by Steven Richards
Traditional Democrats are apprehensive about the breadth of victories by socialist candidates in Tuesday’s primaries, revealing the growing power of such candidates in the party.
In a shock to the Democratic Party establishment, several socialist candidates in the mold of New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani ousted incumbents and cemented their influence in the nation's largest city, long considered the financial capital of the world.
The candidates centered their campaigns on radical changes that have become the calling card of a new brand of socialist Democrats. Their platform includes abolishing ICE, ending deportations, opposing the state of Israel, implementing Medicare for all, and creating federal job guarantees.
Mamdani’s endorsements put the mayor on a collision course with establishment Democratic leadership, and he came out victorious. The socialist victories were specifically a defeat for Democratic House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, who backed the old-school incumbents and doubted Mamdani’s potential for long-term influence over the party.
The results have prompted more moderate Democrats to raise the alarm about the growing strength and influence of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) within their own ranks.
“People who do not support the DSA wring their hands at cocktail parties, while the DSA is organizing,” Rep. Tom Suozzi, D-N.Y., told Axios. “It was a tough night,” Gregory Meeks, another Democrat from New York, told the outlet. New York Attorney General Letitia James said Mamdani’s endorsements threaten to “blow up” the Democratic Party.
NY AG Letitia James: "Disappointed" in Mandami
“Some of the candidates that he has supported are individuals who do not understand the politics of New York City, the cultural differences from district to district, who have not been part of the history and the struggle of some of these districts, and are relatively new to the body politic,” James told CNN.
“All of us are a little frustrated with the Democratic Party. But you don’t blow it up. That’s what MAGA has done,” she added.
Mamdani’s decision to endorse candidates challenging establishment-backed figures and bucking party leadership is part of an attempt to “radically” reorient the Democratic Party towards his vision, those close to the mayor have said.
“He’s seeing that opportunity – that we can radically change the Democratic Party,” said Faiz Shakir, an advisor to Senator Bernie Sanders and described as a friend of Mamdani’s. “Like Bernie, he's not saying I'm doing this out of spite against you, dear leadership. He's saying, I am supporting these candidates who have a better vision, and I am prepared to lose if it has to be the case.”
Platforms and policies defined
In perhaps one of the most shocking races of the night, DSA-endorsed Darializa Avila Chevalier knocked off five-term incumbent Rep. Adriano Espaillat, who helmed the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. Espaillat has represented the Upper Manhattan district for nearly a decade and was backed by Jeffries.
Chevalier, on the other hand, has been a community organizer who graduated from Columbia in 2016. Before running for office, she worked with the Neighborhood Defender Services of Harlem, a public defenders office.
Chevalier’s worldview was heavily influenced by an internship with Tomorrow’s Youth Organization, teaching English to Palestinian children in Nablus, West Bank. The 2014 Israel-Gaza war, which lasted about 50 days, started just after she returned to the United States.
“That was a really formative period for me, because I was essentially living in the heart of the occupation and seeing the way that Palestinians had to navigate all these systems, the impact that it had on children as young as the ones that I was working with,” Avila Chevalier told City & State New York. “I came back, and I couldn't unsee all those things. And I started seeing them in our own systems, right? Our systems of policing, of deportation, of the controlling of our movement.”
Her identity as a pro-Palestine, and anti-Israel, activist was at the center of her long-shot campaign. Before launching her bid for Congress, Chevalier had spent years organizing and participating in protests against the war in Gaza between Israel and Hamas. The war was sparked when Hamas, a Palestinian terrorist group that controlled the Gaza Strip, conducted a deadly attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.
The following day, Chevalier was out on the streets of New York, participating in a protest organized by leftist groups. Rallygoers held signs reading “Resistance is Justified when People are Occupied” and faced criticism for appearing to support the attacks that left more than one thousand Israelis dead. Some of the rally organizers were later sued for allegedly acting as “collaborators and propagandists” for Hamas in the United States.
Claims to be a "human rights advocate" for Palestinians
During the campaign, Chevalier defended attending the rally, suggesting Israel’s response to the Hamas attack had the potential to become “a really outsized reaction.”
“I can only say I have been advocating for the human rights of Palestinians for my adult life. And as someone who has seen a pattern, whenever anything happens on the ground (in Israel), there's always a really outsized reaction that costs thousands of people their lives,” Avila Chevalier told City & State earlier this month.
Chevalier’s activism ultimately encouraged her to convert to Islam because of the "grace and love and passion" that her Muslim friends had for "social justice,” she said in a speech at a New York Mosque.
In addition to pro-Palestine activism, Chevalier has taken an extreme position on immigration law and deportations. Like many of her DSA colleagues, Chevalier calls for ICE to be abolished, but has gone even further to suggest that all deportations are wrong.
“I still believe that all deportations are wrong,” Chevalier said in an interview with Vox earlier this month. When asked if that would include those who had committed criminal offenses in the United States after entering illegally, she doubled down.
Chevalier has also faced scrutiny for a series of deleted posts to social media expressing support for abolishing police, prisons and borders, seizing private property, and nationalizing industries.
“A world without borders—just like a world without prisons or police—is possible, necessary, and the only moral way forward,” Chevalier posted to Twitter in September 2021. During that same month, she also posted: “Yes, literally, abolish the border” and “all deportation is wrong.” In a handful of posts, Chevalier appeared to express support for key tenets of Marxism and abolishing the police.
“Seize the means of production,” she wrote in one post.
“No. It means ending policing full stop. Period. No more police at all ever,” she wrote in another.
Chevalier tried to distance herself from her old tweets during the campaign. “I have grown considerably in the years since these tweets, and I am focused on our community and our community’s future,” Chevalier told CNN when the outlet asked about the posts.
Claire Valdez: "Abolish ICE, free Palestine, organize your union, and join DSA!"
In New York’s 7th Congressional District, Mamdani backed Claire Valdez, a New York Assembly member, union organizer, and DSA member.
Valdez adopted a similar platform to Mamdani, including a “Housing for All” policy with universal rent control and public funding for housing. She has also called for the abolition of ICE, the legalization of “millions of immigrant Americans, Medicare for all, “Queer and Trans Liberation,” and an end to all weapons sales and military aid to Israel, according to her campaign website.
Valdez has been arrested multiple times during protests outside the offices of New York Senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand and federal immigration facilities, protesting the war in Gaza and President Trump’s immigration policies, respectively.
In her victory speech on Tuesday night, she succinctly laid out her priorities: “Solidarity forever, abolish ICE, free Palestine, organize your union, and join DSA!"
Against incumbent Democrat Rep. Dan Goldman, Mamdani backed Brad Lander, the former New York City comptroller who once ran against Mamdani for the mayoral nomination, but later backed him.
Lander, who is himself Jewish, has embraced much of the language and policy agenda of the pro-Palestinian movement, including describing Israel's conduct in Gaza as genocide and pledging to oppose additional U.S. military aid while the Israeli-Palestinian conflict continues, though he declined to go as far as the others.
Lander, who was once affiliated with the DSA, actually ended his membership with the organization for advertising the controversial pro-Palestinian rally which Chevalier had attended on Oct. 8, 2023. However, that did not stop him from working with Chevalier in the election. In the campaign, Lander attacked Goldman for taking donations from AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the organization that has become a frequently invoked boogeyman for critics of Israel on both the left and the right.
He also criticized Goldman for voting for military aid packages to Israel during its wars. “We can't continue to be complicit in genocide,” Lander said of his opposition to those packages.
Like the other candidates, Lander’s campaign website calls for abolishing ICE, packing the Supreme Court, building more public housing, and Medicare for all.
Steven Richards
Source: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/elections/democratic-socialists-are-ascendant-new-york-what-their-better-vision


