Saturday, February 14, 2026

Free Buses, Real Costs: Mamdani’s Socialist Fantasy Collides with New York Reality


New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani has turned "fast and free buses" into the centerpiece of his administration, selling it as an affordability lifeline and a long-overdue upgrade for a bus system that's been ignored for decades. Nice pitch, but this grand plan is about to slam into the brick wall of New York City politics.

Supporters insist fare-free buses would cut down on conflict, boost safety, and deliver instant relief to the riders who rely on them most. Skeptics, including on-air pundits and transit groups, warn it's a recipe for a massive funding black hole at the Metropolitan Transportation Authority unless the city locks in a rock-solid revenue source and a workable operational blueprint.New York City bus riders already endure some of the slowest service in the country, despite hauling millions of passengers daily.

As of early 2026, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul has pushed back on Mayor Zohran Mamdani's proposal for citywide free buses, arguing that the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) cannot afford the estimated annual loss in fare revenue. "We’re the biggest ridership, and yet we're subject to the slowest buses. It's a fundamental unfairness. It's an embarrassment," Danny Pearlstein, policy and communications director at the Riders Alliance, told Fox News Digital during a bus ride through the Bronx.

That grim track record is exactly why Mamdani's idea has political legs. Pearlstein noted that bus riders, often students, seniors, and caregivers, are squeezed for both time and cash, just like drivers or subway users. Yet buses have been shoved to the back burner on city streets for years.

"That is why this administration's call for fast and free buses resonates," he added. Pearlstein's take, along with others, anchors Fox News Digital's "The Rise of Socialism" series, which spotlights how socialist ideas are creeping into debates and policies in big American cities. Advocates lead with safety and less drama. Multiple sources pointed out that fare disputes routinely spark tension between riders and operators.

"When you eliminate fare payments on the buses, the friction between passengers and the drivers goes away," said Brian Fritsch, associate director of the Permanent Citizens Advisory Committee to the MTA (PCAC). "It does create a safer atmosphere for drivers. That has been a sore spot for a number of years."

Brian Fritsch told Fox News Digital that his organization needs to see a more "concrete plan" and determine funding streams for free busing before they take a position on the proposal. Transit analyst Charles Komanoff, who crunched the numbers on Mamdani's free bus idea, backed that up, pointing to past assaults on drivers over fare issues.

"Every year, there’s maybe a dozen cases in which a bus driver is assaulted," Komanoff said. "Presumably that would shrink or maybe disappear entirely if there was no expectation to pay the fare in the first place."

Advocates also lean on data from the city’s recent fare-free bus pilot, rolled out in late 2023 under a state budget mandate. The MTA picked one local route per borough, ditched fares for nearly a year, and brought them back in September 2024.

MTA's review showed ridership jumped on all five routes, about 30 percent on weekdays and closer to 40 percent on weekends. But most of the gains came from current riders making extra trips, not hordes of new users flooding in. The nine-month experiment cost around $12 million in lost fares and extras.

The pilot lays bare the free-transit debate in stark terms: ditching fares can spike usage, but it punches a real hole in the budget and doesn’t magically unleash massive new demand. Expand it citywide, and the cash has to come from taxpayers, Albany, or slashed services elsewhere.New York City is losing close to $1 billion in fare evasion a year. This is roughly the same cost as Mamdani's free and fast bus proposal. However, skeptics say the government must find long-term revenue streams to make fare-free buses successful. Pearlstein argued the pilot still proved free buses are safer and more popular, even if they’re no cure-all.

On affordability, supporters say it would deliver real help to low-income New Yorkers using buses for short, must-do trips.

"Most of the cost of bus operations is already paid for by public subsidies, not by fares," Pearlstein said. "We're collecting several hundred million dollars at the fare box, compared to several billion already invested. What we're replacing is an order of magnitude smaller than what we already raise from other sources."

Komanoff noted most extra trips from free fares wouldn't swap out car rides but would let people take journeys they currently skip.

"We want people to have the basic right to the city," he said.

Supporters add that no fares could shave boarding times and allow all-door loading, modestly speeding things up.

Komanoff's modeling pegged fare-free gains at roughly 7 to 12 percent faster buses. Not revolutionary, but a solid win for daily riders.

"That would be a material improvement in the lives of the two million New Yorkers a day who ride the buses," he said.

Even backers admit speed and reliability trump price every time.

Transit economist Charles Komanoff said he believes Mamdani's bus proposal will essentially generate "free money" via time saved per passenger. "Let’s be clear," Komanoff said. "Making the buses work better, having them be speedier, more reliable, more consistent, is probably more important than making them free. But I think we can do both."

The real killer? Money.

"If there were to be a free bus program, there would need to be some additional revenue coming into the MTA," Fritsch said. "They obviously couldn't just make cuts to make up that loss." Bus fares back MTA's long-term bonds, so scrapping them means reworking financing structures, not just plugging an annual gap.

PCAC has flagged over 20 possible revenue ideas for fare-free buses, but Fritsch stressed the real hurdle is political willpower and city-MTA coordination.

"The mayor has initiatives, the MTA is a state agency," he said. "They need to meet somewhere in the middle."

Komanoff pushed for city taxpayers, not suburban commuters or the MTA, to foot the roughly $800 million annual tab.

"That's not chump change," he said. "But it’s not a game changer for the city’s finances either." Mamdani, a self-described democratic socialist, spins the funding debate through his ideological filter: make essentials free and accessible by jacking up taxes on corporations and the rich. His platform hammers redistribution and bigger government in daily life, casting fare-free buses as a public right, not a paid service.

Critics call that view naive about real-world operations.

Charlton D'Souza, founding president of Passengers United and a southeast Queens native, fears free buses could set dangerous expectations for a system already short on drivers, plagued by old equipment, and delivering spotty service.

"We don't have enough bus drivers. Trips are not getting filled," D'Souza said. "If you make the buses free, people are going to expect a service."

He flagged accountability and budget risks, citing past cuts in tough times.


"I lived through the 2008 budget cuts," D'Souza continued. "They cut bus routes; they cut subway lines. When elected officials talk, they don't always understand the operational dynamics."

Skeptics question who really wins from universal free fares. It could subsidize folks who don’t need help while starving targeted aid.

"If somebody's making $100,000 or $200,000 and they're getting a free ride, how is that equitable?" D'Souza said, pushing instead to expand the city’s Fair Fares program.

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is widely described as a democratic socialist. His campaign materials frame an affordability agenda funded by "taxing corporations & the 1%" and includes other major redistributive goals. 

Critics see free buses as a symptom of a larger slide toward democratic socialism, turning user-fee services into taxpayer-funded entitlements, severing usage from payment, and ballooning government’s grip on daily economics.

Supporters frame it as justice against inequality. Skeptics see a governing philosophy obsessed with redistribution over market sense, risking endless public bailouts.

Still, even wary voices admit Mamdani has moved the needle.

"I liked his positivity, his can-do attitude," Komanoff said, recalling first encountering Mamdani years ago at a rally in favor of congestion pricing. "He didn’t seem stuck in the usual parameters of politics."

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Whether that energy becomes actual policy hinges on nailing down stable cash, fixing operational messes, and getting Albany on board.

For now, Mamdani's free bus dream sits at the crossroads of bold promises and cold math: popular with riders, tempting to advocates, but buried under fiscal and logistical landmines. As Fritsch summed it up: "There's no shortage of ideas. The question is where exactly the money comes from and who actually has the political courage to make it happen."

Arc de Triomphe terror: police officers targeted in mass stabbing


A mass knife attack targeting police officers unfolded near the iconic Arc de Triomphe in Paris on Friday evening, right during the solemn rekindling ceremony of the Flame of the Unknown Soldier. The Islamist suspect, identified as Brahim Bahrir (or Brahim Bahri in some reports), a known radical with a violent history, tried to stab a gendarme with a knife and scissors. Another officer quickly opened fire, hitting the attacker multiple times. He was rushed to the hospital but later died from his injuries and is currently on his way to Jannah where his 72 virgins await him.

This wasn't the scumcrumpet's first rodeo against law enforcement. Back in 2012, he carried out a stabbing attack on police in Belgium, seriously injuring one officer, and got slapped with a 17-year prison sentence tied to terrorism charges. Yet somehow, he was released early just a couple of months ago and allowed back on the streets in order to make liberals feel good about themselves. 

France has turned the country over to Islamic supremacists, and what do they get? More terror.

The attacker targeted an officer securing the ceremony for relighting the eternal flame honoring unknown soldiers at the Napoleon-era landmark, according to a Paris police official. Another officer shot the attacker, who was hospitalized, the official said.

No bystanders or police officers were injured in the incident, the official told The Associated Press.

The French counterterrorism prosecutor's office has taken over the investigation and sent personnel to the scene. A heavy police presence locked down the area around the monument Friday evening, closing it to the public while the traffic circle stayed open for vehicles. The nearby metro station was also shut down at police request, per the RATP transport operator.

The incident has reignited fierce debate over how France handles repeat violent offenders, especially radicalized ones fresh out of prison, and the glaring security gaps at these major national ceremonies. Investigators are digging into the motive and any deeper extremist ties, but the pattern here is painfully familiar: a known threat gets released, strikes again at a symbolic site, and the public is left wondering why basic common sense wasn't applied sooner.

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Friday, February 13, 2026

Three Islamic Jew-haters jailed in UK: they had plans for a massacre



Three Muslim men have been jailed in Britain for their roles in an Islamic State-inspired plot to massacre hundreds of Jews in Greater Manchester.

Walid Saadaoui, his brother Bilel Saadaoui, and Amar Hussein were convicted following an investigation by Greater Manchester Police. The scheme, had it succeeded, would have constituted "one of the deadliest terrorist attacks to ever take place on UK soil," in the words of Assistant Chief Constable Rob Potts.

Walid Saadaoui and Amar Hussein were found guilty of preparing acts of terrorism at Preston Crown Court. Saadaoui, the principal architect of the plan, received a life sentence with a minimum term of 37 years. Hussein was sentenced to life with a minimum of 26 years. Bilel Saadaoui was convicted of failing to disclose information about acts of terrorism and jailed for six years.

According to police, Saadaoui masterminded the operation and recruited Hussein. When Saadaoui was arrested, officers discovered two assault rifles, a semi-automatic pistol, and nearly 200 rounds of ammunition in a vehicle.

The plot took shape in late 2023, when Saadaoui began communicating online with someone he took to be a fellow extremist. "It soon became clear that Saadaoui was keen to conduct a significant terrorist attack targeting Jewish people," Greater Manchester Police stated. He sought assistance in importing automatic firearms and went so far as to carry out reconnaissance in Upper Broughton, Salford, and to visit the port through which he believed the weapons would arrive.

Reports indicate that Saadaoui aimed to acquire four AK-47 assault rifles, two handguns, and 900 rounds of ammunition.


The person he approached for help was, in fact, an undercover agent whose involvement proved "crucial" in thwarting the attack. Through these exchanges, police learned that Bilel Saadaoui was aware of his brother's intentions yet said nothing. Assistant Chief Constable Potts observed that this silence "makes him as guilty as the others."

Saadaoui was apprehended on May 8, 2024, in a large-scale operation involving more than 200 officers. He was arrested in a hotel car park while attempting to collect the firearms intended for the massacre.

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Authorities first noticed Saadaoui when he began disseminating Islamic views across more than ten anonymous social media accounts. The case is a stark reminder of the persistent threat posed by those radicalized in the name of Islamic State, who fixate on Jewish communities as their chosen targets. In this instance, prompt and skillful intervention by counter-terrorism officers averted what might otherwise have been a catastrophe on British streets.


Carrie Prejean Boller booted from WH Religious Liberty Commission due to anti-Semitic flare-up



Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, chair of President Trump's Religious Liberty Commission, announced on Wednesday that conservative activist Carrie Prejean Boller had been removed from the body.

The decision followed the commission's inaugural public hearing on anti-Semitism in America, which rapidly descended into acrimony. During the proceedings, Prejean Boller downplayed accusations of anti-Semitism directed at certain public figures, defended the execrable Candace Owens, who has repeatedly promoted anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, and interrogated Jewish witnesses on whether her own views rendered her antisemitic. She declared, “Catholics do not embrace Zionism, just so you know. So are all Catholics anti-Semites?” and questioned witnesses about her belief that Jews killed Jesus.

Patrick condemned the episode in unequivocal terms. "No member of the Commission has the right to hijack a hearing for their own personal and political agenda on any issue," he wrote on X. "This is clearly, without question, what happened Monday in our hearing on anti-Semitism in America. This was my decision."

Commission Chair Dan Patrick said the former Miss USA pageant contestant had "hijacked" the commission's first hearing on anti-Semitism.

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Prejean Boller first rose to prominence in 2009 when she lost her Miss California title amid the release of a sex tape and her public statement that marriage should be between a man and a woman. She reentered the political arena in 2020 as a member of Trump's campaign advisory board, building a following by opposing mask mandates and transgender participation in women's sports. She converted to Catholicism last year.

The White House, which appointed Prejean Boller to the commission last year, offered no immediate comment on her removal and has remained silent on the affair throughout the week. 


Sweden schools going old school: electronic gadgets out of classrooms



Sweden is seriously dialing back the screen time in classrooms, especially for the little kids, though let's be clear: it's not some total nationwide gadget blackout.

The Swedes started pivoting away from the all-digital everything around 2022–2023 once the data started screaming about tanking reading scores, kids who couldn't focus for five minutes, and shaky basic skills all tied to too much time staring at glowing rectangles.

They're going old-school hard now: pushing physical textbooks, actual handwriting practice, pen-and-paper everything, and real printed books, particularly in the early grades (preschool through primary).

The government's pumping money into textbooks and libraries again, they've scrapped any mandate for digital tools in preschools (zero screens under age 2, and heavily limited after that), and they've basically called the previous full-throttle digital experiment what it was: a failed one.

Then there's the big one: a nationwide mobile phone ban rolling out in compulsory schools (that's primary and middle, up through grade 9, ages roughly 7–16) starting autumn 2026. Kids hand over their phones at the door (or lock 'em up), get 'em back when the bell rings at the end of the day. Phones are already prohibited in classrooms in about 80% of schools, but this makes it mandatory everywhere—including during breaks, to kill distractions, boost concentration, and improve overall security.


It's not a blanket ban on every laptop or tablet in every school or for every age group. The vibe is more "screens only when they actually make sense and add real value"—not the default setting anymore. A lot of coverage calls it "pulling the plug" on the over-digitalization fad, but really it's a smart recalibration: analog methods get priority for the core stuff kids need to master.

This whole move has people around the world taking notes as a possible blueprint for fixing screen-addled classrooms. 

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Trump administration flexes their legal muscle and fire an attorney the same day he was appointed



The Trump administration just reminded everyone who's really in charge when it comes to picking top federal prosecutors, and it isn't a panel of judges.

In a move that's got the lefty outrage machine firing on all cylinders, the White House wasted zero time firing Donald T. Kinsella as U.S. attorney for the Northern District of New York. The poor guy was sworn in on Wednesday, courtesy of a board of judges from the U.S. District Court there, only to get the boot the very same day. Talk about a short-lived gig.

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche didn't mince words about it on X, laying it out plain and simple for the judicial overreach crowd: "Judges don’t pick U.S. Attorneys,
@POTUS does. See Article II of our Constitution. You are fired, Donald Kinsella."

Boom. Message received.


The court tried to play it straight in their Thursday statement, explaining they stepped in under 28 U.S.C. § 546(d) to fill a vacancy temporarily until a proper appointment happens. They even cited the Constitution's Article II, Section 2, Clause 2, which lets Congress vest appointment power for folks like U.S. attorneys "in the Courts of Law." Nice try, but the executive branch wasn't having it.

By day's end, Deputy Director of Presidential Personnel Morgan DeWitt Snow had already emailed Kinsella the bad news: You're out, no explanation needed. The court statement added a polite thank-you note, praising Kinsella for stepping up with his decades of experience as a former prosecutor and for his "distinguished work" serving the Northern District. They thanked him for being willing to return to public service to plug the hole left after the previous acting U.S. attorney, John Sarcone III, got ruled out of line.

That whole mess started back in January when U.S. District Judge Lorna Schofield declared Sarcone was illegally hanging on past the 120-day limit for unconfirmed acting U.S. attorneys. Sarcone then stepped down to first assistant while appealing, per reports.

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But here's the bottom line, folks: The Constitution is crystal clear on this one. Article II gives the president, not some panel of judges, the authority to appoint these positions, with Senate advice and consent when required. The Trump team isn't about to let activist judges rewrite the rules.

This is just the latest reminder that when it comes to executive power, President Trump is playing hardball — and winning. The courts can appoint interim folks all they want under the statute, but the boss in the Oval Office gets the final say. You are fired, indeed.



GA wants to prevent a "Renee Good" scenario and it will make Lib heads explode


Renee Good wasn’t some innocent bystander: she was a progressive left-wing activist who got shot in the face when she used her car to ram into an ICE agent on January 7. The city was embroiled in mayhem, with the liberal media and local Democrats fanning the flames of what arguably were calls for domestic terrorism. Good and others are known for following ICE vehicles around as they enforce immigration laws, disrupting their operations.

In Georgia, they’re trying to prevent that, prevent a ‘Renee Good’ situation, and liberals are likely going to go nuts over it (via Atlanta Journal-Constitution): Renee Good died last month in Minneapolis after a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Officer shot her during an encounter while she was in her vehicle. Now, Republicans in Georgia are working to make it a felony to use a vehicle to obstruct police operations.

Supporters say the legislation, House Bill 1076, is rooted in a pattern of problems across the nation. But critics see it as a rash reaction that could hinder people’s right to protest.

People can already be charged with a felony in Georgia if they use a vehicle as a weapon that harms or kills someone. But the bill by state Rep. Ginny Ehrhart would go further by making any obstruction a felony, including by stationary vehicles.

Ehrhart says confrontations between police and drivers are dangerous to begin with, and her goal is to make the penalties so high that it prevents them from happening in the first place.

Look, the left loves to turn these incidents into martyr sagas faster than you can say "mostly peaceful protest." Renee Good wasn't just out for a leisurely drive that fateful January day in Minneapolis. She allegedly decided to weaponize her vehicle against a federal agent doing his job, and now the usual suspects are clutching pearls over accountability. Georgia Republicans, bless their pragmatic hearts, are looking at this mess and saying, "Not on our watch." House Bill 1076 is straightforward common sense: if you're going to block cops with your car, moving or parked like a stubborn mule, you're looking at felony charges. Up to five years and a hefty fine ought to get the message across without anyone needing to fire a shot.

The critics are already whining about how this might chill the sacred right to protest. Please. There's a big difference between holding a sign and turning your SUV into a battering ram. If the mere threat of real consequences stops one more would-be vehicular vigilante from escalating things to a deadly confrontation, then mission accomplished. Ehrhart gets it. These situations are inherently dangerous, and the best way to keep everyone safe is to crank the deterrence dial way up before someone ends up dead or in cuffs.

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The libs will scream "fascism" and "authoritarianism" because that's their default setting these days. But sane people understand that law enforcement shouldn't have to play dodgeball with cars just because some activist feels like channeling their inner Mad Max. Georgia is drawing a line in the sand here, and good for them. If that sends the outrage brigade into full meltdown mode, well, that's just the sound of progress.


Thursday, February 12, 2026

Male ex-student with gender dysphoria was alleged suspect in Canada school mass shooting


At least nine people were killed in connection to a mass shooting Tuesday at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School in British Columbia, officials said Wednesday. Police identified the suspect, reportedly also found dead, as an 18-year-old man with gender dysphoria who allegedly killed two of his family members at home before opening fire at the school. 

Sadly, Fox News Digital reported this story but was too cowardly to use the correct pronoun 'his' and replaced it with 'their' [family members].

The Tumbler Ridge Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) confirmed to Fox News Digital that officers responded to reports of an active shooter at the school at 1:20 p.m. local time Tuesday. While searching the school, officers found six victims dead from gunshot wounds and the alleged shooter, identified as 18-year-old Jesse Van Rootselaar, dead from what appeared to be a self-inflicted injury colloquially known as suicide. 

Authorities said Van Rootselaar had attended the school before dropping out roughly four years ago. Van Rootselaar, a dude, saw himself as a female but his penis at birth gave him away. In any case, he began dressing up as a woman and took female hormones six years ago. This writer does not know whether or not he had his penis cut off and replaced with a fake labia, but whatever the case, he is still a male with XY chromosomes and other biological conditions. 

And when you think about it, taking a gun to your parents and then indiscriminately shooting up the school you dropped out of, is quite un-lady-like.

Van Rootselaar reportedly had a history of mental health–related contact with police and may have had access to weapons stored at home. Brilliant on his parents part.

Police said officials visited the guy's residence multiple times in recent years for mental health calls, during which weapons were briefly seized under the Criminal Code but later returned following a petition by the lawful owner, likely his mother who is now dead, likely from the very same gun.

Police tape surrounds the Tumbler Ridge Secondary School and other buildings in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia, on Wednesday, a day after a mass shooting there.

Two firearms, a long gun and a modified handgun, were recovered inside the school by the police, RCMP said. Neither weapon was registered to Van Rootselaar, who previously had a firearms license, but expired in 2024.

The six victims found at the school were identified as a 39-year-old female educator, three 12-year-old female students, and two male students, aged 12 and 13.

During the investigation, police identified a secondary location believed to be connected to the incident. Two additional victims were found dead inside a residence and were identified as the suspect's 39-year-old mother and 11-year-old step-brother.

Officials added that two victims were airlifted to a hospital with serious or life-threatening injuries. One of the wounded, a woman previously believed to have died, is now alive, lowering the death toll from the initially reported 10 to nine.

Approximately 25 others with non-life-threatening injuries were taken for assessment at the local medical center, police said.

"This was a rapidly evolving and dynamic situation, and the swift cooperation from the school, first responders, and the community played a critical role in our response," Superintendent Ken Floyd, North District Commander, said in a statement. "Our thoughts are with the families, loved ones, and all those impacted by this tragic incident. This has been an incredibly difficult and emotional day for our community, and we are grateful for the cooperation shown as officers continue their work to advance the investigation."

Well that should be a great comfort to the families and loved ones, knowing about those thoughts.

All remaining students and staff were safely evacuated from the school, police said. Police do not believe there are any additional suspects or ongoing threat to the public. Floyd confirmed the shooter was the same individual described in a police alert issued earlier in the day as a "female in a dress with brown hair."

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said he was devastated by the horrific shootings."My prayers and deepest condolences are with the families and friends who have lost loved ones to these horrific acts of violence. I join Canadians in grieving with those whose lives have been changed irreversibly today, and in gratitude for the courage and selflessness of the first responders who risked their lives to protect their fellow citizens. Our ability to come together in crisis is the best of our country — our empathy, our unity, and our compassion for each other," he wrote on X.

Prayers from politicians have been known to work wonders to assuage the pain families and loved ones feel about losing one of their own to a violent, sick person.

The RCMP initially confirmed an active shooter incident Tuesday at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School in British Columbia, with at least one suspect found dead.

Additional police resources were deployed to the area from neighboring detachments, along with the North District Emergency Response Team.


In a message posted to its website, the Peace River South School District said it was "aware of a lockdown and secure and hold at Tumbler Ridge Secondary and Tumbler Ridge Elementary schools."

"We are asking people to have patience as we work with the RCMP," school officials wrote. Larry Neufeld, who represents Peace River South in the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia, released a statement on social media noting he was heading to the scene.

"I am aware of the active shooter situation currently unfolding in Tumbler Ridge, and my thoughts are with residents as this situation continues to develop," Neufeld wrote. "I have been in direct contact with the Solicitor General to receive updates and to ensure all necessary provincial resources are being made. Public safety is the absolute priority. I urge everyone in the area to follow RCMP instructions, remain sheltered, and rely only on official updates," he continued. "I am leaving Victoria immediately to return to my riding to be on the ground and available to support the community in any way needed. I will continue to stay closely engaged as this situation evolves."

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Free Buses, Real Costs: Mamdani’s Socialist Fantasy Collides with New York Reality

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani has turned "fast and free buses" into the centerpiece of his administration, selling it as an ...