Media coverage of Zohran Mamdani’s first day in office glossed over his early exercise of mayoral power.

My favorite example of the shallowness of the coverage is CNN’s bombshell revelation that Mamdani was “distributing hot chocolate” at city hall, an image that trivializes him and the moment. The second-to-last sentence made passing reference to “the first action of his administration, signing a set of executive orders focused on housing.”

Curious about what exactly those orders are? Tough luck, the multi-billion dollar cable outlet’s story doesn’t say.

Though I’m a few billion short in resources, I was somehow able to track down Mamdani’s executive orders, and immediately realized there’s a lot more there than just “a set of executive orders focused on housing.” The flurry of orders is itself unusual for a New York Mayor: they traditionally spend their first day on symbolic pomp and circumstance, hobnobbing with the big wigs and the billionaires.

Though we are constantly told that Mamdani is on a steep learning curve, within hours of taking office, he signed the following executive orders:

  • “Prior Executive Orders” (1 page): Revokes all orders issued by the previous administration after Sept. 26, 2024 — including the one that got most of the media attention, walking back the previous mayor’s pledge of allegiance to Israel.

  • “Mayor’s Office Structure and Operations” (23 pages): Establishes the cabinet and specialized offices for Economic Justice and Pro Bono legal aid.

  • “Revitalizing the Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants” (3 pages): Establishes an office to coordinate tenant rights and improve housing quality.

  • “Leveraging City-Owned Land to Accelerate Housing” (3 pages): Establishes a task force to identify city-owned sites for 25,000 new housing units.

  • “Improving Process to Accelerate Affordable Housing” (3 pages): Creates a task force to streamline permitting and expedite housing production.

Pretty substantive first day for a politician whom the major media has spent months writing off as inexperienced, unserious, and ideological.

Hidden within the executive order on the structure of the Mayor’s office is a significant though subtle shift in the hierarchy of the NYPD. Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch, the symbol of national security astride a city that is undeniably the golden target of international terrorism, has been quietly downgraded (another development that the media seems to have missed). Contrary to long-time practice the Commissioner will no longer report directly to Mamdani but to a deputy mayor.

A source intimately familiar with City Hall politics and practice tells me that one of the impacts of this downgrade is a literal change of Mamdani’s day-to-day as mayor. For anyone who has ever covered City Hall or followed the Mayor’s day, the source says, the Mayor sits down one-on-one with the Police Commissioner first thing every morning, emulating the president’s meeting with his national security advisor and receiving the morning intelligence briefing.

Another source, an NYPD officer I asked about the significance of the decision, told me: “If he [Mamdani] does nothing it’s meaningless; but in theory Zohran and the first deputy mayor can now put added pressure on Tisch.”

  • LeninWeave [none/use name, any]@hexbear.net
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    25 days ago

    Contrary to long-time practice the Commissioner will no longer report directly to Mamdani but to a deputy mayor.

    This isn’t even a political decision he just hates being around her (based).

  • ratboy [they/them]@hexbear.net
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    25 days ago

    Okay Mamdani, I see you. I will not join the 5D chess gang yet but glad you’re hitting the ground running.

    Contrary to long-time practice the Commissioner will no longer report directly to Mamdani but to a deputy mayor.

    Who is the deputy mayor and wouldn’t it be better for Zohran to meet with Tisch directly in terms of oversight? Don’t quite understand how this is any sort of demotion as opposed to just a diss. She’s still commissioner.

    • Wheaties [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      25 days ago

      It’s a small scheduling change, but it does seem kind of important. The article mentions that past mayors would get a brief from the Commish every morning. Now, there’s a filter between him and the police. The commisioner’s reports have to clear the hump of another person going, “do I really need to bother my boss over this?” Means police perspective on the city isn’t guaranteed to be top of mind each day.

      • ratboy [they/them]@hexbear.net
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        25 days ago

        The commisioner’s reports have to clear the hump of another person going, “do I really need to bother my boss over this?”

        Right, but do we know who the deputy mayor is and that they have the best judgment to decide what Zohran should be privy to and what he shouldn’t? I would assume that one would want NYPD on as short of a leash as possible if rampant abuses of power within the police force are a major concern.

        • blottica [they/them]@hexbear.net
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          25 days ago

          it would probably be Dean Fuleihan his first deputy who worked for de blasio before, but I think hes got like 4 other deputys so it could be one of them.

            • blottica [they/them]@hexbear.net
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              25 days ago

              yeah hes got a bunch for different specific areas. which I dont think is too strange tbh but if it does turn out to be Dean who is doing this day to day meeting he is the most “company man” they got hes like a lifetime advisor for the dems so who knows what they are actually gunna do with that.

  • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    25 days ago

    the Mayor sits down one-on-one with the Police Commissioner first thing every morning, emulating the president’s meeting with his national security advisor and receiving the morning intelligence briefing.

    Starting each day off as if you’re in a war is not a good dynamic to have for a position that should be in service to the people.

    Zohran can have his meeting with his deputy mayor later, and anything important can be filtered alongside a dozen other different things that the deputy mayor can be including in their meeting. Let’s say for example that the deputy mayor position also meets a whole bunch of other leadership each morning, for example the head of the new office for tenants. The head cop is essentially in an equal reporting position to the other heads of important departments created or existing. All of which then get filtered in with equal value.

    It’s an important change in priorities. Instead of the city cop shit being treated like a warzone as #1 priority of the day, all things can be treated with due priority. The dynamic is better.

    • SerLava [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      24 days ago

      the Mayor sits down one-on-one with the Police Commissioner first thing every morning, emulating the president’s meeting with his national security advisor and receiving the morning intelligence briefing.

      That’s such a pathetic War On Terror bullshit performance, good riddance

    • Le_Wokisme [they/them, undecided]@hexbear.net
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      25 days ago

      it’s not like there are any good cops for him to appoint, and i doubt we’d ever earnestly say “at least the new guy isn’t Tisch” so while there were alternatives we wouldn’t have liked any of them either.

      i’d have to know way more than has been said on this website about her and how nyc works, but since mamdani isn’t completely purging the nypd and never campaigned on such a fantasy there are some small upsides besides the fact that Frank Serpico is too old for the job:

      • prevented certain kinds of sabotage she could’ve done as a lame duck

      • saves leverage and social capital for other cop issues. the low level pigs may be more amenable to milquetoast reforms if it’s not coming from a new boss.

      • offering her to stay on puts some onus on her to cooperate

      • preemptively replacing her ahead of time would’ve been seen as ideological (and based), now if she doesn’t play ball, replacing her would be on those grounds instead of him being a radical.

      having the unarmed non-pig crisis response team and a budget freeze (which is a cut from inflation) are decent first steps toward something better, even if he’s not a secret abolitionist.

      • ratboy [they/them]@hexbear.net
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        25 days ago

        prevented certain kinds of sabotage she could’ve done as a lame duck

        Can you expand on this a bit? Not sure how that would work

        having the unarmed non-pig crisis response team and a budget freeze (which is a cut from inflation)

        Has he implemented the budget freeze yet? NYPD is in the middle of contract negotiations right now, so I don’t know that he can unilaterally implement that unless there is either 1. a clause in the contract that allows that ot 2. he can prove “economic exigencies” that would support that. These are negotiations for the public sector though so maybe there are certain rules I’m not privy to

        • Le_Wokisme [they/them, undecided]@hexbear.net
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          25 days ago

          no, he hasn’t implemented that yet. it’s something he campaigned on and you’re correct he can’t just do it arbitrarily.

          prevented certain kinds of sabotage she could’ve done as a lame duck

          Can you expand on this a bit? Not sure how that would work

          no, i don’t know enough about the internal operations of the nypd to say anything specific. if you have a bunch of time and a position of authority in an organization you can always make a mess for the next guy. She could make that mess while she’s in the job too, of course.

  • DornerStan
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    24 days ago

    I’m not gonna speak to this case and I’m too dumb to really know anything, but it’s frustrating that everything is so dominated by spectacle and image nowadays to where the enemy gets to use every bit of subterfuge at their disposal to undermine us, but we can’t really do the same against them.

    Like maybe Mamdani will be disproportionately based and be the exception that proves the rule, but there’s a plethora of examples of institutionalists giving lipservice to workers and then selling out to the bourgeoisie, and like zero examples of the opposite. But if someone were doing that, they’d lose support of leftists immediately, and for good reason since it’s pretty much always the former. You gotta talk out of two sides of your face to get anywhere in politics, and the side that persists post-election is the one that’s getting buttered (a tortured synthesis of two idioms was on my to-do list for today sorry).

    Idk electoralism is a fuck, party politics is the solution