In a move that has sent shockwaves through the world of property speculation, New York has enacted a rent freeze that will see tenants pop champagne corks while landlords reach for the smelling salts. The victory, secured by the indefatigable Mamdani, has been celebrated as a blow against the Goliath of gentrification. Meanwhile, across the pond, British housing experts have emerged from their oak-panelled clubs to warn of 'unintended consequences' for overseas landlords, as if the only unintended consequence here is that their offshore accounts may suffer a chill.
Yes, the chattering classes of London, who have transformed the capital into a tax haven for oligarchs, are now fretting that what happens in Gotham might cast a shadow over their own portfolios. One can almost hear the clink of gin and tonic glasses as they mutter about 'market distortions' and 'incentive structures', as if freezing rents is akin to freezing the laws of physics. But let us not be churlish. It is a fact well known in the corridors of power that the rights of the property-owning class to extract maximum value from the breathing space of the working man must be protected at all costs, lest we slide into some sort of egalitarian nightmare where people can actually afford to live in the cities they work in.
Mamdani, a folk hero for the age of Unaffordable Living, has shown that with enough grit and a few well-placed lawsuits, even the most entrenched system can be made to yield. The freeze, which applies to over one million rent-stabilized apartments, means that tenants can now afford to buy bread without having to choose between eating and sleeping. It is a modest victory, but in a world where modesty is as rare as a quiet night in the Times Square subway station, it is a triumph to be savoured.
The British response, however, has been a masterclass in polite hysteria. 'This could lead to a reduction in housing supply,' they intone, as if the market were a delicate ecosystem that must not be disturbed. But let us remember that the same experts have been singing the praises of deregulation and market mechanisms while the housing crisis has turned entire generations into perma-renters. Their concern for overseas landlords is touching, almost like a vicar worrying about the spiritual well-being of a hedge fund manager.
But I digress. The real story here is that for once, the little guy has won. And while the British experts cry into their Pimm's, New Yorkers can look forward to a future where their rent does not increase faster than their wages. It is a glorious day for sanity, and a bleak day for those who profit from the desperation of others. I propose a toast: to Mamdani, to the tenants of New York, and to the sweet, sweet sound of a landlord's cheque bouncing.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to top up my gin and contemplate the wonderful irony of British outrage at a freeze that would make London a paradise. But then, we cannot have that, can we? The overseas landlords might actually have to work for a living.










