OP-ED: Black America’s 2026 Urban Challenges: Mayor Mamdani Case Study
By Benjamin F. Chavis Jr., NNPA NewswireNNPA NEWSWIRE — We are the Black Press of America. For the past 199 years, since the first publication of Freedom’s Journal in New York City in 1827, we have had to call out those who pretended to be our political allies. Accountability from those we help to elect is A fair and just demand.
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Today across the United States of America in some of the largest urban cities, Black Americans are having renewed nightmares about being taken for granted, ignored and being erase in history and in the public square.
Ethnic cleansing is an insidious form of systematic racism. In response to the increasing “Browing of America,” concerns are raised about the unfulfillment of prior commitments that were supposed to ensure racial equality in municipal politics, economics, and urban revitalization.
Voters of color – both Black and Latino New Yorkers – backed Andrew Cuomo heavily in the primary, but then ultimately decided to give Zohran Mamdani a chance: https://manhattan.institute/article/how-mamdani-flipped-the-black-and-hispanic-vote overcoming their skepticism on housing, transit, and public safety, and reportedly moved by his affordability agenda,
This trust, on the part of Black voters in particular, may have been misplaced. Why? Several troubling early signs that the new mayor is disregarding New Yorkers of color, and treating them like Ralph Ellison’s iconic Invisible Man.
Mamdani was forced to apologize to Black New Yorkers for overlooking the historical contributions of enslaved and indigenous people to building the city when he talked about a city “built by immigrants” in his inauguration speech. https://www.blackenterprise.com/zohran-mamdani-apologies-to-black-new-yorkers/
The Mamdani administration is holding a series of “Rental Ripoff” hearings, spearheaded by Cea Weaver, the director of his Office to Protect Tenants, who called homeownership a form of white supremacy. The mayor is reaching out to help private landlords instead of prioritizing fixing public housing (NYCHA) which has a dismal track record of terrible conditions (no heat, year-plus waits for repairs, rampant pests and mold).
Rev. Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr. is President and CEO of the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA) and can be reached at [email protected]

