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Service industry workers pose around "Elena the Essential Worker" during a rally in support of the introduction of the Raise the Wage Act--which includes a $15 minimum wage for tipped workers and is also part of President Joe Biden's American Rescue Plan--at the National Mall on January 26, 2021 in Washington, D.C. (Photo: Jemal Countess/Getty Images for One Fair Wage)
As the small restaurant sector reels from the devastating economic effects of the coronavirus pandemic, a report published Thursday by advocates for tipped workers and a $15 minimum wage revealed that phasing out subminimum wages for such workers--which can be as low as a little over $2 an hour--does not cause businesses to close.
"We are at a critical moment for tipped service industry workers, mostly women and people of color, who are facing unprecedented rates of housing and food insecurity, unemployment, and poverty."
--Saru Jayaraman,
One Fair Wage
In fact, the report--published by the Food Labor Research Center at the University of California, Berkeley and One Fair Wage--found that the five states with the greatest rate of decline in open hospitality businesses during the pandemic are all states with a subminimum wage.
That wage was set at $2.13 under a 1996 federal law resulting largely from lobbying by then-National Restaurant Association president Herman Cain. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, six states--Alabama, Georgia, Lousiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Tennessee--still set their wage for such workers at $2.13, with no requirement for employers to guarantee workers' combined pay reaches the $7.25 federal minimum wage threshold after tips.
Campaigners say it is no coincidence that these states are all in the South, as tipping itself is a direct legacy of slavery, as the report notes. Among its key findings:
"The corporate trade lobby has ruthlessly gone after independent small business restaurants, restaurateurs, and tipped workers--the heartbeat of our economy--claiming that small business restaurants cannot bear the 'burden' of paying a full minimum wage for tipped workers during the pandemic, and that phasing out the subminimum wage for tipped workers would cause small business restaurants to close," Saru Jayaraman, executive director and founder of One Fair Wage, said in a statement.
\u201cCheck it out! @SaruJayaraman on @KQED talking about #WagingChange film, #RaiseTheWage Act, and #OneFairWage. \n\nLISTEN:\n\nhttps://t.co/TKL4aqWoQU\u201d— One Fair Wage (@One Fair Wage) 1613595600
"We are at a critical moment for tipped service industry workers, mostly women and people of color, who are facing unprecedented rates of housing and food insecurity, unemployment, and poverty," added Jayaraman. "Our nation's working people and our economy simply cannot afford to face the consequences of the false and inaccurate claims of the corporate restaurant lobby. It is time to build back better and restore the soul of our country. Over 500,000 small businesses and nearly 14 million workers are counting on it."
To that end, more than 200 small business restaurant employers have signed a letter released in conjunction with the report endorsing the Raise the Wage Act, a bill (pdf) that includes ending the subminimum wage for tipped workers. The bill--led by Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.) in the House and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) in the Senate--would phase in the $15 hourly minimum wage over the next four years and index it to median wage growth thereafter.
The legislation is now part of the Biden administration's $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan for economic and pandemic recovery.
The letter calls the bill "particularly important to restaurant owners, because restaurants that would like to pay our employees livable wages are at a competitive disadvantage to restaurant groups that continue to leverage wages as low as $2.13 per hour to keep the true cost of food and hospitality artificially low in the minds of consumers."
"We must protect and uplift the most marginalized in the restaurant sector and ensure that as we level the playing field, tipped workers are not left behind," it states.
Chef Jose Andres, founder of the food aid nonprofit World Central Kitchen, said that "sometimes when we talk about people who face hunger, we always seem to point to another country," but "the reality is that this is happening right here in our backyards, in our restaurants."
"I'm proud to be supporting One Fair Wage--it's a gender issue, it's a racial justice issue... We have a chance to address these disparities with federal action."
--Chef Jose Andres,
World Central Kitchen
"It breaks my heart to know that many of these meals we are serving to those who cannot feed themselves or to people who share an industry with me, the restaurant industry," he added. "I'm proud to be supporting One Fair Wage--it's a gender issue, it's a racial justice issue... We have a chance to address these disparities with federal action."
Kathleen Menegozzi, owner of Jack's Pizza in Alton and Pittsfield, New Hampshire, said her business supports "a full minimum wage for all workers with tips on top because it's the right thing for workers and it creates more equality and sustainability for the industry."
However, resistance to raising wages remains fierce among capitalist interests and the politicians they influence through campaign contributions--resistance that flies in the face of the fact that two-thirds of Americans want the minimum wage increased to $15 an hour.
\u201cHere\u2019s the truth: the fight to raise the minimum wage to a living wage of $15 is as important as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 & the Voting Rights Act of 1965. We cannot get this close & then fall back.\u201d— Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II (@Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II) 1613567884
In a rare case of GOP lawmakers proposing a minimum wage hike, Sens. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) and Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) earlier this week said they would jointly introduce a bill that "gradually raises" the federal pay floor, although they did not provide specific details. They did, however, tie the pay hike to the provision "ensuring that businesses cannot hire illegal immigrants."
The GOP senators' announcement, dismissed as "transparently cynical" by Patriotic Millionaires chair Morris Pearl, came on the same day that fast-food workers and other frontline employees across the nation walked off the job to demand at least $15 an hour, collective bargaining rights, and better working conditions.
Supporters of the Raise the Wage Act got a boost earlier this week when the Congressional Budget Office, in response to a request from Sanders, said that raising the federal minimum hourly wage to $15 would have a significantly broader budget impact than two provisions of the 2017 GOP tax cut legislation passed through reconciliation--Arctic fossil fuel drilling and repealing the Affordable Care Act's individual mandate.
That impact, said Sanders, provides more evidence of why the wage increase complies with the Senate rules for passing a measure through the reconciliation process.
\u201cThe Congressional Budget Office has said that the Raise the Wage Act of 2021 would have a sizeable impact on the budget. That means it may be able to clear the hurdle of the Byrd Rule and be passed through reconciliation.\n\n#RaiseTheWage https://t.co/G9CBirmYWn\u201d— Fight For 15 (@Fight For 15) 1613656820
"It is popular, it is what the people want, it is what justice demands," Sanders told CNN. "So I'm gonna fight as hard as I can, and I believe that we will succeed."
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As the small restaurant sector reels from the devastating economic effects of the coronavirus pandemic, a report published Thursday by advocates for tipped workers and a $15 minimum wage revealed that phasing out subminimum wages for such workers--which can be as low as a little over $2 an hour--does not cause businesses to close.
"We are at a critical moment for tipped service industry workers, mostly women and people of color, who are facing unprecedented rates of housing and food insecurity, unemployment, and poverty."
--Saru Jayaraman,
One Fair Wage
In fact, the report--published by the Food Labor Research Center at the University of California, Berkeley and One Fair Wage--found that the five states with the greatest rate of decline in open hospitality businesses during the pandemic are all states with a subminimum wage.
That wage was set at $2.13 under a 1996 federal law resulting largely from lobbying by then-National Restaurant Association president Herman Cain. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, six states--Alabama, Georgia, Lousiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Tennessee--still set their wage for such workers at $2.13, with no requirement for employers to guarantee workers' combined pay reaches the $7.25 federal minimum wage threshold after tips.
Campaigners say it is no coincidence that these states are all in the South, as tipping itself is a direct legacy of slavery, as the report notes. Among its key findings:
"The corporate trade lobby has ruthlessly gone after independent small business restaurants, restaurateurs, and tipped workers--the heartbeat of our economy--claiming that small business restaurants cannot bear the 'burden' of paying a full minimum wage for tipped workers during the pandemic, and that phasing out the subminimum wage for tipped workers would cause small business restaurants to close," Saru Jayaraman, executive director and founder of One Fair Wage, said in a statement.
\u201cCheck it out! @SaruJayaraman on @KQED talking about #WagingChange film, #RaiseTheWage Act, and #OneFairWage. \n\nLISTEN:\n\nhttps://t.co/TKL4aqWoQU\u201d— One Fair Wage (@One Fair Wage) 1613595600
"We are at a critical moment for tipped service industry workers, mostly women and people of color, who are facing unprecedented rates of housing and food insecurity, unemployment, and poverty," added Jayaraman. "Our nation's working people and our economy simply cannot afford to face the consequences of the false and inaccurate claims of the corporate restaurant lobby. It is time to build back better and restore the soul of our country. Over 500,000 small businesses and nearly 14 million workers are counting on it."
To that end, more than 200 small business restaurant employers have signed a letter released in conjunction with the report endorsing the Raise the Wage Act, a bill (pdf) that includes ending the subminimum wage for tipped workers. The bill--led by Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.) in the House and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) in the Senate--would phase in the $15 hourly minimum wage over the next four years and index it to median wage growth thereafter.
The legislation is now part of the Biden administration's $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan for economic and pandemic recovery.
The letter calls the bill "particularly important to restaurant owners, because restaurants that would like to pay our employees livable wages are at a competitive disadvantage to restaurant groups that continue to leverage wages as low as $2.13 per hour to keep the true cost of food and hospitality artificially low in the minds of consumers."
"We must protect and uplift the most marginalized in the restaurant sector and ensure that as we level the playing field, tipped workers are not left behind," it states.
Chef Jose Andres, founder of the food aid nonprofit World Central Kitchen, said that "sometimes when we talk about people who face hunger, we always seem to point to another country," but "the reality is that this is happening right here in our backyards, in our restaurants."
"I'm proud to be supporting One Fair Wage--it's a gender issue, it's a racial justice issue... We have a chance to address these disparities with federal action."
--Chef Jose Andres,
World Central Kitchen
"It breaks my heart to know that many of these meals we are serving to those who cannot feed themselves or to people who share an industry with me, the restaurant industry," he added. "I'm proud to be supporting One Fair Wage--it's a gender issue, it's a racial justice issue... We have a chance to address these disparities with federal action."
Kathleen Menegozzi, owner of Jack's Pizza in Alton and Pittsfield, New Hampshire, said her business supports "a full minimum wage for all workers with tips on top because it's the right thing for workers and it creates more equality and sustainability for the industry."
However, resistance to raising wages remains fierce among capitalist interests and the politicians they influence through campaign contributions--resistance that flies in the face of the fact that two-thirds of Americans want the minimum wage increased to $15 an hour.
\u201cHere\u2019s the truth: the fight to raise the minimum wage to a living wage of $15 is as important as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 & the Voting Rights Act of 1965. We cannot get this close & then fall back.\u201d— Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II (@Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II) 1613567884
In a rare case of GOP lawmakers proposing a minimum wage hike, Sens. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) and Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) earlier this week said they would jointly introduce a bill that "gradually raises" the federal pay floor, although they did not provide specific details. They did, however, tie the pay hike to the provision "ensuring that businesses cannot hire illegal immigrants."
The GOP senators' announcement, dismissed as "transparently cynical" by Patriotic Millionaires chair Morris Pearl, came on the same day that fast-food workers and other frontline employees across the nation walked off the job to demand at least $15 an hour, collective bargaining rights, and better working conditions.
Supporters of the Raise the Wage Act got a boost earlier this week when the Congressional Budget Office, in response to a request from Sanders, said that raising the federal minimum hourly wage to $15 would have a significantly broader budget impact than two provisions of the 2017 GOP tax cut legislation passed through reconciliation--Arctic fossil fuel drilling and repealing the Affordable Care Act's individual mandate.
That impact, said Sanders, provides more evidence of why the wage increase complies with the Senate rules for passing a measure through the reconciliation process.
\u201cThe Congressional Budget Office has said that the Raise the Wage Act of 2021 would have a sizeable impact on the budget. That means it may be able to clear the hurdle of the Byrd Rule and be passed through reconciliation.\n\n#RaiseTheWage https://t.co/G9CBirmYWn\u201d— Fight For 15 (@Fight For 15) 1613656820
"It is popular, it is what the people want, it is what justice demands," Sanders told CNN. "So I'm gonna fight as hard as I can, and I believe that we will succeed."
As the small restaurant sector reels from the devastating economic effects of the coronavirus pandemic, a report published Thursday by advocates for tipped workers and a $15 minimum wage revealed that phasing out subminimum wages for such workers--which can be as low as a little over $2 an hour--does not cause businesses to close.
"We are at a critical moment for tipped service industry workers, mostly women and people of color, who are facing unprecedented rates of housing and food insecurity, unemployment, and poverty."
--Saru Jayaraman,
One Fair Wage
In fact, the report--published by the Food Labor Research Center at the University of California, Berkeley and One Fair Wage--found that the five states with the greatest rate of decline in open hospitality businesses during the pandemic are all states with a subminimum wage.
That wage was set at $2.13 under a 1996 federal law resulting largely from lobbying by then-National Restaurant Association president Herman Cain. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, six states--Alabama, Georgia, Lousiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Tennessee--still set their wage for such workers at $2.13, with no requirement for employers to guarantee workers' combined pay reaches the $7.25 federal minimum wage threshold after tips.
Campaigners say it is no coincidence that these states are all in the South, as tipping itself is a direct legacy of slavery, as the report notes. Among its key findings:
"The corporate trade lobby has ruthlessly gone after independent small business restaurants, restaurateurs, and tipped workers--the heartbeat of our economy--claiming that small business restaurants cannot bear the 'burden' of paying a full minimum wage for tipped workers during the pandemic, and that phasing out the subminimum wage for tipped workers would cause small business restaurants to close," Saru Jayaraman, executive director and founder of One Fair Wage, said in a statement.
\u201cCheck it out! @SaruJayaraman on @KQED talking about #WagingChange film, #RaiseTheWage Act, and #OneFairWage. \n\nLISTEN:\n\nhttps://t.co/TKL4aqWoQU\u201d— One Fair Wage (@One Fair Wage) 1613595600
"We are at a critical moment for tipped service industry workers, mostly women and people of color, who are facing unprecedented rates of housing and food insecurity, unemployment, and poverty," added Jayaraman. "Our nation's working people and our economy simply cannot afford to face the consequences of the false and inaccurate claims of the corporate restaurant lobby. It is time to build back better and restore the soul of our country. Over 500,000 small businesses and nearly 14 million workers are counting on it."
To that end, more than 200 small business restaurant employers have signed a letter released in conjunction with the report endorsing the Raise the Wage Act, a bill (pdf) that includes ending the subminimum wage for tipped workers. The bill--led by Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.) in the House and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) in the Senate--would phase in the $15 hourly minimum wage over the next four years and index it to median wage growth thereafter.
The legislation is now part of the Biden administration's $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan for economic and pandemic recovery.
The letter calls the bill "particularly important to restaurant owners, because restaurants that would like to pay our employees livable wages are at a competitive disadvantage to restaurant groups that continue to leverage wages as low as $2.13 per hour to keep the true cost of food and hospitality artificially low in the minds of consumers."
"We must protect and uplift the most marginalized in the restaurant sector and ensure that as we level the playing field, tipped workers are not left behind," it states.
Chef Jose Andres, founder of the food aid nonprofit World Central Kitchen, said that "sometimes when we talk about people who face hunger, we always seem to point to another country," but "the reality is that this is happening right here in our backyards, in our restaurants."
"I'm proud to be supporting One Fair Wage--it's a gender issue, it's a racial justice issue... We have a chance to address these disparities with federal action."
--Chef Jose Andres,
World Central Kitchen
"It breaks my heart to know that many of these meals we are serving to those who cannot feed themselves or to people who share an industry with me, the restaurant industry," he added. "I'm proud to be supporting One Fair Wage--it's a gender issue, it's a racial justice issue... We have a chance to address these disparities with federal action."
Kathleen Menegozzi, owner of Jack's Pizza in Alton and Pittsfield, New Hampshire, said her business supports "a full minimum wage for all workers with tips on top because it's the right thing for workers and it creates more equality and sustainability for the industry."
However, resistance to raising wages remains fierce among capitalist interests and the politicians they influence through campaign contributions--resistance that flies in the face of the fact that two-thirds of Americans want the minimum wage increased to $15 an hour.
\u201cHere\u2019s the truth: the fight to raise the minimum wage to a living wage of $15 is as important as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 & the Voting Rights Act of 1965. We cannot get this close & then fall back.\u201d— Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II (@Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II) 1613567884
In a rare case of GOP lawmakers proposing a minimum wage hike, Sens. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) and Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) earlier this week said they would jointly introduce a bill that "gradually raises" the federal pay floor, although they did not provide specific details. They did, however, tie the pay hike to the provision "ensuring that businesses cannot hire illegal immigrants."
The GOP senators' announcement, dismissed as "transparently cynical" by Patriotic Millionaires chair Morris Pearl, came on the same day that fast-food workers and other frontline employees across the nation walked off the job to demand at least $15 an hour, collective bargaining rights, and better working conditions.
Supporters of the Raise the Wage Act got a boost earlier this week when the Congressional Budget Office, in response to a request from Sanders, said that raising the federal minimum hourly wage to $15 would have a significantly broader budget impact than two provisions of the 2017 GOP tax cut legislation passed through reconciliation--Arctic fossil fuel drilling and repealing the Affordable Care Act's individual mandate.
That impact, said Sanders, provides more evidence of why the wage increase complies with the Senate rules for passing a measure through the reconciliation process.
\u201cThe Congressional Budget Office has said that the Raise the Wage Act of 2021 would have a sizeable impact on the budget. That means it may be able to clear the hurdle of the Byrd Rule and be passed through reconciliation.\n\n#RaiseTheWage https://t.co/G9CBirmYWn\u201d— Fight For 15 (@Fight For 15) 1613656820
"It is popular, it is what the people want, it is what justice demands," Sanders told CNN. "So I'm gonna fight as hard as I can, and I believe that we will succeed."
Judge Rossie Alston Jr. ruled the plaintiffs had failed to prove the groups provided "ongoing, continuous, systematic, and material support for Hamas and its affiliates."
A federal judge appointed in 2019 by US President Donald Trump has dismissed a lawsuit filed against pro-Palestinian organizations that alleged they were fronts for the terrorist organization Hamas.
In a ruling issued on Friday, Judge Rossie Alston Jr. of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia found that the plaintiffs who filed the case against the pro-Palestine groups had not sufficiently demonstrated a clear link between the groups and Hamas' attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.
The plaintiffs in the case—consisting of seven Americans and two Israelis—were all victims of the Hamas attack that killed an estimated 1,200 people, including more than 700 Israeli civilians.
They alleged that the pro-Palestinian groups—including National Students for Justice in Palestine, WESPAC Foundation, and Americans for Justice in Palestine Educational Foundation—provided material support to Hamas that directly led to injuries they suffered as a result of the October 7 attack.
This alleged support for Hamas, the plaintiffs argued, violated both the Anti-Terrorism Act and the Alien Tort Statute.
However, after examining all the evidence presented by the plaintiffs, Alston found they had not proven their claim that the organizations in question provide "ongoing, continuous, systematic, and material support for Hamas and its affiliates."
Specifically, Alston said that the claims made by the plaintiffs "are all very general and conclusory and do not specifically relate to the injuries" that they suffered in the Hamas attack.
"Although plaintiffs conclude that defendants have aided and abetted Hamas by providing it with 'material support despite knowledge of Hamas' terrorist activity both before, during, and after its October 7 terrorist attack,' plaintiffs do not allege that any planning, preparation, funding, or execution of the October 7, 2023 attack or any violations of international law by Hamas occurred in the United States," Alston emphasized. "None of the direct attackers are alleged to be citizens of the United States."
Alston was unconvinced by the plaintiffs' claims that the pro-Palestinian organizations "act as Hamas' public relations division, recruiting domestic foot soldiers to disseminate Hamas’s propaganda," and he similarly dismissed them as "vague and conclusory."
He then said that the plaintiffs did not establish that these "public relations" activities purportedly done on behalf of Hamas had "aided and abetted Hamas in carrying out the specific October 7, 2023 attack (or subsequent or continuing Hamas violations) that caused the Israeli Plaintiffs' injuries."
Alston concluded by dismissing the plaintiffs' case without prejudice, meaning they are free to file an amended lawsuit against the plaintiffs within 30 days of the judge's ruling.
"Putin got one hell of a photo op out of Trump," wrote one critic.
US President Donald Trump on Saturday morning tried to put his best spin on a Friday summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin that yielded neither a cease-fire agreement nor a comprehensive peace deal to end the war in Ukraine.
Writing on his Truth Social page, the president took a victory lap over the summit despite coming home completely empty-handed when he flew back from Alaska on Friday night.
"A great and very successful day in Alaska!" Trump began. "The meeting with President Vladimir Putin of Russia went very well, as did a late night phone call with President Zelenskyy of Ukraine, and various European Leaders, including the highly respected Secretary General of NATO."
Trump then pivoted to saying that he was fine with not obtaining a cease-fire agreement, even though he said just days before that he'd impose "severe consequences" on Russia if it did not agree to one.
"It was determined by all that the best way to end the horrific war between Russia and Ukraine is to go directly to a Peace Agreement, which would end the war, and not a mere Cease-fire Agreement, which often times do not hold up," Trump said. "President Zelenskyy will be coming to DC, the Oval Office, on Monday afternoon. If all works out, we will then schedule a meeting with President Putin. Potentially, millions of people's lives will be saved."
While Trump did his best to put a happy face on the summit, many critics contended it was nothing short of a debacle for the US president.
Writing in The New Yorker, Susan Glasser argued that the entire summit with Putin was a "self-own of embarrassing proportions," given that he literally rolled out the red carpet for his Russian counterpart and did not achieve any success in bringing the war to a close.
"Putin got one hell of a photo op out of Trump, and still more time on the clock to prosecute his war against the 'brotherly' Ukrainian people, as he had the chutzpah to call them during his remarks in Alaska," she wrote. "The most enduring images from Anchorage, it seems, will be its grotesque displays of bonhomie between the dictator and his longtime American admirer."
She also noted that Trump appeared to shift the entire burden of ending the war onto Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, and he even said after the Putin summit that "it's really up to President Zelenskyy to get it done."
This led Glasser to comment that "if there's one unwavering Law of Trump, this is it: Whatever happens, it is never, ever, his fault."
Glasser wasn't the only critic to offer a scathing assessment of the summit. The Economist blasted Trump in an editorial about the meeting, which it labeled a "gift" to Putin. The magazine also contrasted the way that Trump treated Putin during his visit to American soil with the way that he treated Zelenskyy during an Oval Office meeting earlier this year.
"The honors for Mr. Putin were in sharp contrast to the public humiliation that Mr. Trump and his advisers inflicted on Mr. Zelenskyy during his first visit to the White House earlier this year," they wrote. "Since then relations with Ukraine have improved, but Mr. Trump has often been quick to blame it for being invaded; and he has proved strangely indulgent with Mr. Putin."
Michael McFaul, an American ambassador to Russia under former President Barack Obama, was struck by just how much effort went into holding a summit that accomplished nothing.
"Summits usually have deliverables," he told The Atlantic. "This meeting had none... I hope that they made some progress towards next steps in the peace process. But there is no evidence of that yet."
Mamdani won the House minority leader's district by double digits in New York City's Democratic mayoral primary, prompting one critic to ask, "Do those voters not matter?"
Zohran Mamdani is the Democratic nominee for New York City mayor, but Democratic U.S. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries—whose district Mamdani won by double digits—is still refusing to endorse him, "blue-no-matter-who" mantra be damned.
Criticism of Jeffries (D-N.Y.) mounted Friday after he sidestepped questions about whether he agreed with the democratic socialist Mamdani's proposed policies—including a rent freeze, universal public transportation, and free supermarkets—during an interview on CNBC's "Squawk Box" earlier this week.
"He's going to have to demonstrate to a broader electorate—including in many of the neighborhoods that I represent in Brooklyn—that his ideas can actually be put into reality," Jeffries said in comments that drew praise from scandal-ridden incumbent Democratic Mayor Eric Adams, who opted to run independently. Another Democrat, disgraced former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, is also running on his own.
"Shit like this does more to undermine faith in the institution of the Democratic Party than anything Mamdani might ever say or do," Amanda Litman, co-founder and executive director of Run For Something—a political action group that recruits young, diverse progressives to run for down-ballot offices—said on social media in response to Jeffries' refusal to endorse Mamdani.
"He won the primary! Handily!!" Litman added. "Does that electorate not count? Do those voters not matter?"
Writer and professor Roxane Gay noted on Bluesky that "Jeffries is an establishment Democrat. He will always work for the establishment. He is not a disruptor or innovator or individual thinker. Within that framework, his gutless behavior toward Mamdani or any progressive candidate makes a lot of sense."
City College of New York professor Angus Johnston said on the social network Bluesky that "even if Jeffries does eventually endorse Mamdani, the only response available to Mamdani next year if someone asks him whether he's endorsing Jeffries is three seconds of incredulous laughter."
Jeffries has repeatedly refused to endorse Mamdani, a staunch supporter of Palestinian liberation and vocal opponent of Israel's genocidal annihilation of Gaza. The minority leader—whose all-time top campaign donor is the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, according to AIPAC Tracker—has especially criticized Mamdani's use of the phrase "globalize the intifada," a call for universal justice and liberation.
Mamdani's stance doesn't seem to have harmed his support among New York's Jewish voters, who according to recent polling prefer him over any other mayoral candidate by a double-digit margin.