DNC Chair shrugs Mamdani, who refuses to condemn the “Intifada globalization” slogan
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Ken Martin, chairman of the Democratic National Committee (DNC), dismissed concerns over the disgust of NYC Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani trying to explicitly condemn the slogan.
After Mamdani’s monumental upset in the democratic primary for New York City mayor over the former governor Andrew Cuomo, He won backlash for refusing to condemn the phrase used to describe the violent Palestinian uprising against Israel. The slogan “Globalization of Intifadas” has been the cry of a rally of US anti-Israel protesters since October 7, 2023, since Hamas’ attacks on hundreds of innocent Israelis.
“There are no candidates at this party who agree with you 100%. To be honest, I sometimes disagree with the mamdani he said, but at the end of the day, I always believe in it as a Democrat chair. In Minnesota For the past 14 years, he is now the chairman of the DNC and wins with an additional one,” Martin said Wednesday. Interview with PBS Newshour.
Top Democrats, media demands Zoran Mamdani condemns phrase “intifada globalization”

Democratic National Committee (DNC) Chairman Ken Martin refused to condemn NYC Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, dismissing concerns about “globalizing Intifada,” adding that Democrats must welcome different perspectives to build a strong correlation. (Getty Images; AP)
“You win by bringing people into your coalition. We have conservative Democrats. We have central democrats. New Democrat brands This is left, Martin continued. “We take people to that coalition and at the end of the day, that’s the type of party we’re trying to lead. We’re a big tent party.”
Martin acknowledged that this type of coalition building can “lead to objections and debate,” but he pointed out that such “differences” should be praised and recognized as a way to advance the party.
In a podcast last month, Mamdani called the controversial slogan “a desperate desire for equality and equal rights to stand up for Palestinians. human rights. “ When given another opportunity to explicitly condemn NBC’s “Meet the Press,” the NYC mayoral candidate refused to do so again.
“We take people to that coalition and at the end of the day, that’s the type of party we’re trying to lead. We’re a big tent party.”

Anti-Israel activists have held a banner containing “Intifada Globalization” during a protest commemorating “Nakba Day” in New York City’s Brooklyn area on May 15, 2025. Naqba Day, which means “catastrophe” in Arabic, is the annual anniversary of Palestinians who mark the expulsion from the lands that form part of Greater Israel during the 1948 Arab-Israel War. (Photo: Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images)
“That’s not the language I use,” Mamdani told NBC’s Kristen Welker. “The language I use and the language I continue to use to lead the city speaks clearly to my intentions, and this is an intention based on universal human rights beliefs.”
Hakeem Jeffries says NYC’s hopeful Mamdani needs to “clear” his position to “globalize Intifada”
When Welker doubled whether Mamdami “actually condemns” the slogan, Welker pointed out that many people are aware Calls for violence against Jews, Mamdani said he spoke with many Jewish New Yorkers about the fear of anti-Semitism, saying he promised to increase the city’s “anti-hate crime programming” by 800%.
“In the end, what I think needs to show is the ability to not only talk about something, but to tackle it and make it clear that there is no room for anti-Semitism in this city,” replied Mamdani. “And we have to eradicate that bias, and in the end we do it through action.

Left: New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani will speak at the National Network of Action Conference held in New York City, USA on April 3, 2025. (Reuters/Gina Moon and Jennifer Mitchell Fox News Digital)
Before turning to another topic, Welker attempted to put Mamdani on the record for the third time, whether he condemned the controversial slogan. “Why don’t you blame it?” Welker asked.
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“My concern is to start walking along the lines of language and clarify what languages I think are acceptable or unacceptable. I’ll take me to a place similar to the place of a president who’s trying to do a very kind of thing, put people in prison and prison for protest,” Mamdani replied. “In the end, it’s not the language I use, but the language I understand that I have concerns, and all I do is show my vision for this city through my words and actions.”