
Photo by Tess Mayer.
In New York City, the war between renters and developers is only getting fiercer. The outgoing councilmember of Central Brooklynâs City Council District 35, Laurie Cumbo, is one of over thirty term-limited City Council members who will hand over power next year following the upcoming June primary, which will decide the Democratic nominee and the presumptive winner in the November elections. Cumbo leaves behind rising rents and a history of strife with local tenantsâ organizations, who often accused her of selling out working-class neighborhoods, predominantly populated by people of color, to luxury developers looking to make another buck. The crisis has only intensified as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to push New Yorkers to the brink of eviction and food insecurity. Michael Hollingsworth, a tenant organizer and graphic designer with a disdain for smoke-filled rooms in politics, is running for office to put community control back in the hands of his community.Â
A member of the Crown Heights Tenant Union and Central Brooklyn branch of New York Cityâs Democratic Socialists of America, Hollingsworth is one of six socialists on the ballot this June who seek to swing the balance of power inside and outside City Hall toward the working class. But what transpires in this districtâwhich covers the neighborhoods of Fort Greene, Clinton Hill, Prospect Heights, and parts of Crown Heights and Bed-Stuyâwill have reverberations all the way to Washington, D.C. The district overlaps with those of the socialist state legislators Phara Souffrant Forrest, a member of the Assembly, and State Senator Jabari Brisport, as well as Congressmember Hakeem Jeffries, the heir-apparent to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. But Hollingsworth, a lifelong Central Brooklynite and a rent-stabilized tenant to this day, makes clear that heâs not interested in joining the inner circle of the Democratic Party. Though his victory against the establishment favorite, former Cumbo treasurer Crystal Hudson, would indeed ruffle feathers all the way to the Capitol, his concerns if elected would be much closer to home.Â
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ROB M. KATZ: Talk about why youâre running. What are your top priorities if elected?
MICHAEL HOLLINGSWORTH: I live in a part of the district that has been under siege, like a lot of neighborhoods of color for the past 20 years, in terms of a lot of luxury development. Before that, [there was] a lot of displacement of long-term Black and brown folks who were forced out because our electeds basically sat by and let tenant protections weaken, enforcement weaken, and watched that happen to our neighborhoods.Â
Iâm not afraid to call out the folks that are responsible for gentrification of Black and brown neighborhoods. I know thereâs a popular false narrative by a lot of Central Brooklyn electeds who like to say that young white people are the cause of Black folks and brown folks being displaced. For me, someone whoâs been here my entire life, I know what the cause is. Itâs not young white people. It is the electeds who are drenched in real estate money, elected to rezone our neighborhoods, hand over public land to private interests, sit by for years, and watch our tenant protections weaken and just allow our folks to be displaced year after year.
Iâm obviously going to be of a different calibur. I donât take real estate money, so Iâm not going to do the bidding of real estate. A City Council member has a huge say in what gets built in our neighborhoods. Unfortunately for the past ten years or so, City Council members do what developers tell them to do. Iâm taking a 180-degree approach to that. Weâre calling for a comprehensive citywide plan thatâs basically going to shut out real estate and actually bring in real community input. Weâre also going to talk about the issues of the carceral state that we live in, our environment, and education. Those are the big ones. Thereâs a lot of connective tissue between all of them.Â
Iâm on board with the Defund NYPD movement. I always make sure that people understand when I say âdefund,â thereâs a second part of that, and thatâs ârefund.â Some of that money has to go back to neighborhoods of color, neighborhoods that have been under-resourced for generations. That includes investing in safe and affordable housing. That includes investing in our schools. I know one of the pushbacks that Iâm going to get is that neighborhoods like mine need police because thereâs lots of crime. My position is, the reason why neighborhoods like mine have a lot of crime is because theyâve never been invested in. That has led to tons of poverty. Wherever you find lots of poverty, youâre going to find lots of crime. All the basic stuff that weâve given to other neighborhoods that are successful now, weâve never given to neighborhoods of color. I want us to fix that. If we do that, there wonât be a need for us to have 40,000 armed police and a $10.9 billion budget.Â
KATZ: People speculate about whether there will be a socialist or progressive caucus in the City Council. What are you hoping could be accomplished with this wave of socialists or progressives in the City Council?
HOLLINGSWORTH: Well, weâve gotta be very careful with that âprogressiveâ label. I identify as a Black socialist. I know everybody these days is calling themselves a progressive. Everybody is slapping that on themselves. De Blasio calls himself a progressive, and he refused to take away disciplinary power from [Dermot] Shea, the NYPD commissioner. Donât just take what a candidate says on its face. Do some research. See if they were really talking about these issues before they decided to run for office. If enough people do that this year, then we can get a really good City Council with enough true leftistsâa combination of socialists and real progressives.
As bad as this pandemic has been and continues to be, it has exposed a lot of the inequalities that a lot of us already knew about. With a true left City Council and a good mayor, we can decide to do one of two things. We can decide to either go back to the old New York before COVID, or we can chart a course for a new city that truly is more fair and freer for all of us, not just the handful of folks who were doing well before. It can, in a lot of ways, set the course for NY for the next 200 to 300 years, if we do it right.Â
KATZ: Now that you mention it, do you have any thoughts on where the mayoral race is headed?
HOLLINGSWORTH: [Laughs] UmâŠ
KATZ: Itâs okay to pass!
HOLLINGSWORTH: [Laughs] Iâve been told not to. I do have strong opinions but Iâve been told to keep them to myself for now. I donât want to offend anyone. My message to New Yorkers would be to be very careful about our next mayor.
KATZ: To do their research.
HOLLINGSWORTH: Yeah. Our next mayor is coming in at a crucial time. Weâre at a crossroads. If somebody has a son who has an afro in a commercial, donât fall for that this time. We need to be very, very careful.
KATZ: I wanted to talk about the current battle in Crown Heights around keeping the Associated Supermarket from being evicted. Itâs become a burning issue in Central Brooklyn, highlighting the impact of gentrification on peopleâs day-to-day lives. It could create a food desert affecting thousands of New Yorkers.
HOLLINGSWORTH: That supermarket is a few blocks away from me. Itâs the supermarket my mother used to take me and my brothers to when we were younger. Itâs served the neighborhood for 50 years. About a month ago, I had a friend reach out to me and say, âHey, the supermarket has just been given 90 days to vacate the premises.â I was kind of floored.
The Crown Heights Tenant Union was in one hundred percent agreement that this is a supermarket that has served the neighborhood forever, for longer than most of us have been alive, and itâs crucially needed. We decided that we just needed to mobilize, so we had a couple of actions where we let the community know what was happening, had some speak-outs. If you just stand out there on a Saturday for about ten minutes and watch the people who go in and out, youâll see the majority of folks are older folks, seniors who have mobility issues. Iâve heard people say, âGet over it, they can walk a couple extra blocks.â Thatâs easy to say if youâre young and able. One of the reasons why theyâre older and have a lot of physical issues is because they moved into these neighborhoods when nobody else wanted to live here. They did a lot of back-breaking work for years. Theyâve earned the right to be able to still shop for food where itâs convenient for them. If it goes away, itâs a food desert. This is a place where people can get fresh produce and meat. Sure, there are lots of bodegas, but a bodega is not a supermarket.Â
You love to see it: Comrades @mike4brooklyn and @JabariBrisport at the rally to save the Associated supermarket in Crown Heights today.đč@nycDSA @DSAForTheCity pic.twitter.com/RUkfSYEPnG
â Jordan G. Teicher đč (@teicherj) February 6, 2021
Thatâs the sickness of this country, right? Thatâs capitalism. The owners of the site, their rationale is, âWell, we own the property so we can do whatever we want to, because we have the right.â Just because you have the right to do something doesnât make it right. America allows one man, sitting in an office, who doesnât live in a community, to make a decision to disenfranchise thousands of people. Itâs just not right.Â
KATZ: Youâve mentioned before that the Brooklyn political establishment is looking at District 35âwhy? Why is this district a battleground in 2021?
HOLLINGSWORTH: For a long time, it has been a seat of Black political power that wasnât corrupt. You can go back to Mary Pinkett, James Davis, and then [current Attorney General and former City Councilmember] Tish James. That part is legitimate. Last summer, Jabari, Phara, and other folks from DSA, during the Defund [the Police] campaign, did an action outside of Laurie Cumboâs house. She did what she usually does, which is overblow things. She said she was inside with her kid. Then she took that and went with the false narrative that DSA is responsible for displacing Black folks. This is coming from a woman whoâs never said no to any anti-Black or brown land use decision, by the way, and who was handpicked by [the real estate developer and former Brooklyn Nets owner] Bruce Rattner and Hakeem Jeffries to give away the neighborhoods, which sheâs done successfully.
They were shocked when Phara and Jabari won, and that took two establishment Democrats off of the political playing field. These folks care about one thing above anything else. And that is keeping political power and handing it off to their friends, and friends of friends. They lost two friends. The two people who were elected are both Black, so itâs not about Black people losing political power. Itâs about [the establishment] losing political power. This is a narrative thatâs going to happen in my race. They canât say Iâm a gentrifierâIâve lived here my entire life. Although theyâll probably try.
KATZ: They try a lot of things.
HOLLINGSWORTH: Yeah, but Iâm ready for that. They obviously look at this City Council seat as being huge. The district overlaps with a lot of Hakeem Jeffriesâs district. They would rather have someone in the seat who is more pliable to the establishment wing of the party. Iâm not comfortable with the way things have been going. They havenât been working for the majority of us. Theyâve been working for the political class. So have their donors, particularly the real estate folks. The rest of us who live here, not so much. Theyâre going to have all of their guns trained on this race. When we beat them, itâs going to be quite a day in Central Brooklyn. The chickens will come home to roost, and Iâm looking forward to it.







































