Join the November 5 Coalition
Together, We Take On the Future.
On the eve of last night’s election, I wrote: Who will become the November 5th Jews?
Regardless of who’d win the NYC mayoral race, it was always going to be a clarifying moment — a referendum on the antisemitism that has been allowed to seep into our media, our institutions, and our city streets.
A line in the sand. Politically. Spiritually. Historically.
Today, clarity has arrived. Is it a wolf in sheep’s clothing? Time will tell.
Zohran Mamdani’s win in New York City is being spun as some generational turning point — as if the chant-filled crowd somehow speaks for Greater New York City’s soul and the Democratic Party at large.
(Yet another reason to be a happy as a clam to be a No Party Affiliate. #Walkaway.)
Let’s be clear:
This was not a revolution because it was not a landslide.
Had that hot, hat head Curtis Sliwa stepped aside, it would’ve been a nail-biter.
So no — this was not a mandate.
It was a turnout gap, despite the large turnout.
No by hoards, either.
As I see it, he won the social media whores vote.
And a shout out to Mamdani’s core marketing team — Epstein, Gershon & Katz — who could pass for a law firm. When Mamdani clearly states he wants to divest from Israel (BDS), seeing Jews make him their master feels like a rejection of their own identity, thinking it will buy them safety, belonging, approval, or redemption from movements that openly call for our erasure. It borders on pathetic.
Suicidal empaths is more what I’d like to call them.
Mamdani’s win was expected.
Hoped against, yes.
But if you’re shocked — look in the mirror.
This is what denial looks like.
This brings us to the November 5 Coalition, which is forming now — not accidentally. It is ancestral.
It is being built by Jews who refuse to disappear — the October 8 Jews.
And by Christians who refuse to allow the word Zionist to be distorted, diminished, or demonized.
My kind of people.
While the election was in full swing, I joined a Zoom hosted by Brooke Goldstein of The Lawfare Project, discussing the impact of the psychotic Tucker Carlson and the sewer rat Nick Fuentes — their campaign to shame, divide, and target Christians who support Israel. Their attack on Jews and Christian Zionists is an abomination.
Within 24 hours of the election, I was in conversation with leaders from various groups including the O7C Coalition — founded by Patricia Heaton and Elizabeth Dorros — who have built one of the strongest Christian Zionist networks in America since the October 7 war.
And their message was unmistakable:
We do not abandon the word Zionist.
Zion is covenant.
Zion is calling.
Zion is home.
This is not about branding or optics.
This is about memory, inheritance, responsibility, and destiny.
Zionism is not extremism.
Zionism is the right of a people to live where their story began.
So when Mamdani voters — and yes, the Jewish ones, too — cheer the defeat of Jews who stand for their own safety and continuity, they are not championing liberation.
They are cheering erasure.
Self-erasure.
The November 5 Coalition is the answer:
• Jews who know who they are
• Christians who know what covenant demands
• And anyone who understands history is shaped through courage
We do not wait for institutions to validate us.
We move because it is time.
Last week I was in Israel — at the World Zionist Congress — standing in Hostage Square, marching in Rabin Square, witnessing the beating heart of a people who refuse to vanish.
This is not nostalgia.
This is continuity.
So, now we rise.
Calm.
Clear.
Unapologetic.
We do not bend our identity to avoid discomfort.
We do not surrender language because others misuse it.
We do not negotiate — with anyone — our belonging.
We carry the message forward.
And we write the next chapter by living it.



