Schiff Sovereign Podcast

New Yorkers think they voted to be like Norway. They’ll get Venezuela. [Podcast]

Nov 5, 2025
The hosts dissect the aftermath of New York City's mayoral election, highlighting the gap between voter expectations and the harsh political reality. They use a family business analogy to illustrate the perils of electing an inexperienced leader. The discussion delves into the impracticality of proposed policies and the issue of behind-the-scenes influencers controlling an inept mayor. The contrast between voters' notions of Nordic success versus the risks of Venezuelan-style collapse is particularly striking, emphasizing the importance of experience in leadership.
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ANECDOTE

Street Interviews Reveal Naïve Expectations

  • Hickman recounts street interviews of New Yorkers expecting the new mayor to magically pay rents and bills.
  • He uses the interviews to show voters' naïveté about how government funding works.
INSIGHT

Charisma Over Competence Fails Execution

  • Voters picked a charismatic, inexperienced candidate to run a vast, declining organization despite lacking business skills.
  • James Hickman warns execution trumps ideas and such a leader is unlikely to reverse decline.
INSIGHT

Promises Clash With Implementation Limits

  • Many campaign promises are impractical or unconstitutional when scrutinized for implementation.
  • Hickman emphasizes that governing power, legal limits, and execution realities block many populist proposals.
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