‘There
Should Be Flashing Red Lights’: Steve Bannon on Mamdani’s Win
Trump’s
former White House strategist has a warning for Republicans gloating about
Zohran Mamdani’s election.
By Megan
Messerly
11/05/2025
10:00 AM EST
More than
a few Republicans are celebrating Zohran Mamdani’s victory, seeing the
34-year-old democratic socialist as a political gift and an albatross for the
Democratic Party. Steve Bannon is not among them.
The
former White House chief strategist has long preached the idea that populism is
the engine of modern politics. And he sees Mamdani’s election as mayor of New
York City as proof of its staying power — and a sign of the growing
anti-establishment force on the left that Republicans would be foolish to
ignore.
“Tonight
should be a wake up call to the populist nationalist movement under President
Trump,” he said in an interview with POLITICO Magazine just after midnight on
Wednesday. “These are very serious people, and they need to be addressed
seriously.”
Bannon
seemed impressed by the Mamdani campaign’s ability to turn out low-propensity
voters — “this is kind of the Trump model” — though he branded Mamdani a
“neo-Marxist,” rather than a populist. And he is eager to have Trump and his
administration battle Mamdani in the days ahead.
In a
wide-ranging conversation following Democrats’ big wins in New Jersey and
Virginia, Bannon also ripped Republicans for their failures, discussed how the
GOP can avoid a 2026 midterm rout and laid out what Trump’s immediate next
moves should be.
This
interview has been edited for length and clarity.
A lot of
Republicans, including the NRCC, are cheering Mamdani’s win tonight, already
trying to make him the latest Democratic boogeyman. But you’ve also warned
Republicans to be careful what they wish for with Mamdani — that he’s a
“skilled politician” who connects with voters on affordability in ways the GOP
hasn’t. Where’s the flashing red light for Republicans in his victory?
First
off, all those people that said he wasn’t going to win the primary and he was
great to run against, I think, have been proven wrong. This is not a debating
society.
Tonight,
what you saw out of Mamdani is something you’ve never seen this entire race. I
mean, that’s an angry guy. That was in your face, and particularly the
president’s face, up in his grill, and the president responded: “And so it
begins.”
People
better understand they have a fight on their hands. This guy is a serious guy.
I’ve said this from the beginning — I said early in the primary.
Forget
the Republican Party in New York — that’s a joke — but the national Republican
Party and some of the smartest strategists do not realize the power of the
Working Families Party and the [Democratic Socialists of America] for ground
game. Modern politics now is about engaging low-propensity voters, and they
clearly turned them out tonight, and this is kind of the Trump model. This is
very serious.
You call
Mamdani a Marxist, but a lot of other folks would call him a populist —
He’s a
Marxist, a neo-Marxist.
Are there
alarm bells for Republicans in this victory? I mean, he clearly is trying to
make this populist appeal.
There
should be even more than alarm bells. There should be flashing red lights all
over.
This is
not Karen Bass. This is not the guy in Chicago. You’re going to see a whole new
group of Mamdanis in these major urban cities because they’re just flooded with
immigrants, right? That’s where his vote came from, principally, and the
progressive left, these kids have come up through the public school system.
This is the flower of what the progressive left has delivered over the last 40
or 50 years. You saw it tonight and people, we’re going to have a fight on our
hands.
All the
Republicans sit there and tell me, “Oh, Steve, this is what we’ve always
wanted, a socialist.” I said, “This guy is a Bolshevik, he’s a Marxist.” These
guys are going to hunker down for a while, and they’re going to take over every
apparatus of New York City government, and they’re going to start putting the
squeeze on business. And you’re going to see, they’re going to roll, they’re
going to roll hard.
His
speech tonight could not have been nastier or more aggressive. He mocked Cuomo.
That is one of the first families of the Democratic Party, particularly in the
state of New York.
And then
with Trump, it was a direct throwdown to Trump, unlike any politician’s ever
done. He tried to call President Trump out, and President Trump responded.
I think
tomorrow — and I’ve argued from the beginning — this guy’s citizenship should
be checked immediately.
To me, it
ought to be addressed. It ought to be addressed by the State Department, DHS
and the Justice Department, to go through all this. If the guy lied on his
naturalization papers, he ought to be deported out of the country immediately
and put on a plane to Uganda.
Mamdani
was born in Uganda and moved here when he was 7 years old and is an American
citizen. Have you spoken to President Trump about trying to denaturalize him?
I don’t
want to say who I’ve talked to, but on the [War Room] show, I have been very
pointed about that. I’ve been very upfront about my beliefs on this.
I told
people this back in July. A bunch of donors asked me to come up after he won
[the primary], because I kept saying, “This guy’s going to win.” What Cuomo ran
here is like “The Last Hurrah,” the novel. In the movie by John Ford, after
World War II, a politician named Frank Skeffington — which was really [Boston
Mayor] James Michael Curley — ran the same kind of race he’d been running for
years and got smoked by a young upstart.
Cuomo’s
almost run kind of “The Last Hurrah.” He’s run this kind of campaign that, oh,
he’s got the endorsement of The New York Times, he’s got the endorsement of the
New York Post, and he’s raised $40 million, he’s up on TV, he’s got all the
police unions, and all the unions in town and all the union bosses. It didn’t
matter.
What this
kid got was 5,000 people canvassing in Brooklyn by going door-to-door, the
Working Families Party and the DSA. People should understand they’re the rising
power organizationally.
Tonight
should be a wake up call to the populist nationalist movement under President
Trump, that these are very serious people, and they need to be addressed
seriously, not dismissed, like so many of the pundits have done.
A lot of
folks have seen echoes of Trump in Mamdani, insofar as their anti-establishment
authenticity and their resonance with working class voters. Do you see them as
part of the same political wave?
I’ve said
for a while populism is going to be the wave of the future. Now, this is much
more radical than that — but, yes. Listen, the managed decline of our country
by the elites is the basic undertone of what this kind of political revolution
in the country has been.
Not that
he’s got the same type of qualities as Trump, but it’s anti-establishment. And
I think what he showed people is he’s a fighter. And so, you know, game on.
Game respects game.
Who’s
better positioned to harness that insurgent, anti-establishment sentiment
heading into ‘26 and ‘28, the left or the right?
I think
it’s going to be a fight for both.
One thing
I think that is pretty evident tonight is that the structures of the two
parties — Democrat and Republican — don’t really matter. The energy is in the
populist right, Trump, and what Mamdani is, what I would call the neo-Marxist
left. The Democratic Party was basically worthless here. The Republican Party,
as a party, was worthless.
Look at
these numbers tonight. [New Jersey Gov.-elect] Mikie Sherrill and [Virginia
Gov.-elect Abigail] Spanberger are going to win by 15 points. At one time,
[polls] had Mikie Sherrill winning by 1 or 2 points. Last I saw, she could win
by 10, 12, 14, 15 points. These are blowouts.
Democrats
had a theme tonight. The theme was stop Trump, anti-Trump. We’ve got to beat
Trump. It was all Trump, Trump, Trump, and the Republicans in New Jersey,
particularly New Jersey, and in Virginia had no theme whatsoever.
The
official Republican Party just wants to tap Trump along and then be done with
him, be done with MAGA, and get back to what they want to do — neocon,
neoliberal.
[Virginia
Gov. Glenn] Youngkin, I don’t know what he was doing in Iowa, because his
political career ended tonight. He destroyed the Republican Party in the
Commonwealth of Virginia, for maybe a generation. Did you see these [state]
House losses? They lost seats they thought were impossible to lose.
And this
is going to become a national issue immediately, because there’s no doubt
Democrats are going to try to go 10-1 in House representation [through
redistricting], and the wind’s to their back, and they’re going to go all in
right now.
And the
House itself may hang in the balance, given what happened in California and
Virginia. You saw [Maryland Gov.] Wes Moore is going to jump right on the
bandwagon. He comes out of MSNBC right about 10:30 at night saying, “Hey, I’m
calling together a commission, and we’re going to look at fairness.” You’re
going to see a lot more of this springing up.
What do
Republicans need to do differently to avoid a midterm bloodbath next year?
I think
it’s going to be very simple: You’re either with MAGA or you’re not. The
Republican Party has no following. It has a bunch of donors, and it has the Fox
TV network, and it has Karl Rove and all these worn-out ideas you see in the
House and the Senate. It’s just embarrassing. The Republican Party is just a
husk. When Trump is engaged, when Trump’s on the ballot, when Trump’s team can
get out there and get low-propensity voters — because that’s the difference now
in modern politics — when they can do it, they win. When he doesn’t do it, they
don’t.
So
[candidates have] got to make a decision, and I think President Trump ought to
force their hand.
You
double and triple down with Trump. If you’re not prepared to do that, you’re
going to get smoked, because you’re not going to see Trump voters come out,
like in Virginia, just like in New Jersey.
Is
embracing Trump enough? Or do these candidates actually need to embrace
populism and economic nationalism?
I do
believe that the White House is going to pivot now back to even a bigger focus
on domestic policies, not just affordability, but job creation, making sure
that the Big Beautiful Bill is fully implemented, making sure that all these
investments that have been talked about actually get made.
I think
the commerce secretary tomorrow should be designated by the president to make
sure that these things are done, that ground is dug, that these plants are
starting to be built. I think it’s now time to double and triple down on
President Trump’s agenda. If you execute the agenda, we’re going to be in good
shape. He’s got a populist agenda. He’s got a nationalist agenda. You’ve just
got to get on with it.
To that
point though, President Trump is getting some of his lowest approval ratings
ever right now. Why do you think that is?
First,
I’m not so sure. They could never properly gauge President Trump — we’ve talked
about this for a long time. But that being said, I think people need to feel
that the economy is working for them. I don’t think there’s any doubt about it.
The program is the right program. It just needs to be executed. And I think
people need to feel that it’s being executed.
Spending
so much time in the Mideast, spending so much time in Ukraine, I understand
he’s trying to bring world peace and trying to make sure that the world doesn’t
slide into an even deeper element of the Third World War, but his domestic
program is fantastic. He’s got a great team with [Treasury Secretary Scott]
Bessent and company.
Has his
fixation on international affairs distracted him from his domestic agenda?
I don’t
think it’s a fixation. Look, we are on the precipice of deeper involvement in a
Third World War. I think what he’s trying to do in Ukraine, to bring that to a
conclusion, would go a long ways to settling things down, particularly on the
Eurasian landmass.
I keep
saying the Middle East is a sideshow, and that Israel’s a sideshow to the
sideshow. I think it’s way past time to tone that down and just say, “Hey,
look, you got the Gaza thing under control, it’s going, but no more.” They’re
already kicking the dust up, “Oh, the Iranians are acting back up.” No more of
that.
I think
the thing in Venezuela, the hemispheric defense, the focus on Latin America, it
ought to be quickly brought to a head, if you can negotiate something with
these guys or not. And the international does have a direct impact into what’s
happening here domestically.
But I
think what [critics are] going to throw at him tomorrow is that President Trump
hasn’t focused on any of this, and the Democrats are doing it, and that’s why
they’re winning from the suburbs of Northern Virginia to the suburbs of New
Jersey to Manhattan. You have to combat that, because that’s just going to be
the reality of the narrative. You’ve got to go back on that and show that
nobody can do it better than President Trump, and I think it’s time now to get
on with it.
Do you
think affordability is going to be the keyword of the ’26 election?
I would
just say the economy overall. Remember some of the exit polls, people didn’t
focus on affordability, but the economy. It’s twofold, not just affordability
across things, but also jobs.
We have
to put American citizens first. Not just America first. American citizens
first. I think President Trump’s agenda is perfect for that.
I think
President Trump will go around and maybe give more speeches and more things
domestically, maybe take a few less international trips for the next six months
or so, and just get focused back with the American people. The American people
love him when he’s focused on this, and I think you’re going to see it.
What do
you hope Trump does first thing when he wakes up in the morning?
Two
things I would do. Number one, get [Assistant Attorney General] Harmeet Dhillon
and the Justice Department to go out and file suit against this scam of
[California Gov. Gavin] Newsom on this redistricting plan that went against the
constitution of California. I would get the Justice Department to file suit, go
get a [temporary restraining order] immediately, and then hit this thing and
drag it out for a year.
And
number two, I would get DHS, the State Department and the Justice Department
looking immediately at Mamdani, who I am convinced did not get citizenship in a
fair and honest way, and get those two things rolling.
In
addition, I think he ought to sit there and listen to Mamdani’s speech again,
particularly the part where he challenged President Trump when he said, “Turn
the volume up.”
President
Trump’s got a great saying: “No games.” And so if this guy wants to take on
President Trump, so be it.

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