New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is facing renewed scrutiny over his appointment of a radical tenant activist after resurfaced video footage showed his pick openly describing rent control as a tool to undermine the free housing market and push toward what she called “full social housing.”
As The New York Post reported, Cea Weaver, 37, whom Mamdani recently tapped to serve as director of the city’s Office to Protect Tenants, is seen in the resurfaced clip describing rent control as a deliberate strategy to weaken the real estate industry.
The video began circulating widely on X following news of her City Hall appointment and has sparked sharp backlash online.
Cea Weaver says the quiet part out loud….
“We decided that fighting for rent control was a strategic and critical first step in the fight for full social housing…
We decided that through a program like rent control, we are able to directly challenge the logic of unfettered… pic.twitter.com/R8fo9rsBCW
— Michelle Tandler (@michelletandler) January 14, 2026
“We decided that fighting for rent control was a strategic and critical first step in the fight for full social housing,” Weaver said in the clip.
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She continued by addressing critics who question the focus on rent regulation instead of public housing.
“A lot of times, people ask, ‘Why are we fighting for rent control when we have NYCHA? We should be fighting to save public housing,” Weaver said.
“We decided that through a program like rent control, we are able to directly challenge the logic of unfettered profit in the real estate market,” she added.
It was not immediately clear when or where the remarks were made. However, Weaver went on to argue that housing regulation could be used to strike at the industry broadly by reframing property ownership away from wealth creation.
“The idea is that we could weaken the entire industry at once through a strong rent control campaign, and that would strengthen our ability to do things like fight for social housing,” she said.
The comments prompted immediate reaction from critics on social media, with users warning about the potential economic fallout of policies designed to erode property values.
“How many New Yorkers (or Americans for that matter) want to support policies that weaken the speculative value of real estate?” one critic wrote.
“No one with two brain cells to rub together is going to invest in properties that lose money and have them just be taken over by the state. It’s a lose/lose/LOSE scenario,” another commenter warned.
Weaver is a member of the Democratic Socialists of America and has been active in housing advocacy in New York City for years.
Her past statements have repeatedly drawn attention, particularly following her elevation to a senior role within the Mamdani administration.
After her appointment, additional old social media posts attributed to Weaver resurfaced, including comments in which she described homeownership as a “weapon of white supremacy” and criticized gentrification across the city.
Weaver has acknowledged that some of her past remarks were “regrettable.” Mayor Zohran Mamdani and allies within the DSA moved quickly to defend her, arguing that criticism of Weaver amounted to a political smear.
The organization characterized the backlash as a “desperate right-wing attack” and said the city was fortunate to have Weaver advocating for tenants.
Despite those defenses, the controversy has intensified concerns among critics who argue that Weaver’s stated views align with policies that would destabilize New York City’s housing market at a time when affordability and supply remain central issues for residents.
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