By Tal Fortgang
Thursday, February 19, 2026
The Democratic Socialists of America are ascendant,
poised to remake the Democratic Party in their image. To hear Democratic
politicians and major media outlets like the New York Times tell it, all
the DSA wants is for America to be more like Norway: safe, egalitarian, and
governed by an overweening yet benevolent state. America under the DSA would
certainly resemble Norway — if Norway’s leaders loathed their own country, were
committed to undermining its interests, and actively supported a global
anti-Norwegian movement.
The slightest bit of digging into the DSA’s leadership,
communications, publications, and activities reveals that the DSA is nothing
less than an anti-American subversion campaign, rooted in Marxist ideas and
maintaining terrorist sympathies. The DSA doesn’t even try to hide it — and why
should they? Like all good Marxists, they believe that their revolution is
imminent and inevitable.
Zohran Mamdani’s rise from no-name activist to gadfly New
York State assemblyman to New York City mayor is emblematic of the DSA’s
trajectory. The DSA vows that Mamdani’s victory is just the beginning of “a
political movement of and for the working class that can defeat the oligarchy
and win the political revolution.” Mamdani appeared to moderate his views
slightly to ensure that he would cross the finish line, but he is already
staffing his administration with classic DSA personnel — criminals, grifters, and
America-hating radicals. New Yorkers and other Americans are about to see what
that “revolution” entails.
Most Americans understandably see the DSA as essentially
the progressive wing of the Democratic Party. Left-wing commentators and
politicians reinforce that view by discussing democratic socialism as a set of
abstractions and principles. Senator Bernie Sanders, for instance, defines a
democratic socialist government as one that “works for all the people and not
just the billionaire class.”
After the DSA had conquered the New York Democratic
Party, Governor Kathy Hochul decided to endorse Mamdani for mayor. His
commitment to socialism, she wrote in the New York Times, only means
building “a New York where children can grow up safe in their neighborhoods and
where opportunity is within reach for every family.” Barack Obama called
Mamdani to lend his support, too. The New York Times ran interference
for the candidate’s animating ideology by publishing an article titled “Zohran
Mamdani Says He’s a Democratic Socialist. What Does That Mean?” According to
the paper of record, “the simplest way to understand democratic socialism is as
an ideology rooted in its opposition to capitalism and wanting to shift power
to workers from corporations.” But the Times reassured readers that “the
policies that self-described democratic socialists advocate for generally do
not involve the complete abolition of capitalism.” Democratic socialists are
“closer to social democrats — a common ideology in Europe that emphasizes
strong social safety nets and government involvement in areas like health
care.”
Rank-and-file democratic socialists may simply claim to
oppose greedy corporations and fascism. But the reality is that the DSA is an
organization, albeit an amorphous one that retains a decentralized structure as
a matter of strategy. It has organizing principles, leadership, and a political
program. And that program is radical.
The New York Times might insist that the DSA is
not interested in replacing capitalism entirely, but the DSA’s 2021 convention
platform says otherwise. “In overcoming the old, barbaric order of capitalism,
the working class will not only liberate itself from its own shackles, but all
of humanity from the parasitic death-drive of capitalism,” it states. “As
capitalism’s climate crisis ravages the whole Earth, the well-being of the
working class is ultimately aligned with the survival of the whole planet.” How
very Nordic.
The DSA has since moderated some of its public language,
while insisting that its chapters and subsidiaries may say things that do not
represent the entire movement. That is belied by trends within the DSA’s
leadership. Mainstream institutions and movements police their ranks to ensure
that they don’t promote anyone who could sully their reputation. The DSA has
promoted open Marxist-Leninists who seek to usher in communist revolution.
Whistleblower Maurice Isserman, a professor of history and founding member of
the DSA, quit the organization after leading figures within it justified the
atrocities committed by Hamas on October 7, 2023. He has described the rise of
the “entryists,” communists who are now a majority on the National Political
Committee (NPC), the DSA’s ruling body. The national co-chairwoman of the NPC —
effectively the leader of the DSA — Megan Romer, is a self-professed “proud”
member of the Red Star Caucus, which describes itself as one of several
“Marxist-Leninist” subgroups within the DSA. “Socialist countries are not our
enemy, U.S. imperialism is,” the caucus’s platform reads. Its central goal is
to “abolish capitalism and, ultimately, to achieve communism,” the caucus
states in its “points of unity” section. “We do not believe that capitalism can
be reformed into socialism — it must be overthrown and replaced.”
Overthrowing capitalism and fighting American
“imperialism” requires overthrowing America’s constitutional order. The DSA
plans to abolish the Constitution, starting with the Senate and the Electoral
College, and to “put workers in charge of the government” instead. Dismantling
our constitutional republic will, of course, require universal suffrage and
fully open borders — the group plans to “extend full voting rights to people
with criminal convictions and noncitizens.” And after DSA leaders disarm the
military, they will “allow workers to freely migrate between countries to seek
employment without restrictive immigration controls.”
The DSA is similarly extreme on criminal justice. It
calls for “demilitarizing” the police, ending prosecutions for all misdemeanors,
and ultimately abolishing prisons, which are seen as instruments of capitalist
oppression. With no prisons and no borders, the U.S. will finally have the
democratic will to support those who most deserve it: terrorists and leftist
dictators. The DSA has long co-hosted events and shared personnel with
Samidoun, an organization sanctioned by the U.S., Canada, and some European
nations. The U.S. government has designated Samidoun a “sham charity” that
exists to raise funds for the terrorist group the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine (PFLP). But the DSA and Samidoun have maintained their
alliance and continue their joint activities, co-hosting events in Washington,
New York, and Philadelphia.
It’s no surprise, then, that only a few hours after Hamas
invaded Israel on October 7, 2023, proceeding to slaughter, rape, and maim
thousands and abduct hundreds, the DSA chapter in New York (NYC-DSA) announced
a “Free Palestine” rally in Times Square the next day. At the rally — where
attendees displayed images of swastikas on their phones and burned Israeli
flags — the demonstration leader praised the “resistance” and salivated about
murdered Israelis as the crowd whooped and cheered: “There was some sort of
rave or desert party where they were having a great time until the resistance
came in electrified hang gliders and took at least several dozen hipsters. . . .
Our people from Gaza, our young people, are riding their bikes through these
settlements.”
DSA members seem even more united by their love of
terrorism than their hatred of the rich. Russell Rickford, a Cornell history
professor who infamously described October 7 as “exhilarating” and
“energizing,” is a card-carrying member of the DSA. DSA member Djamil
Lakhdar-Hamina, a doctoral candidate at the University of Maryland, told
NYC-DSA member Jack Lundquist over a Zoom meeting that “the only existing
effective vehicle of resistance against Zionist barbarism right now is Hamas.”
In May 2024, Romer, the DSA administrator, proclaimed that the DSA does “not,
in fact, condemn Hamas,” and “no socialist should.”
In May 2025, Israeli embassy staffers Yaron Lischinsky,
an Israeli citizen, and Sarah Milgrim, an American, were murdered outside the
Capital Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C., allegedly by Elias Rodriguez, a
leftist who chanted “Free Palestine” during his arrest. In a statement on X,
the NYC-DSA claimed to “reject the violence.” (It blocked the ability to reply
to the post, knowing exactly what the comments would look like if it didn’t.)
But members soon questioned the condemnation, and the DSA backtracked. “Is it
good to condemn violence against a genocidal apartheid state?” one member
asked. The Liberation Caucus, a DSA coalition that describes itself as
“Marxist-Leninist-Maoist,” proudly signed a statement that praised the shooting
as a “legitimate act of resistance.” In a later post, it demanded, “Free Elias
Rodriguez and all political prisoners.”
The DSA is even taking active steps to protect terrorists
and other enemies of the U.S. In June 2025, NYC-DSA hosted an event on how to
disrupt global trade and stop the flow of weapons and other goods between the
U.S. and allied countries. The DSA’s seminar leader encouraged activists to
impede American production of the F-35 fighter jet, arguing that “interrupting
this logistic supply chain is actually key to interrupting genocide.” (For good
measure, the DSA’s description of the event on YouTube praises the Houthis’
“heroic” efforts to target the “movement of weapons and capital.”) Ahmed Husain
sits on the DSA’s National Political Committee, coordinating efforts to disrupt
international shipping through a private citizens’ arms embargo. Admitting his
support for the terrorist groups waging war against Israel, Husain said, “We’re
inside the home of empire. . . . As they fight there, we fight here. There’s
multiple fronts.” Another DSA member, Abdullah Farooq, has teamed up with the
Palestinian Youth Movement activist group in its illegal effort to stop
shipping giant Maersk from delivering weapons to Israel.
The DSA’s ties to enemies of the West run deep. It is a
member of Progressive International, an umbrella group led by Maoist
centimillionaire Neville Roy Singham, who is a chief funder of anti–U.S. and
pro–Chinese Communist Party radicalism. Even the New York Times has
questioned Singham’s activities. According to the paper, he operates “hidden
amid a tangle of nonprofit groups and shell companies” and “works closely with
the Chinese government media machine and is financing its propaganda
worldwide.” Singham’s organization regularly hosts gatherings in Cuba, Brazil,
and elsewhere, bringing together American agitators and members of the PFLP,
the Cuban intelligence community, and the CCP.
The DSA particularly sympathizes with the world’s worst
human rights violators. According to its 2024 platform, the DSA seeks to “end
economic sanctions that impact the sovereignty of countries whose governments
act independently of the United States, such as Cuba, Venezuela, and Iran.” The
DSA International Committee (DSA IC) defines its goal as “working toward a
solidarity that knows no borders.” It specializes in advancing the interests of
dictators.
Cuba plays a suspiciously large role in the DSA’s
approach to international affairs. The DSA IC emphasizes “DSA Cuba Solidarity,”
with the stated aim of “strengthening ties between the labor movements in the
U.S. and Cuba.” That solidarity appears to extend to full-on public relations
efforts. The DSA is a member of the National Network on Cuba (NNOC), an
umbrella organization of groups that aim to create a pro-Cuban U.S. foreign
policy. The NNOC, in turn, is a partner of Instituto Cubano de Amistad con los
Pueblos (ICAP), an arm of the Cuban government that seeks to influence
international affairs. The DSA — NNOC relationship has resulted in legally
questionable advocacy for hostile foreign regimes. For example, DSA IC member
Jorge Rocha recently joined Calla Walsh — a 21-year-old activist who praised
the “Axis of Resistance,” Iran’s alliance with terrorist groups such as Hamas
and the Houthis, before apparently defecting to Tehran — on the Guerrilla
History podcast to advocate removing Cuba from the State Sponsors of
Terrorism list. In October, the DSA sent a delegation of “elected leaders &
rank-and-file members” to Cuba to deliver “solidarity aid.” After visiting the
Latin American School of Medicine in Havana — which, according to the DSA, “has
trained thousands of doctors, including over 100 from Palestine” — they
returned to the U.S. “more determined than ever to end the cruel U.S.
blockade.” The Foreign Agents Restriction Act requires public bodies that perform
work for foreign governments to report such activities to the Department of
Justice. Though this is not quite a confession of a violation of the act, it
certainly comes close.
After the arrest of Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro in
January, DSA NPC member Luisa Martinez convened a web event titled “Hands Off
Venezuela.” The DSA calls upon Americans to “stand in solidarity with President
Maduro,” she declared. While Venezuelans celebrated their freedom from Maduro’s
tyranny, Martinez called for his release and accused President Donald Trump of
preparing America “to fight a future conflict with China.” Naturally, the DSA’s
institutional position was to take Venezuela’s and China’s side.
The DSA IC’s support for repressive regimes extends
further still. It sponsored the People’s Summit for Korea in New York last
July, which was headlined by other Singham-funded organizations such as the
ANSWER Coalition and the Party for Socialism and Liberation. The People’s
Summit featured pro–North Korean speakers who seek to destroy South Korean
sovereignty. “For decades,” the summit claims on its website, “US imperialism
has blocked Korea’s path to peace, reunification, and self-determination.” After
the U.S. bombed Iran’s nuclear facilities, meanwhile, the DSA IC rushed to
affirm “Iran’s right to self-defense” on its website. “Iran has long been
targeted by the U.S. and its allies for its efforts to establish national
self-determination and champion Palestinian liberation,” the group declared.
And while it regularly condemns Western capitalism as a source of environmental
degradation, the DSA eagerly promotes CCP environmentalist propaganda,
whitewashing the world’s worst polluter as an emerging “ecological
civilization.”
The DSA’s defenders have historically dissembled by
saying that the organization is diffuse and takes few institutional positions.
Yet it continues to promote individuals and caucuses that express nakedly
anti-American views and to organize events and campaigns that advance
extremism. Perhaps because it is untenable to argue that Mamdani and other
public figures can maintain clean hands as they remain affiliated with a
massive subversion campaign, Democratic politicians and left-leaning media
outlets have made an intense effort to help the DSA present itself as within
the normal bounds of American politics. They are supporting a movement that
openly seeks the violent overthrow of America on behalf of socialist radicals,
foreign terrorist organizations, and an international alliance of communists.
The Venceremos Fund — a central fundraising operation of the DSA IC — openly
aims to “build a war chest” to “support the struggle to dismantle U.S. empire.”
Calling the DSA a subversion campaign might sound like a
modern-day red scare, but the evidence is overwhelming and in plain view. It
can be found in the statements and goals expressed by the DSA’s own personnel.
The DSA’s Communist Caucus describes the stakes better than any modern-day
McCarthy could: “We will seize control of the world that was built through our
collective exploitation and domination. All of this we want, yet none can be
had exclusively through the ballot box.”
Or, take it from Cliff Connolly, an irrepressible NPC
member: “Undermining the genocidal U.S. government is one of the best ways to
organize for world peace and prosperity. I’m proud to belong to the DS of A.”
Consider yourself warned.