When the Trump administration deployed the National Guard to Washington, DC, and took control of the city’s police, the country advanced further into authoritarianism. After having already sent the National Guard to Los Angeles, Trump claimed the federal takeover of DC would bring law and order to the nation’s capital, which he characterized as “one of the most dangerous cities anywhere in the world.” In announcing the move, Trump emphasized his “natural instinct as a real estate person.” His background as a property developer, he said, made him uniquely well-suited to deal with urban crime and homelessness.
Trump’s acknowledgement of the link between his past business practices and his approach to governance is revealing: It grounds his particular brand of despotism in the politics of 1980s New York City. This link is especially important given the looming clash between the Trump administration and the presumptive next mayor of New York, democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani, whose political commitments threaten the neoliberal compact that has characterized the city’s political economy since the resolution of the fiscal crisis in the 1970s. Mamdani’s housing platform in particular aims to curb the outsize power of New York’s real estate sector, the milieu in which Trump rose to prominence in the late 1970s and ’80s.
New York’s fiscal crisis had its roots in a series of political-economic shifts that eroded the post–World War II liberal order. In the early 1970s, following years of white middle-class flight to the suburbs and capital flight to the Sunbelt and Global South, New York City found itself unable to raise enough tax revenue to keep funding the social programs that comprised its famed social-democratic polity. In late 1974, amid a global recession, the institutional investors that had been keeping New York City afloat stopped buying up municipal debt, pushing the city toward insolvency. The Ford administration refused to bail out the city, and after several tense months, the city came to an agreement with New York State to avert bankruptcy.
But the costs of this pact were steep, especially for working-class Black and brown New Yorkers, whose alleged profligacy was often blamed for the crisis. In exchange for the state bailout, New York City lost sovereignty over key areas of municipal governance and was forced to accept harsh austerity measures—thousands of municipal workers were laid off and many others had their wages frozen; social services were slashed, and public transportation fares were increased. Property values in the city dropped, particularly in working-class neighborhoods, where landlords often found it more profitable to abandon—and even burn down—their buildings rather than maintain them. The Bronx alone averaged as many as 40 fires per night in the mid-1970s; these fires led to the destruction of an estimated 80 percent of the South Bronx’s housing stock.