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Mamdani Launches His First Salvos in New York’s Fiscal Battle

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Mamdani Launches His First Salvos in New York’s Fiscal Battle

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The Mamdani Beat

/ February 19, 2026

Mamdani Launches His First Salvos in New York’s Fiscal Battle

The mayor, the governor, and the members of the city’s big-ticket tax base are all squaring off over prospective tax increases and service cuts.

D.D. Guttenplan

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Mayor Zohran Mamdani presents his preliminary city budget at a City Hall meeting.
(Michael Brochstein / Sipa USA via AP)

Judging by Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s performance in City Hall’s Blue Room on Wednesday, there are certain features of New York’s fiscal follies that have changed little during the last several decades.

“Over the last year, New York faced a historic fiscal crisis…” Although that sounds like Mamdani, who used the same phrase to describe the city’s current budget challenges, it was actually former Governor Basil Paterson averting doom back in 2009. When David Dinkins took office in 1990, he, too, inherited a fiscal crisis, as did Rudy Guiliani, who had to close a projected gap of $2.3 billion—out of a total of $31.6 billion—in his first year.

Viewed historically, especially in the context of a total budget of $127 billion, the city’s current $5.4 billion projected deficit—already down from the $12 billion announced a few weeks ago—looks less like a fiscal chasm and more like a pothole. Yet the demands of custom, when coupled with the young mayor’s evident wish to project the financial sobriety signalled by his dark suits and sombre neckties, meant that the press corps—and their readers, viewers and listeners—were again treated to the latest production in a kind of political theatre that never seems to go out of fashion.

The whole performance is perhaps best summed up by the phrase “or we’ll kill this dog,” an allusion to the classic 1973 cover of the National Lampoon, which threatened desperate measures “if you don’t buy this magazine.”

In Mamdani’s case, the threat was to raise the city’s property taxes—which as the mayor noted is the only significant municipal revenue source not subject to the dictates of Governor Kathy Hochul and the state legislature—by 9.5 percent above the current level if Albany continues to balk at the mayor’s preferred policy of a 2 percent increase in city income taxes for New Yorkers earning over $1 million a year and an increase in taxes on the city’s most profitable corporations. The New York Times, The City, Gothamist, Bloomberg and the New York Post all helpfully put the word “threat” in their headlines, with the Post front page depicting a masked and pistol-packing Mamdani ordering the governor to “Stick Em Up!” (Since this was the Post, both of Mamdani’s guns had …
Mamdani Launches His First Salvos in New York’s Fiscal Battle Log In Email * Password * Remember Me Forgot Your Password? Log In New to The Nation? Subscribe Print subscriber? Activate your online access Skip to content Skip to footer Mamdani Launches His First Salvos in New York’s Fiscal Battle Magazine Newsletters Subscribe Log In Search Subscribe Donate Magazine Latest Archive Podcasts Newsletters Sections Politics World Economy Culture Books & the Arts The Nation About Events Contact Us Advertise Current Issue Politics / The Mamdani Beat / February 19, 2026 Mamdani Launches His First Salvos in New York’s Fiscal Battle The mayor, the governor, and the members of the city’s big-ticket tax base are all squaring off over prospective tax increases and service cuts. D.D. Guttenplan Share Copy Link Facebook X (Twitter) Bluesky Pocket Email Ad Policy Mayor Zohran Mamdani presents his preliminary city budget at a City Hall meeting. (Michael Brochstein / Sipa USA via AP) Judging by Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s performance in City Hall’s Blue Room on Wednesday, there are certain features of New York’s fiscal follies that have changed little during the last several decades. “Over the last year, New York faced a historic fiscal crisis…” Although that sounds like Mamdani, who used the same phrase to describe the city’s current budget challenges, it was actually former Governor Basil Paterson averting doom back in 2009. When David Dinkins took office in 1990, he, too, inherited a fiscal crisis, as did Rudy Guiliani, who had to close a projected gap of $2.3 billion—out of a total of $31.6 billion—in his first year. Viewed historically, especially in the context of a total budget of $127 billion, the city’s current $5.4 billion projected deficit—already down from the $12 billion announced a few weeks ago—looks less like a fiscal chasm and more like a pothole. Yet the demands of custom, when coupled with the young mayor’s evident wish to project the financial sobriety signalled by his dark suits and sombre neckties, meant that the press corps—and their readers, viewers and listeners—were again treated to the latest production in a kind of political theatre that never seems to go out of fashion. The whole performance is perhaps best summed up by the phrase “or we’ll kill this dog,” an allusion to the classic 1973 cover of the National Lampoon, which threatened desperate measures “if you don’t buy this magazine.” In Mamdani’s case, the threat was to raise the city’s property taxes—which as the mayor noted is the only significant municipal revenue source not subject to the dictates of Governor Kathy Hochul and the state legislature—by 9.5 percent above the current level if Albany continues to balk at the mayor’s preferred policy of a 2 percent increase in city income taxes for New Yorkers earning over $1 million a year and an increase in taxes on the city’s most profitable corporations. The New York Times, The City, Gothamist, Bloomberg and the New York Post all helpfully put the word “threat” in their headlines, with the Post front page depicting a masked and pistol-packing Mamdani ordering the governor to “Stick Em Up!” (Since this was the Post, both of Mamdani’s guns had …
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