Every few years, somebody pops up to tell a city’s landlords, “Hey, maybe someone poor with two kids and a minimum wage job shouldn’t have to sell a kidney just to keep a roof over their heads.” In 63 BCE, that somebody was Lucius Sergius Catilina — Catiline if you’re on casual terms. In modern New York, it’s Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani.
Catiline wanted votes, so he promised to cancel debts, redistribute land, and hand out farms like Oprah hands out cars: “You get a farm! You get a farm! And you get a farm!” This was easy to promise because the debts weren’t owed to him, he didn’t own the land he wanted to redistribute, nor did he own the farms he wanted to give away.
Mamdani, on the other hand, in exchange for votes, is promising to stop your landlord from raising rent so high you need to start renting out your closet on Airbnb just to pay for your bedroom. This is also easy to say, because Mamdani doesn’t own any of those apartments and doesn’t have to make any mortgage payments. Mamdani doesn’t mention that one of the main reasons that rents are high is that the rent control policy the city has had in effect for 82 years stifles the creation of new housing. The chief rule of everyone ignorant of simple economics seems to be that when you see an obstacle in the road, speed up.
It’s a matter of, “different centuries, same basic fight”: who gets to call the shots when it comes to property? The property owners and mortgage holders? Or the people who are just trying not to end up living under a bridge?
Picture Rome in the mid-first century BCE: The Republic’s looking a little shaky, the Senate’s packed with old men clutching their togas, and everyone’s broke. Small farmers had lost their land to the Roman equivalent of agribusiness—big estates run by slaves. Aristocrats were mortgaging their futures to throw the ancient version of Super Bowl halftime shows (bread, circuses, and gladiators). Veterans were wandering around muttering, “Wait, we fought all those wars and I don’t even get a cabbage patch?” The political climate was hotter than a June bride in a feather bed.
Into this chaos strides Catiline, promising a tabula nova—a clean slate. Translation: burn the IOUs, cancel the debts, and start afresh. To the desperate, this sounded like salvation. To the Roman Senate, it sounded like arson—which was pretty accurate since Cataline was planning to burn the estates of his enemies.
Fast forward a couple of thousand years: Instead of togas, it’s hoodies and instead of gladiators, it’s the New York Yankees and Knicks games…but the housing crisis is pretty much the same. Enter Zohran Mamdani, representing Astoria, Queens. His pitch: Housing is a human right, not a Monopoly board. His weapons:
· Good Cause Eviction: No more landlords deciding rent should increase just because taxes and utilities go up… Or because they’ve bought a new yacht.
· Rent caps: Stop the annual ritual of tenants opening their lease renewal letters like they’re scratching off a lottery ticket.
· Social housing: City-owned apartments that are permanently affordable (because, as we all know, this has worked so well in the past exactly nowhere!).
Landlords scream that this is socialism, but tenants call it survival. Politicians—absolutely certain that simply passing new legislation could repeal the law of gravity—call it sound politics.
Lets size up these two like a prize fight.
Catiline vs. Mamdani: The Tale of the Tape
Let’s start with Catiline.
Catiline (Rome, 63 BCE)
Big Idea Cancel debts, hand out land
Enemies Roman Senate, creditors, Cicero with a grudge
Supporters Indebted elites, broke farmers, grumpy veterans
Methods Conspiracy, maybe arson, an attempted military coup
Fate Died in battle, labeled a traitor forever
Versus Mamdani (Queens, 2020s)
Big Idea Cap rents, protect tenants
Enemies Real estate lobby, landlords, banks, and anyone who successfully passed Economics 101
Supporters Tenants, immigrants, socialists, and Education majors.
Methods Legislation, rallies, and lots of tweets
Fate Still in office and will probably be elected mayor. After that, who knows?
Catiline believed that wiping out debts would restore equilibrium by freeing citizens to farm, serve, and consume. Critics saw it as destabilizing credit markets. Mamdani argues that capping rents and expanding tenant protections will stabilize communities, prevent displacement, and preserve affordable housing. Critics warn it will deter construction and reduce supply while property owners convert apartments into individual condominiums.
Despite the 2,000-year gap, the similarities are hard to miss. Romans feared debt slavery while New Yorkers fear rent hikes; this might be different shackles, but the anxiety is the same. Catiline promised a bonfire of IOUs while Mamdani promises landlords will be put in their place. Both got cheers from the impoverished struggling masses. Cicero thundered about Catiline destroying civilization and landlords thunder that rent control will destroy the housing market. Spoiler: civilization and New York both still exist.
Now, the differences matter too: While Catiline tried to storm Rome, Mamdani tries to storm Albany committee meetings. One ended with a bloody battlefield, the other has a bill in legislative limbo—one that, in the unlikely event it ever passes, will probably be doomed to die in a Federal Court.
While Catiline wanted to erase debts outright, Mamdani wants to freeze rents without offering a solution to how the property owners can keep paying their mortgages. The first would have triggered a civil war in Rome, while the other would trigger capital flight and economic turmoil.
While Catiline got swords, Mamdani gets subpoenas. Cicero shouted, “How long, O Catiline, will you abuse our patience?” Today, it’s landlords muttering, “How long, O Mamdani, will you abuse our patience?” Catiline’s reforms died with him. Mamdani’s ideas are still duking it out in statehouses and at the ballot box.
The two politicians, 2000 years apart, offer us a little more than a history lesson. Every society eventually has to answer the same awkward question: “Is property sacred, or is housing a right?” Rome decided that property was sacred, and though the Republic keeled over within a generation, the Empire lasted hundreds of years. New York hasn’t decided yet.
Catiline’s ghost might whisper to Mamdani: “Careful, kid — they’ll call you a traitor to property, too.” Mamdani might whisper back: “Yeah, but at least they won’t execute me in the Forum.”
The fight goes on, whether in marble forums or in rent-stabilized walk-ups. And as long as people need somewhere to sleep that isn’t the street, somebody will always step up to poke the bear and say, “Maybe property rights aren’t the only rights worth protecting.”