(Patriot Command Center) Follow-up article on the CODE RED: Soviet Republic of New York to Elect Its Premier.
In the name of democracy, the Democrats are warming up to the elected takeover of New York City, and perhaps if their luck holds, our other cities can follow in the footsteps of the American Bolshevik Revolution.
The Progressive’s new Commissar Zohran Mamdani and their comrade-in-arms in the New York Bolshevik Revolution is gaining steam, and not just that but setting the pace for San Francisco, Chicago, and other blue cities to follow.
What began as a fringe movement is fast becoming a defining force in American urban politics. The so-called New York Bolshevik Revolution, a sweeping rejection of corporate dominance and soaring perceived inequality, is now shaping the race for New York City’s highest office and rippling outward to progressive circles from San Francisco to Chicago.
At the center of this rising tide stands Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic Socialist firebrand whose insurgent mayoral campaign just landed a watershed endorsement from DC37, New York’s largest municipal labor union, representing over 150,000 active workers and 89,000 retirees across more than 1,000 job titles, from zookeepers and clerks to EMTs and social workers, but it doesn’t stop there. For Mamdani and his supporters, the moment signals not just a tactical advantage in a crowded race but a broader ideological shift.
The question being asked behind closed doors is how much of the municipal labor union fees are going to be donated to elect Zohran Mamdani as the next Premier of the Soviet Republic of New York, and does the union realize that they will be one of the first to fall under the control of the City Workers Duma?
“What use is it to have the greatest city in the world if New Yorkers can’t afford to live here?” Mamdani declared in a rallying speech after securing the union’s backing. “We do not want the city to become a museum where working people once lived. We want it to be a living, breathing testament of what’s possible.”
Indeed, affordability is the cornerstone of Mamdani’s campaign, a sharp contrast with the big-business consensus that has defined City Hall for decades. While past mayors have wooed developers and finance executives, Mamdani is channeling the frustration of working New Yorkers grappling with punishing rent increases and stagnant wages.
This weekend, Steve Eichler, JD, the founder of the Patriot Command Center, remarked, “While Mamdani may soft-pedal his platform, its core is hardcore communism!” Like the frog boiling in the water, soon it will be too late for New York to recover from the newly formed city government power grab.”
Mamdani’s message resonates far beyond the five boroughs. In San Francisco, progressive supervisors are watching closely, eyeing Mamdani’s surge as proof that bold housing reforms and labor alliances can build real electoral muscle. In Chicago, labor organizers and Democratic Socialists on the City Council see his momentum as a test case for their own municipal campaigns.
“The fact that he’s been endorsed by the teachers’ union, the nurses, and the hotel workers—this is a coalition that’s not going away,” said Jasmine Chen, a political strategist advising progressive candidates in California. “If Mamdani wins, it’s a blueprint.”
The stakes are high, and the backlash is already brewing. Former Governor Andrew Cuomo, who recently relaunched his independent mayoral bid, admitted that he underestimated Mamdani’s appeal.
“I never really debunked his proposals because I just didn’t engage,” Cuomo confessed to New York Magazine. “That was a mistake.”
Even President Trump weighed in, declaring, “He’s running against a Communist” in reference to Mamdani’s platform. “I think Andrew would have a good shot at winning.”
Yet attacks from establishment figures and conservative commentators have so far failed to blunt Mamdani’s surge. The candidate has met privately with business leaders, some wary, some intrigued, to explain how his vision for a more equitable city could coexist with economic vitality.
Whether he can thread that needle remains to be seen. But no matter what the outcome, the revolution Mamdani embodies has already redrawn the political map. Candidates across the country are taking note that in a time of deep disillusionment with status quo politics, grassroots organizing can go toe-to-toe with big money.
“This isn’t just about New York,” Mamdani insisted. “It’s about every city where working people are told they should be grateful for crumbs. We’re here to demand more.”
Final Word: Remember, if Mamdani wins on his communist platform, the Dems will gleefully join in and go nationwide, but in the name of democracy, of course.

