An Angeleno in New York
Paul Zappia stands in front of a bodega after a canvassing shift in New York City. Photo Álvaro López
DSA chapters around the country have come a long way since I joined in 2020. With our local electoral project, DSA Los Angeles has elected four (of 15) members to the LA City Council, a council member in Burbank, and two members to the LAUSD school board. We also aided in the passage of rent control in Pasadena and a mansion tax in LA city.
Even with our huge successes over the last five years, it has been awe-inspiring to watch New York City DSA’s electoral project over that same period. Though Zohran Mamdani’s ascendance is often described as meteoric, DSA members know it was the result of almost a decade of tireless work and focus.
Early in 2025, I decided to celebrate my birthday in late October by taking a trip with my partner to New York City. It felt miraculous that our trip would be just two weeks before one of the most important elections of my lifetime.
Hello, New York
On our third night in Williamsburg, three floors above the audible din of honking and chatter, I sat on the bed in our tiny hotel room, with its two coat hooks for a closet and showerhead that hung almost directly above the toilet, and opened Mamdani’s campaign site. The plan was to canvass the next day in North Brooklyn with my friend, Álvaro López, an NYC-DSA member and coordinator of their electoral committee.
Shortly after selecting a preferred time, date, and region for a canvass, I received an automated notice that I’d be assigned a precise kickoff location and two canvassing leads. The promised confirmation came just a few minutes later.
The training
The subway station near our hotel had ambient music playing throughout the platform, with accompanying vocals that sounded like Shakira falling over and over into a manhole. The sound aptly mirrored my nervous energy waiting to board the L train toward my shift the next morning.
Once a group of about 15 people gathered at our designated kickoff location, two field leads began to hand out file folders with a script and literature to each volunteer. With literature in hand, one of the leads asked our group to share why we were out canvassing that day. A woman spoke of how she’d just met Zohran the previous week, and their conversation was so inspiring that she immediately signed up for a shift. I also raised my hand to share my story.
I was canvassing that day, as an Angeleno, because the race for New York’s mayor was bigger than one city. People around the country were waiting in anticipation for proof that organized people can beat organized money, and I was there because Zohran, with his incredible team and army of volunteers, had reminded us that we can do more than hope for a better future. Not since Bernie Sanders’ Nevada primary victory in 2020 had I felt such optimism.
The training was very similar to the canvasses we hold in DSA-LA, which start by modelling a typical conversation with voters. Each interaction should start by asking the voter about their needs, connecting those needs to Mamdani’s platform, and asking whether they would be voting for him. In closing, we work together with each person to craft a plan to vote on or before election day. Once being assigned turf, you are also added to a WhatsApp Community thread for your neighborhood. The Bushwick thread alone had almost 1,000 members. WhatsApp Communities are useful because they allow organizers to create unique group chats for each locale, and quickly call on volunteers to show up for a canvass.
Photo Paul Zappia
The doors
I’ve canvassed in California, Nevada, Arizona, and now New York. In each of these places, it’s hard to overlook how much working class people are suffering. My conversations in Bushwick, with the exception of a few charming New York accents, were almost identical to those in other states. I wish there wasn’t a familiarity in each cracked wall, stained carpet, and dank hallway. Working people all over this country are crushed under the weight of their expenses, neglect of their landlords, and exploitation from their bosses, and they know they deserve better. Each person emitted an almost visible electricity when they learned I was canvassing for Mamdani, and were anxious to vote for someone who promised them more than the status quo.
Each time a volunteer records an interaction, or lack thereof, they paint a clearer and clearer picture on the canvas that makes up the campaign. I was humbled to be a small stroke in what we now know was a masterpiece.
An end, a beginning
As we wrapped up our shift and made our way to a local restaurant for lunch, we passed another canvass that was just getting started a few blocks away. It’s hard to describe the scale of the operation there without seeing it for yourself.
On our walk, Álvaro would point to different street vendors and describe their daily routines. He noted how a repaved triangle now attracted local elders, and as a family packed into a van on the curb, he would thoughtfully identify the origins of the patterns that made up their traditional dress. In that short walk I learned about a myriad of communities that had immigrated to this part of Brooklyn, and how those people keep New York alive. Despite media narratives about democratic socialists, our movement is made up of people who know so much and care so deeply about the communities around them. With purpose and conviction, and without compensation, they spend much of their time anonymously fighting to make their neighbors’ lives better.
On election night back home, I joined DSA-LA members packed into bars and venues across the city to share a potentially historic night together. Polls closed in New York and cheers erupted as people hugged, screamed, and jumped in excitement at the declared victory of a democratic socialist 3,000 miles away. Not long after, our own voters delivered an absolute blowout with the passage of Prop 50 in California. In a year marked by devastating fires, military occupation, and unrelenting ICE raids, it felt so damn good to celebrate something.
What’s next for the Left of the West?
New York is a dense place, with transit access to huge swaths of the city. Los Angeles, by contrast, is not only larger in area, but hosts everything from dense urbanity to shallow, suburban sprawl, and a connective tissue mostly woven together with expansive highways. Our local chapter’s bounds encompass nearly all of LA County and its 88 different cities.
Despite the differences, there are elements of NYC-DSA’s mayoral campaign strategy that can work here. The chapter’s trust in volunteers and development of canvassing leads all over the city should serve as a model for how we run and scale our electoral projects. The expressive, crafted, and concise visual and verbal communications of Mamdani’s campaign can inspire our efforts here. The discipline to embark on a single, focused campaign brought thousands of new members into NYC-DSA. The use of a WhatsApp community to contact volunteers quickly is a model that we have used with success in DSA-LA’s daily ICE patrols.
For myself, questions still remain. How do we engage in electoral work that builds more power and organization for working class people in LA County and involves all our members? Do we engage in ballot measure campaigns across the county and state? Can we focus our efforts on winning State Assembly seats whose districts span multiple cities and offices hold vast resources from the 4th largest economy in the world?
One thing is certain: NYC-DSA proved that working class people can be the crafters of a future built for us. At 6:34 PM on November 4th, it felt incredible to be a democratic socialist. That feeling can continue as long as we commit ourselves to our work and each other.