect and passion have won him devotees across the social spectrum. His youthful idealism has broken the mould of the archetypal dysfunctional politicians fixated on the unjust status quo – the Chuck Schumers, Andrew Cuomos, Lindsay Grahams. His politics with a moral purpose, focused on affordability and working people's concerns, has even called out the pussy-footed, 'more of the same' brand of politics of centrist democrats like Barack Obama, who did not endorse Mamdani, but hedged his bets, belatedly calling him up in a lukewarm show of support.

Zohran's audacious gambit of bearding the devil in his own den reminded us, by its stark contrast, of our Vishwaguru's terror-stricken dodge of Trump to the extent that the inveterate globe-trotter even sacrificed international jaunts to escape a meeting with "my friend Doland." Running scared, Modi dared not confront Trump after he threatened to impose 350 per cent tariffs to halt the Indo-Pak war.

He sidestepped Trump's impromptu invitation to the White House in June, at the time the Pakistan Army Chief was visiting. He passed over an invitation to attend the Gaza peace summit in Egypt and skipped the ASEAN summit in Kuala Lumpur because Trump would be there. According to a German news outlet, Modi has repeatedly refused to take calls from Trump.

Modi's coyness has cost India, with 50 per cent tariffs still in place even as China and other countries have secured concessions through dialogue at the highest levels. While Indo-US relations are estranged, our bete noire, Pakistan, has become a close buddy of the USA, and Trump is cosying up to Xi Jinping, planning a visit to China next year.

Meanwhile, the much-anticipated fireworks at the Mamdani-Trump meeting on November 21 turned out to be a love-fest with nary a false note. It was surreal to see David and Goliath bond as they did, expressing their shared love of New York City and their need to build more housing and reduce crime. From calling Mamdani "a 100 percent Communist lunatic," Trump now referred to him as "a rational person ... and I expect to be helping him, not hurting him."

Mamdani displayed uncanny political savvy by focusing not on the areas of difference but on their shared desire to serve and better the lives of New Yorkers. Trump, another disruptor of the status quo, has understood that Mamdani speaks and acts for his people, and they support him. As the New York Times pointed out, Mamdani received much greater warmth and goodwill from Trump than he could ever have from the Democratic Party bigwigs.

Clearly, Zohran Mamdani is the next big thing in America, a remarkable achievement considering that his political philosophy is so radically different from the capitalist-libertarian ethic and fanatically pro-Israel disposition of the ruling elite. He believes that billionaires shouldn't exist and the rich should be taxed commensurate with their wealth.

In a country where both parties and the majority public opinion support Israel and the Zionist cause, Mamdani has been unapologetically pro-Palestinian, stating that he cannot support Israel so long as it is an officially Jewish state, accusing Israel of committing genocide and vowing to arrest Netanyahu if he sets foot in New York. In a letter circulated before the election, 1100 rabbis cited Mamdani by name. They warned that the safety and dignity of Jews depended on electing candidates who accept Israel as a cornerstone of Jewish identity.

He dug in with his anti-Israel activism despite the blowback. Yet, he won over one in five Jewish democrats deeply influenced by his passionate and reasoned opposition to the genocidal Israeli government, bigotry and hate. He has relentlessly backed the helpless migrants, even angrily confronting the dreaded Tom Homan and referring to ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) as "a rogue government entity", thereby demonstrating that certain human values transcend political calculations. His is a politics with a strong moral core.

Would a Zohran Mamdani make it in India? On the face of it, Mamdani has all the attributes needed to be an unmitigated success. Genetically, he is as Indian as anybody – the son of a Gujarati father and a Punjabi mother, both leaders in their respective fields of academics and film direction. Take his ideology: he is a fervent believer in democratic socialism, a doctrine that is inscribed in the Preamble of our Constitution. His easy charm and smashing good looks would give our film celebrities a run for their money. His commitment to working people's concerns and affordability is what our politicians promise at election time but rarely deliver.

Mamdani's people-centric concerns have drawn comparisons with the AAP's politics, but that is an odious equivalence. Though it may sound like a contradiction in terms, he is a pragmatic idealist who doesn't react with his heart but with his brain. He is the epitome of pluralism – in upbringing, thought and action, a far cry from the bush-shirted Machiavellian AAP leader, who went missing during the North-East Delhi pogrom in 2020 for fear of antagonising the majority community. On all counts, Zohran Mamdani is the kind of politician this country desperately needs.

But hold on! There's an everlasting stigma attached to him - he is Muslim, and this is no country for a Muslim! Out here, hate crimes against Muslims – lynching, bulldozing, social ostracism, housing apartheid, incendiary rhetoric - have been normalised, even valorised. Starting with Gujarat 2002, the poster boy of Hindutva has consolidated power by bashing Muslims. His imprimatur is unmistakable in the deviant, anti-minority bigotry being freely practised in the public square.

Cocking a snook at our Constitution that guarantees the rights of minorities to lead a life of dignity and equality, iniquitous laws such as the CAA, UCC, the anti-conversion laws, et, have been passed to ensure the inexorable marginalisation and exclusion of Muslims. Umar Khalid and myriad others are victims of a blatantly unfair justice system. Although Muslims constitute 14.2 per cent (200 million) of the population, they are an insignificant presence in the political sphere, represented by a mere 26 members in a 788-member Parliament, a stark reflection of the deliberate sidelining of Muslims by political parties.

The Islamophobia in America is almost benign by comparison. Hey Zohran, you have invoked the spirit of Mahatma Gandhi while taking on the might of racist America and fighting for the dispossessed, "turning the page on a politics that abandons the many and answers only to the few." You quoted Nehru's immortal 'Tryst with Destiny' speech, which was interpreted by some hopeful souls as inter alia a call for India and its diaspora to make a new beginning, like America has!

Perish the thought! In today's India, your heroes and their ideals have been forgotten, supplanted by gross Hindutva icons. Whatever your talent, skills and worthiness, there's no place for the likes of you in our benighted land because YOU ARE MUSLIM!

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