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OPINION

Did Mamdani Benefit from Election Rigging?

Did Mamdani Benefit from Election Rigging?
Zohran Mamdani (Getty Images)

Betsy McCaughey By Thursday, 03 July 2025 11:44 AM EDT Current | Bio | Archive

New Yorkers are under the false impression that the taxpayer-funded New York City Campaign Finance Board is leveling the playing field to make voting for Gotham's next mayor and other elected officials fair.

Just the opposite is true. The CFB is doling out obscene amounts of our money to tilt the scales in favor of left-wing candidates.

The political consultants, pollsters and campaign industry raked in gobs of cash during the recent primary, while the city was pushed to the extreme left, nominating radical antisemite and communist Zohran Mamdani to be the Democratic candidate for mayor.

Looking ahead to the November general election, taxpayers will be paying more than $100 per vote cast. Worse, if the CFB is allowed to continue its biased methods, most of that money will support left-wing candidates, including Mamdani, and kneecap moderate rivals.

The CFB was established as an independent city agency in 1988 to give political newbies a fair shot at competing against established pols. The idea was that every dollar raised in small private contributions would be matched by a dollar of taxpayer funds.

Since then, the match has been increased to a staggering $8 to $1 in the primary and another $8 to $1 in the general election. It's a goldmine for candidates in the CFB's good graces. As Mamdani apparently appears to be.

But not everyone is.

Last December, the CFB declared incumbent Mayor Eric Adams ineligible for public financing, alluding to federal allegations that have since been withdrawn. The CFB's action was election meddling — the old "guilty until proven innocent" trick.

It's not the first time. In 2013 the CFB denied matching funds to then-Comptroller John Liu in his race for the mayoralty, citing unproven allegations. That allowed the communist-loving Bill de Blasio to dominate — a disaster for the city.

This time around, the CFB is turning a blind eye to abuses by Mamdani that violate the spirit, and possibly the letter, of the public campaign finance system.

On May 18, Mamdani urged supporters to donate to former City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams' campaign. Some 370 of his supporters then gave to Adams, making her eligible for nearly $15,000 in public funding. That's taxpayer money going to a candidate who didn't have the grassroots support to qualify.

Not a word from the CFB, even after Adams then instructed her supporters to vote for Mamdani if the ranked-choice voting went into a second round or more.

CFB also chose to ignore the biggest contributor to Mamdani's campaign: the Democratic Socialists of America. On Monday, DSA held a Zoom call displaying to its supporters what it provided to Mamdani's campaign during the last six months: 1.6 million door knocks, 2.3 million phone dials and 30,000 volunteers.

DSA explained that it started early, trained leaders and provided canvassing over six months in over 60 neighborhoods.

Businesses face severe donation restrictions, and candidates have to report every penny or in-kind resource they receive. But the DSA poured millions of dollars worth of expertise, manpower and sweat equity into a hostile takeover of the Democratic primary on Mamdani's behalf. The CFB was mum.

Mamdani's also backed by a far-flung network of leftist nonprofits that receive taxpayer funding courtesy of Democratic lawmakers — then provide the expertise, manpower and connections to win political races. They're outstripping the unions in impact and influence.

And worse, gaming the campaign finance system and corrupting its original purpose.

Mamdani reportedly raised $1,708,494 in individual contributions, which the CFB matched $8 to $1 to yield a whopping $8.75 million just for the primary.

But according to CFB filings, 94% — virtually all the contributionswere bundled by one person — Jerrod MacFarlane. He's a professional fundraiser from The Action Lab, a left-of-center group.

Action Lab is headquartered in Brooklyn, thanks to a "community projects" grant sponsored by Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez that paid for the building.

Mamdani frequently boasts about the grassroots volunteer movement powering his campaign. But what happened last Tuesday was not an organic rising up of everyday New Yorkers.

In a city and state dominated by the Left, lawmakers are using taxpayer money to boost the nonprofit radical advocacy industrial complex, which then orchestrates their reelection.

The CFB doles out more taxpayer money, pretending the process is fair.

Time to eliminate the CFB, let taxpayers off the hook, and devise another method to make elections fair.

Betsy McCaughey, Ph.D., is the former lieutenant governor of New York State. Read Betsy McCaughey's Reports — Here Now.

© Creators Syndicate Inc.


McCaughey
New Yorkers are under the false impression that the taxpayer-funded New York City Campaign Finance Board is leveling the playing field to make voting for Gotham's next mayor and other elected officials fair. Just the opposite is true.
mamdani, new york, elections, mayor
746
2025-44-03
Thursday, 03 July 2025 11:44 AM
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