Folks, we’ve officially entered the part of the political cycle where the marionette stops pretending there are no strings.
Governor Kathy Hochul — the alleged “moderate” Democrat who spent her entire re-election campaign swearing on a stack of New York pension funds that she would not raise a single tax on a single New Yorker — just announced she’s advancing a brand-new pied-à-terre tax aimed squarely at wealthy NYC homeowners. The ink wasn’t even dry on the press release before socialist Mayor Zohran Mamdani and his Democratic Socialists of America fan club were on every camera in Manhattan claiming credit for the whole thing. Like a kid who just bullied his mom into buying him a Nintendo Switch by screaming in the middle of a Target.
So just to recap the timeline: Hochul promised no new taxes. Mamdani promised to soak the rich. Mamdani won. Hochul lost. The end.
Read her lips? Don’t bother. Read Mamdani’s. That’s whose mouth the words come out of these days.
## The ‘Moderate Democrat’ Who Isn’t
You remember back when Kathy Hochul was being marketed to swing voters as a sensible upstate Democrat in pearls? She was supposed to be the firewall. The grown-up. The one who would keep New York from sliding off the edge of the table while AOC and her TikTok caucus chanted slogans in the corner. We were told — over and over and over — that she was a different breed. Not like the New York City crowd. Not like the activist class. A real moderate.
That was, what, eighteen months ago?
Because this week she went on the record promoting a pied-à-terre tax on second homes valued north of five million bucks in NYC — a policy that has been a wishlist item of the Democratic Socialists of America for literally a decade. A policy she shot down repeatedly. A policy her own budget office has previously warned would be hard to administer, easy to dodge, and nuclear with the donor class.
And now? Now it’s “actually under consideration.”
You know what else was once “actually under consideration”? Reading.
## Mamdani Spikes the Ball
The cherry on top of this dumpster sundae is the fact that Mamdani — a man who, lest we forget, openly identifies as a socialist and was elected mayor of the largest city in America on a platform that read like a Che Guevara fan-fic — went on the record this week and said, in essentially these words, that Hochul caved because of him.
He’s right. That’s what kills me. He’s right.
He campaigned on dragging the Democratic Party left. He promised his DSA bench he could move the governor. He told the donors to scream all they wanted. And now, less than half a year into his mayoralty, he’s got the moderate Democrat governor of the entire state of New York advancing his policy proposals like she’s the assistant manager and he’s the regional VP.
The mask isn’t slipping. The mask is on the floor. The mask is in the dumpster. The mask has been wheeled to the curb and the sanitation department has already picked it up.
## Why You Should Care If You Don’t Live in Manhattan
Now you’re sitting there in Ohio or Florida or Tennessee thinking, “Bob, why do I care if some guy with a $7 million apartment on the Upper West Side has to pay an extra ten grand a year? Sounds like a him problem.”
Fair. But here’s the thing — this isn’t about the apartment. This is about the playbook.
The playbook goes like this: the socialist wing of the Democratic Party gets a guy elected mayor in a major city. That guy uses the bully pulpit to demand left-wing policy at the state level. The “moderate” governor folds because she needs the city’s voter turnout in the next primary. New tax goes through. The wealthy figure out how to dodge it within six months. The state’s revenue projection collapses. Then — and this is the part you should pay attention to — they come back to the well and “expand” the tax to the middle class. Because the rich didn’t pay enough. Because there’s a budget gap. Because someone has to.
That someone is always you.
We’ve watched this movie. We watched it in California. We watched it in Illinois. We watched it in New Jersey. The pied-à-terre tax is the appetizer. The middle-class wealth tax is the entrée. And dessert is a moving truck full of your neighbors heading south on I-95.
## The Tell
Here’s the tell that this is pure political surrender and not actual policy: Hochul’s own people can’t even articulate why she changed her mind. There’s no new economic study. There’s no new revenue emergency. There’s no new constitutional amendment forcing her hand. There is, however, a very loud socialist mayor in a very big city who very publicly told her to do it.
That’s the entire policy rationale. “Mamdani said so.”
If your governor’s tax plan can be summarized as “the loudest guy in the room yelled at me,” you don’t have a governor. You have a doormat with a name plate.
## What Happens Next
Budget talks are live in Albany right now. Hochul will pretend the pied-à-terre tax is a “targeted revenue measure” aimed at “out-of-state speculators.” Mamdani will give two more press conferences claiming credit. The DSA will fundraise off it by Friday. Bloomberg’s old crew will quietly start moving their LLCs to Palm Beach over the weekend. And by this time next year, somebody on the floor of the State Assembly will be proposing the exact same tax on second homes valued at $2 million. Then $1 million. Then your single-family home in Buffalo because you have a finished basement and a deck.
And Kathy Hochul will be on a stage somewhere insisting, with a perfectly straight face, that she’s still a moderate. That she still doesn’t believe in raising taxes on working New Yorkers. That she’s not Mamdani’s hand puppet.
Sure, Kathy.
And the puppet’s mouth moves on its own.
