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Mamdani-backed candidates win big in New York Democratic primaries – US politics live | US politics

Mamdani-backed candidates win big in New York primary

Hello and welcome to our US politics liveblog.

Three congressional candidates endorsed by Zohran Mamdani, New York’s democratic socialist mayor, won their closely watched primaries on Tuesday, beating out incumbents or incumbent-backed candidates supported by the Democratic establishment.

Brad Lander, the former New York City comptroller who also ran for mayor last year before endorsing Mamdani, defeated the two-term incumbent Democrat Dan Goldman in NY-10.

Political newcomer Darializa Avila Chevalier won against five-term incumbent Democrat Adriano Espaillat in NY-13 in a stunning upset.

And in NY-7, Claire Valdez beat out Brooklyn borough president Antonio Reynoso – the handpicked successor of Nydia Velázquez, the first Puerto Rican woman to serve in Congress who is considered a progressive giant of New York City politics.

This clean sweep for Mamdani is a clear indicator of his growing influence – and that of his ascendant progressive movement – over the Democratic party.

“The old politics that got us into this crisis is not the politics that’s going to get us out of this crisis,” Mamdani said at a watch party for Valdez.

In other developments:

  • In Maryland, Adrian Boafo won the extremely crowded primary race to succeed Steny Hoyer, the longest-serving House Democrat and a longtime member of leadership who is retiring at the end of his 23rd term. Boafo, a state delegate, defeated the former US Capitol police officer Harry Dunn, who defended the building on January 6, and businesswoman Quincy Bareebe.

  • April McClain Delaney fended off her predecessor, the former Democratic congressman David Trone, who sought to reclaim his seat in Maryland’s sixth district after an unsuccessful bid for Senate two years ago.

  • Nancy Lacore, a three-star navy rear-admiral fired by Pete Hegseth last year in the defense secretary’s purge of senior US military officials, has won the Democratic nomination in a runoff for a closely watched congressional race in South Carolina.

  • South Carolina’s attorney general, Alan Wilson, won the Republican nomination for governor, defeating Trump-backed lieutenant governor Pamela Evette.

  • In Utah, former congressman Ben McAdams, a political moderate, won the primary to compete in a ​n​ewly drawn Democratic-friendly district in Salt Lake City.

  • Donald Trump is slated to meet with the Nato secretary general, Mark Rutte, in the Oval office on Wednesday.

  • Later Wednesday, Trump will also be hosting the opening of The Great American State Fair, an event held by the Freedom 250, an organization run by Trump supporters to mark the United States’ 250th anniversary and run counter to America250, the nonpartisan body set up by Congress a decade ago to oversee the commemoration.

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Analysis: Zohran Mamdani has lost none of his political magic

David Smith

A man or a movement? That was the question being asked when Zohran Mamdani gambled his political capital on Tuesday’s elections in New York.

The answer from voters was emphatic: they prefer Mamdani and his brand of democratic socialism to the Democratic party establishment and its lukewarm version of capitalism. America’s biggest city has swung even further to the left.

The New York Knicks might have won in five, but Mamdani did it in three. The mayor audaciously backed a trio of candidates in Democratic primaries for the US House of Representatives, and all three prevailed over establishment-backed rivals. Two were fellow democratic socialists.

The results demonstrated that Mamdani has lost none of his political magic. He took a risk by intervening in the congressional races, alienating some Black and Latino Democrats and trade unions along the way, but it paid off handsomely.

Zohran Mamdani has said it is a question of electing ‘better Democrats’. Photograph: Jaysun Silver/Shutterstock

The mayor-turned-kingmaker had said it was a question of electing “better Democrats” who would “put working people back at the heart of politics”. All three victors are expected to win their safely blue districts, which would send three Mamdani allies into Congress next January.

The outcome was also a recognition of some wider trends in US politics: socialism is no longer a dirty word, criticism of Israel is no longer taboo and dissatisfaction with Democratic leaders in the Donald Trump era runs deep. Voters are thirsty for energy, fight and fresh ideas.

They ask: if Republicans can draw up a Project 2025 and pursue it ruthlessly, why can’t Democrats come up with a Project 2029 that promises universal healthcare, supreme court reform, massive climate investments, a war on the oligarchs and a clear-eyed approach to the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu?

Voters have been sending a message to Democrats: stand for something, rather than nothing, because writing strongly worded letters to Trump is not enough. They regard Congress as lethargic and ineffective against the authoritarian onslaught, in contrast to the energy of Democratic governors and mayors.

Many were incensed by Biden and Harris’s backing of Israel’s war in Gaza, which resulted in the deaths of more than 73,000 Palestinian people. Some were frustrated by a Democratic National Committee election autopsy that pulled punches and failed to mention Gaza at all.

A significant number voters are also sceptical of Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader, and Hakeem Jeffries, his equivalent in the House, both New Yorkers and staunch supporters of Israel.

Van Jones, a political commentator and former official in the Barack Obama administration, told CNN:

double quotation markThis is a battle between the establishment and this insurgency. And the roof is collapsing on the Democratic party establishment tonight … This is no longer a movement; this is a movement and a machine at the same time.

Once the midterms are done, Mamdani and his allies will be a powerful force in determining the Democratic presidential nominee in 2028. That could put wind in the sails of yet another New Yorker: the progressive star Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

It is exactly 12 months since Mamdani beat Andrew Cuomo in his own Democratic primary, putting him on course to win the mayoralty. “A year ago, it was not the end of a political movement,” he told supporters on Tuesday. “It was the beginning.”

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