Paul Hosford: Zohran Mamdani and Catherine Connolly both won by offering hope to voters
New York City mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani speaking in the borough of Queens the day after his election victory over Andrew Cuomo who ran as an independent after Mamdani defeated him in the Democratic Party primary. Picture: Heather Khalifa/AP
Amid the jubilant scenes as 34-year-old Ugandan immigrant Zohran Mamdani sealed a most unlikely victory to become the mayor of New York City, there was something of a strange sight in RTÉ’s package.
President-elect Catherine Connolly’s odds were nowhere near as long.

Still, when she formally entered the race for the Irish presidency in July, she was an Independent TD from Galway West with no team or structure or money who was facing into a battle with two coalition party candidates and had yet to receive the backing of many on the left.
While you can argue that she was the beneficiary of many breaking balls — Jim Gavin and Mairead McGuinness’s withdrawals, for example — 15,000 volunteers powered her campaign and undoubtedly dominated the online space.
What both had in common at their core was that they were campaigns that were expressly hopeful and optimistic, offering voters something, even if that thing was just hope itself.


In Mr Mamdani’s speech following his win late on Tuesday evening, he struck on the note of hope no fewer than 10 times, saying: “Tonight we have spoken in a clear voice. Hope is alive.Â
"More than a million of us stood in our churches, in gymnasiums, in community centres, as we filled in the ledger of democracy.





