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Mamdani Spanberger

They Promised You Affordability — They Delivered Higher Taxes Instead

by Emiliano Ruiz
March 31, 2026

There is a particular brand of political cruelty in promising relief to people who are already struggling, winning their votes on the strength of that promise, and then — the moment the gavel falls and the oath is sworn — proceeding to make their lives measurably worse. It is not merely hypocrisy. It is a betrayal of governance itself. And it is precisely what is unfolding right now in New York City and the Commonwealth of Virginia, where Democrats who rode affordability rhetoric into office are now presiding over rising water bills, higher property taxes, new levies on everything from gym memberships to dog grooming, and energy policies designed to extract maximum cost from the very constituents they claimed to champion.

The voters are noticing. The question is whether they will remember come November.

The New York Experiment in Expensive Compassion

Zohran Mamdani did not run a subtle campaign. The democratic socialist who became mayor of America’s largest city made affordability the central pillar of his political identity — a promise that resonated deeply in a city where nine million people are already paying some of the highest rents, property taxes, and cost-of-living expenses in the Western world. He would freeze rents. He would ease the burden on working families. He would be different.

He is different, just not in the way his voters expected.

Residents showed up at a recent public meeting to confront City Hall with a rather inconvenient ledger: water bills are up, electricity costs are climbing, and the mayor is now proposing a ten percent hike in property taxes.

One resident put it plainly: “The water bill went up. The light bill went up. Now property taxes — what exactly are we doing here?” It is a question that deserves a serious answer, and the answer is that the progressive policy agenda, whatever its intentions, is structurally incapable of delivering affordability. It can only redistribute burdens while generating new ones.

The rent freeze Mamdani championed is perhaps the most instructive piece of the wreckage. Economists — whether on the left or the right — are in rare and emphatic agreement on this point. In a survey of the American Economic Association, fully 93 percent of members agreed that rent ceilings reduce both the quality and quantity of available housing. This is not a conservative talking point; it is the settled consensus of the economics profession, articulated even by left-leaning voices like Paul Krugman, who described rent control as “among the best-understood issues in all of economics.”

Research out of Stanford found that rent control in San Francisco reduced the rental housing supply by 15 percent and produced a citywide rent increase of more than five percent for everyone outside the controlled units. In Cambridge and Brookline, Massachusetts, rent-controlled housing stock shrank by eight and twelve percent, respectively, following imposition of such controls.



Mamdani’s proposal, applied to a city where demand already far outstrips supply, will deliver the same outcome. The Heritage Foundation’s E.J. Antoni has been direct about this: “If we look at the ways in which New York City is more expensive than other places around the country, it is chiefly due to bad public policy that has imposed those costs.”

Doubling down on those failures, he notes, will only compound them. Edward Pinto of the American Enterprise Institute describes the combined rent freeze and property tax increase as a “one-two wealth destruction punch,” one that will suppress multifamily property values, discourage new construction, defer maintenance, and ultimately leave both tenants and homeowners with fewer options and higher long-term costs. And that is before accounting for Mamdani’s proposed estate tax plan, which critics warn would accelerate the voluntary flight of wealth and residents to states like Florida and Tennessee that have not declared war on the productive class.

The irony is clear: the mayor who ran on making New York more affordable is engineering precisely the conditions that will make it more expensive — not for the wealthy, who have options, but for the working families who trusted him.

Virginia’s Fifty-Tax Agenda

The story in Virginia is structurally identical, if more bureaucratically dressed. Governor Abigail Spanberger campaigned as a voice of moderation, a check on Republican economic excess, and a champion of working families in the Old Dominion. She offered herself as an alternative to the kind of governance that burdened ordinary Virginians. Within weeks of taking office, the Democratic legislative agenda in Richmond began revealing what that alternative actually looks like: more than fifty tax proposals targeting income, investment, and the everyday economic activity of ordinary people.

That figure is worth sitting with. Fifty taxes. Lawmakers are advancing proposals to raise top income tax rates as high as ten percent, to impose a 3.8 percent tax on investment income, to increase the sales tax, and to apply new levies on delivery services, rideshare trips, dry cleaning, gym memberships, pet grooming, and large employers. For high earners, income and investment taxes could stack to reach 13.8 percent — positioning Virginia competitively with the high-tax states that have spent decades watching their productive residents pack up and leave. Jack Salmon of the Mercatus Center at George Mason University describes this as part of a broader pattern: blue states that seem “particularly determined to raise the tax burden on their highest-earning taxpayers,” apparently indifferent to the lesson that such earners are also the most mobile.

Adding insult to injury, Spanberger has moved to rejoin the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a carbon pricing program that her Republican predecessor Glenn Youngkin exited on the grounds that it drives up energy costs. She has done this in a state where Dominion Energy rate hikes already took effect on January 1, reflecting in part the costs of transitioning to offshore wind under the Virginia Clean Economy Act — costs that fall, as energy costs always do, most heavily on those least able to absorb them. Boeing has meanwhile announced plans to relocate its headquarters from Virginia to Missouri, a symbolic and substantive blow to the business climate Spanberger inherited and is now actively degrading.

The gap between what was promised and what is being delivered is not a matter of interpretation. It is arithmetic.

A Pattern, Not an Anomaly

It would be convenient for Democrats if this were an aberration — two governors and mayors overstepping, an outlier case to be explained away. But the data does not permit that comfort. A White House Council of Economic Advisers analysis, drawing on Bureau of Labor Statistics data through November 2025, found that year-over-year inflation in conservative-led states averaged 2.5 percent, compared to 3.0 percent in liberal-led states. The gap widens at the metropolitan level: cities in conservative states experienced 1.9 percent inflation, while those in liberal states ran at 3.0 percent, with housing inflation in liberal metros reaching 3.9 percent compared to 2.3 percent in conservative metros. The pattern held across every methodology the analysts applied — by governor, by legislative control, by presidential vote — and the consistent finding was the same. The states with the most aggressive regulatory, tax, and housing intervention are the states where affordability is deteriorating most rapidly.

This is not coincidence. It is causation. When government restricts housing supply through rent control and zoning, restricts energy supply through climate mandates, and restricts capital formation through higher taxes on income and investment, the predictable result is higher costs for everyone — particularly those at the bottom of the income ladder who cannot escape to a less regulated market. The people most harmed by progressive governance are, almost always, the people progressive governance claims to protect.

There is a kind of dark theology at work here. The left believes, with genuine conviction, that prices can be commanded downward by statute, that wealth can be redistributed without diminishing the incentives that produce it, and that the cost of a political vision can be absorbed by the productive class without consequence. History has never validated this belief. Economics has never validated it. Experience in city after city and state after state has refuted it. And yet the experiment continues, conducted at the expense of real families who trusted the people running it.

What Governance Actually Requires

The conservative critique here is not that government should be indifferent to affordability. Housing costs, energy prices, and the tax burden on working families are legitimate concerns of self-government. The difference is in the diagnosis and therefore in the prescription. Where the left sees high costs as a market failure demanding intervention — rent freezes, price controls, new taxes on economic activity — the right recognizes that most of the affordability crisis in blue America is itself the product of prior interventions. Zoning laws that block housing construction. Environmental mandates that drive up energy costs. Permitting regimes that make building expensive and slow. Tax structures that push productive residents and businesses into more hospitable states. The cure for bad policy is not more policy in the same direction. It is removing the original obstruction.

The voters of New York and Virginia were told that progressive governance would shield them from economic hardship. Instead, they are discovering that the governance itself is the hardship — and that the people running it either cannot see what they are doing, or do not much care.

Advisor Bullion Numismatics

The midterms are coming. The bills are already here.

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