What will become of public safety in New York City, now that avowed socialist Zohran Mamdani is about to take the reins as mayor? A review of his record on and views toward law enforcement, combined with early reactions from members of New York’s Finest themselves, points clearly toward a looming breakdown of law and order, and raises significant concerns about the future of America’s largest city. Start with the police. Jon Levine of the Washington Free Beacon didn’t mince words: “Hundreds of New York City police officers are ready to leave the forcein the wake of Zohran Mamdani’s election victory, with some openly weeping after the cop-hating socialist seized the city’s mayoralty earlier this month,” he reported. That’s more than a colorful anecdote. It’s an early warning flare about what Mamdani’s ascent to City Hall is likely to mean for Gotham City’s thin blue line. The context matters. Even before Mamdani’s win, the NYPD was already bleeding officers. In 2022 alone, 3, 701 officers retired or resigned the highest number since the aftermath of 9/11. A July 2025 report described retirements hitting historic highs and union officials warning that a Mamdani victory would accelerate an exodus from a department already stretched thin. (RELATED: Zohran Mamdani Lives In A Fantasy) Mamdani’s allies insist that he has moderated. But his record is what it is. As a candidate for the state legislature in 2020, he loudly backed a $1 billion cut to the NYPD budget, arguing that “policing is something that does not create safety.” During the 2025 campaign, recognizing that crime-weary voters were scared of that message, he tried to walk it back on cable news, laughing that he should have been “more careful” about his defund tweets. Now, as mayor-elect, he has tapped Elana Leopold a signatory to a 2020 open letter demanding a $1 billion NYPD budget cut to help lead his transition team, alongside longtime advisers who advocate replacing police who respond to 911 calls with social workers. Personnel is policy, and the people Mamdani is elevating send a clear signal to the rank-and-file: the new regime views traditional policing as a problem to be solved, not a public good to be supported. When political leaders demonize policing, make policy around activists’ slogans, and empower appointees whose brand is hostility to law enforcement, cops don’t just grumble. They leave. New York is on the cusp of repeating that cycle, with higher stakes. This is not a mid-sized West Coast city or a Midwestern metropolis; it is America’s largest city and its financial capital. Mamdani’s victory rested on a coalition energized by promises of rent freezes, free buses, and universal childcare and a sharp left turn in the city’s political identity. But nowhere in that progressive wish list is a plan for keeping cops on the job. In fact, the early evidence points the other way. The New York Post reports that an “NYPD exodus is already underway,” with a surge of officers filing retirement papers in the month leading up to Mamdani’s win. Levine’s Free Beacon reporting adds the human texture: officers openly crying at the result and “hundreds” preparing to leave. These are adults with mortgages and kids, not social media avatars. You have to push people very hard before they will forfeit a secure civil-service job and, in some cases, walk away from generous city pensions. This is the real danger of a Mamdani mayoralty: not an overnight abolition of the NYPD, but a grinding attrition that hollows it out from within. Veteran officers with decades of experience will retire at the first opportunity. Mid-career cops will move laterally to Nassau, Suffolk, or New Jersey, departments that pay well without the political abuse. Young recruits assuming the city can find enough will inherit bigger caseloads, thinner backup, and a clear message that City Hall has the critics’ backs, not theirs. Mamdani and his admirers like to talk about “quality of life,” usually in the context of rent and childcare. But public safety is the precondition for every other measure of quality of life. Without reasonably safe streets, free buses become rolling safe spaces for fare-beaters and predators, and rent-stabilized apartments become less valuable because the neighborhoods around them decay. Given the department’s recent history, the national data on police attrition, and the explicit fears already being voiced by New York’s own officers, the most reasonable prediction is not that “everything will be fine,” but that the exodus Levine describes has only just begun. New York voters made a choice. They may soon discover that their choice comes with fewer cops on the beat and a city that not only feels but actually is a lot less safe. Jenny Beth Martin is Honorary Chairman of Tea Party Patriots Action. The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not reflect the official position of the Daily Caller News Foundation. All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. 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https://dailycaller.com/2025/11/21/opinion-mamdanis-victory-means-fewer-cops-more-danger-jenny-beth-martin/