2026 United States House of Representatives elections in New York

← 2024
November 3, 2026
2028 →

All 26 New York seats to the United States House of Representatives
 
Party Democratic Republican
Last election 19 7

An election for United States Congressional seats will be held on November 3, 2026, to elect the 26 U.S. representatives from the State of New York, one from each of the state's 26 congressional districts. The elections will coincide with other elections to the House of Representatives, elections to the United States Senate, and various state and local elections. The primary election took place on June 23, 2026. As the state of New York has closed primary elections, only registered party members are allowed to vote in each party's primary.[1]

Progressive and socialist candidates had a highly successful primary night, defeating more moderate Democratic incumbents in the 10th and 13th districts and winning the open 7th district in a landslide, in what was described as a “clean sweep” and a show of strength for Mayor Zohran Mamdani and the New York City chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America.[2][3]

District 1

2026 New York's 1st congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Nick LaLota Chris Gallant
Party Republican Democratic
Alliance Conservative Working Families

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Nick LaLota
Republican



The 1st district is based on the eastern end and North Shore of Long Island, including the Hamptons, the North Fork, Riverhead, Port Jefferson, Smithtown, and Shelter Island, all in Suffolk County. The incumbent is Republican Nick LaLota, who was re-elected with 55.52% of the vote in 2024.[4]

Republican

Nominee

  • Nick LaLota, incumbent U.S. representative[5]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Nick LaLota (R) $3,317,401 $1,009,728 $2,983,750
Source: Federal Election Commission[6]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Chris Gallant, air traffic controller[7]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Christoper Gallant (D) $434,125 $424,490 $81,740
Source: Federal Election Commission[6]

Eliminated in primary

  • Lukas Ventouras, member of the Huntington Democratic Committee[8]

Disqualified

Withdrawn

  • Luca Nascimbene[11]

Declined

  • John Avlon, former CNN reporter, co-founder of No Labels, and nominee for this district in 2024[12]

Endorsements

Chris Gallant
Executive branch officials
  • Pete Buttigieg, former U.S. secretary of transportation (2021–2025)[13]
State legislators
  • Steve Englebright, former state assemblymember from the 4th district (1992–2022)[14]
  • Fred Thiele, former state assemblymember from the 1st district (1995–2024)[14]
Individuals
  • John Avlon, political commentator and journalist[14]
Political parties
  • New York Working Families Party[15]
Lukas Ventouras
Organizations
  • Center for Freethought Equality PAC[14]
  • Track AIPAC[16]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Chris Gallant (D) $515,866 $434,125 $81,740
Lukas Ventouras (D) $120,655 $115,969 $21,345
Source: Federal Election Commission[6]

Results

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Chris Gallant 12,132 62.9
Democratic Lukas Ventouras 7,130 37.0
Democratic Write-in 30 0.2
Total votes 19,292 100.0

Independents

Filed paperwork

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Likely R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Likely R February 3, 2026

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Nick LaLota (R) $3,317,401 $1,009,728 $2,983,750
Chris Gallant (D) $515,866 $434,125 $81,740
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Polling

Nick LaLota vs. Chris Gallant

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Nick
LaLota (R)
Chris
Gallant (D)
Undecided
Public Policy Polling (D)[24][A] December 10–11, 2025 579 (V) 41% 38% 20%

Results

2026 New York's 1st congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Nick LaLota (incumbent)
Democratic Chris Gallant
Total votes

District 2

2026 New York's 2nd congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Andrew Garbarino Patrick Halpin
Party Republican Democratic
Alliance Conservative Working Families

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Andrew Garbarino
Republican



The 2nd district is based on the South Shore of Suffolk County, including the towns of Babylon, Islip, and most of Brookhaven all in Suffolk County, and Massapequa in Nassau County. The incumbent was Republican Andrew Garbarino, who was re-elected with 59.8% of the vote in 2024.[4]

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Andrew Garbarino, incumbent U.S. representative[25]

Endorsements

Andrew Garbarino
Executive branch officials
  • Donald Trump, 45th and 47th president of the United States (2017–2021, 2025–present)[26]
Organizations
  • Log Cabin Republicans[27]
Political parties
  • Conservative Party of New York State[25]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Andrew Garbarino (R) $2,805,494 $1,529,140 $2,821,960
Source: Federal Election Commission[28]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Patrick Halpin, former Suffolk County Executive (1988–1991)[29]

Disqualified

  • Jess Murphy, real estate investment manager[30]

Withdrawn

  • Garrett Petersen, deputy chair of the Islip Democrats and nominee for New York's 7th State Assembly district in 2024[31]
  • Joshua Taveras, store manager[32]

Endorsements

Pat Halpin
Political parties
  • New York Working Families Party[15]

Fundraising

Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Patrick Halpin (D) $427,897 $345,252 $82,645
Source: Federal Election Commission[28]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Likely R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Andrew Garbarino (R) $2,805,494 $1,529,140 $2,821,960
Patrick Halpin (D) $427,897 $345,252 $82,645
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 2nd congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Andrew Garbarino (incumbent)
Democratic Patrick G. Halpin
Total votes

District 3

2026 New York's 3rd congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Tom Suozzi Mike LiPetri
Party Democratic Republican
Alliance Common Sense Conservative

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Tom Suozzi
Democratic



The 3rd district is based on the North Shore of Nassau County, including all of Glen Cove and North Hempstead, parts of Oyster Bay, and Hempstead, and the Northeast Queens neighborhoods of Whitestone, Beechhurst, Little Neck, and Douglaston.[33] The incumbent is Democrat Tom Suozzi, who was re-elected with 51.8% of the vote in 2024.[4]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Tom Suozzi, incumbent U.S. representative[34]

Eliminated in primary

  • Danielle Welch, public defender[35]

Endorsements

Tom Suozzi
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
  • NYC District Council of Carpenters[38]
Organizations
  • AIPAC[39]
  • Brady Campaign[40]
  • Democratic Majority for Israel[41]
  • End Citizens United[42]
  • Giffords[43]
  • Jewish Democratic Council of America[44]
  • Joint Action Committee for Political Affairs[45]
  • League of Conservation Voters Action Fund[46]
  • Natural Resources Defense Council[47]
  • New York League of Conservation Voters[48]
  • Reproductive Freedom for All[49]
  • WelcomePAC[50]
Danielle Welch
Organizations
  • Showing Up for Racial Justice[51]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Tom Suozzi (D) $4,997,581 $1,535,359 $5,496,563
Danielle Welch (D) $45,810 $38,005 $7,805
Source: Federal Election Commission[52]

Results

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Tom Suozzi (incumbent) 20,820 79.6
Democratic Danielle Welch 5,263 20.1
Democratic Write-in 63 0.2
Total votes 26,146 100.0

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Mike LiPetri, former state assemblyman from the 9th district (2019–2021), candidate for the 2nd district in 2020, and nominee for this district in 2024[53]

Eliminated in primary

  • Greg Hach, attorney and candidate for this district in 2024[54]

Endorsements

Greg Hach
Local officials
  • Rudy Giuliani, former mayor of New York City (1994–2001)[55]
Mike LiPetri
Executive branch officials
  • Donald Trump, president of the United States (2017–2021, 2025–present)[56]
U.S. representatives
  • Tom Emmer, House majority whip (2023–present) from MN-06 (2015–present)[57]
  • Richard Hudson, NC-09 (2013–present)[58]
Local officials
  • Bruce Blakeman, Nassau County executive (2022–present) and 2026 gubernatorial candidate[57]
Political parties
  • Conservative Party of New York State[25]
Labor unions
  • International Union of Operating Engineers Local 138[55]
Organizations
  • NRCC MAGA Majority[58]
Party branches
  • Nassau County Republican Party[57]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Greg Hach (R) $526,877 $477,698 $58,415
Mike LiPetri (R) $993,324 $281,474 $727,639
Source: Federal Election Commission[52]

Results

Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Mike LiPetri 10,898 81.9
Republican Greg Hach 2,294 17.2
Republican Write-in 117 0.9
Total votes 13,309 100.0

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Lean D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Lean D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Lean D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Lean D November 24, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Tom Suozzi (D) $4,997,581 $1,535,359 $5,496,563
Mike LiPetri (R) $993,324 $281,474 $727,639
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 3rd congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Tom Suozzi (incumbent)
Republican Mike LiPetri
Total votes

District 4

2026 New York's 4th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Laura Gillen Jeanine Driscoll
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Laura Gillen
Democratic



The 4th district is based on the South Shore of Nassau County and is entirely within the town of Hempstead. The incumbent is Democrat Laura Gillen, who flipped the district and was elected with 51.1% of the vote in 2024.[4] She is running for re-election.

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Laura Gillen, incumbent U.S. representative[59]

Disqualified

  • Nick Sciretta, stagehand[60]
  • Kiana Bierria-Anderson, activist[60]

Withdrawn

  • Taylor Darling, former state assemblymember from the 18th district (2019–2024) and candidate for New York's 6th State Senate district in 2024[61]
  • Gian Jones, businessman and candidate for this district in 2024[62]

Endorsements

Laura Gillen
U.S. representatives
  • Pete Aguilar, CA-33 (2015–present)[63]
  • Katherine Clark, House minority whip (2023–present) from MA-05 (2013–present)[63]
  • Hakeem Jeffries, House minority leader (2023–present) from NY-08 (2013–present)[63]
  • Gregory Meeks, NY-05 (1998–present)[64]
Party officials
  • Jay Jacobs, chair of the New York State Democratic Party (2019–present)[64]
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • New York State United Teachers[65]
Organizations
  • AIPAC[39]
  • Brady Campaign[40]
  • Democratic Majority for Israel[41]
  • Elect Democratic Women[66]
  • EMILY's List[67]
  • End Citizens United[42]
  • Giffords[43]
  • Jewish Democratic Council of America[44]
  • Joint Action Committee for Political Affairs[45]
  • League of Conservation Voters Action Fund[68]
  • Natural Resources Defense Council[47]
  • Reproductive Freedom for All[49]
Kiana Bierria-Anderson (disqualified)
Organizations
  • Hofstra University College Democrats[69]
Taylor Darling (withdrawn)
Organizations
  • Showing Up for Racial Justice[51]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Laura Gillen (D) $4,587,185 $1,188,926 $3,421,462
Source: Federal Election Commission[70]

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Jeanine Driscoll, Hempstead receiver of taxes[71]

Eliminated in primary

  • Marvin Williams, U.S. Air Force veteran[72]

Disqualified

  • Michael Mandel, attorney[73]

Withdrawn

  • John DeGrace, former mayor of Valley Stream[74]

Declined

  • Anthony D'Esposito, Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Labor (2026–present) and former U.S. representative (2023–2025)[71]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Dennis McGrath (R) $10,000 $8,910 $1,089
Source: Federal Election Commission[70]

Results

Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jeanine Driscoll 12,892 90.8
Republican Marvin Williams 1,258 8.9
Republican Write-in 53 0.4
Total votes 14,203 100.0

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Lean D January 15, 2026
Inside Elections[20] Tilt D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Lean D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Likely D January 25, 2026

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Laura Gillen (D) $4,587,185 $1,188,926 $3,421,462
Jeanine Driscoll (R) $187,762 $4,939 $182,823
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 4th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Laura Gillen (incumbent)
Republican Jeanine Driscoll
Total votes

District 5

2026 New York's 5th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Gregory Meeks George Marsh
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Gregory Meeks
Democratic



The 5th district is based in Southeast Queens, including the neighborhoods of Jamaica, Hollis, Laurelton, Richmond Hill, Ozone Park, Howard Beach, and the Rockaways. The district is currently represented by Gregory Meeks, first elected in 1998, who was re-elected with 72.9% of the vote in 2024.[4]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Gregory Meeks, incumbent U.S. representative[75]

Disqualified

  • Salvatore Padellaro, entrepreneur[76]

Endorsements

Gregory Meeks
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
  • District Council 37[77]
  • NYC District Council of Carpenters[38]
Organizations
  • AIPAC[39]
  • Democratic Majority for Israel[41]
  • J Street PAC[78]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
  • Population Connection[80]
Salvatore Padellaro (disqualified)
Organizations

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Gregory Meeks (D) $1,575,073 $1,854,342 $1,949,283
Source: Federal Election Commission[81]

Republican primary

Nominee

Disqualified

  • Aaron Cherry[83]
  • Alexandria Foxworth[84]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Gregory Meeks (D) $1,575,073 $1,854,342 $1,949,283
George Marsh (R) $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 5th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Gregory Meeks (incumbent)
Republican George Marsh
Total votes

District 6

2026 New York's 6th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Grace Meng Joseph Chou
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Grace Meng
Democratic



The 6th district is based in Central and Eastern Queens, including the neighborhoods of Woodside, Jackson Heights, Elmhurst, Kew Gardens, Flushing, Bayside, and Fresh Meadows. Incumbent Democrat Grace Meng, who was re-elected with 60.7% of the vote in 2024,[4] is running for re-election.[85]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Grace Meng, incumbent U.S. representative[85][86]

Eliminated in primary

  • Chuck Park, former chief of staff for New York City councilmember Shekar Krishnan[87]

Disqualified

  • Xiong Yan, Chinese dissident and candidate for New York's 10th congressional district in 2022[88]

Endorsements

Grace Meng
U.S. senators
  • Andy Kim, New Jersey (2024–present)[85]
State legislators
  • John Liu, state senator from the 16th district (2019–present)[85]
Local officials
  • Shekar Krishnan, New York City councilmember from the 25th district (2022–present)[89]
Labor unions
  • 1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers East[90]
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
  • District Council 37[77]
  • International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers Local 28[90]
  • Laborers' International Union of North America[91]
  • National Association of Letter Carriers Local 294[90]
  • New York City Central Labor Council[92]
  • New York State AFL-CIO[93]
  • New York State Association of Letter Carriers[90]
  • New York State Nurses Association[94]
  • NYC District Council of Carpenters[95]
  • UNITE HERE Local 100[95]
Organizations
  • AIPAC[39]
  • Congressional Progressive Caucus[96]
  • Democratic Majority for Israel[41]
  • League of Conservation Voters Action Fund[46]
  • Jim Owles Liberal Democratic Club[97]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
  • Population Connection[80]
  • Reproductive Freedom for All[98]
  • Stonewall Democratic Club of New York[99]
  • Vote Mama[100]
Chuck Park
State legislators
  • Raj Goyle, former Kansas state representative from the 87th district (2007–2011)[101]
Organizations
  • Citizen Action of New York[102]
  • Citizens Against AIPAC Corruption[103]
  • Forest Hills Indivisible[103]
  • Progressive Victory[103]
  • Sunrise NYC[102]
  • Track AIPAC[16]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Grace Meng (D) $1,692,657 $1,626,255 $1,035,288
Chuck Park (D) $445,020 $380,689 $28,477
Source: Federal Election Commission[104]

Results

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Grace Meng (incumbent) 18,134 56.8
Democratic Chuck Park 13,674 42.9
Democratic Write-in 91 0.3
Total votes 31,899 100.0

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Grace Meng (D) $1,692,657 $1,626,255 $1,035,288
Joseph Chou (R) $92,644 $90,481 $2,163
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 6th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Grace Meng (incumbent)
Republican Joseph Chou
Total votes

District 7

2026 New York's 7th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Claire Valdez Melvin Rivera
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Nydia Velázquez
Democratic



The 7th district is based in Brooklyn and Queens, including the neighborhoods of Clinton Hill, Williamsburg, Greenpoint, Bushwick, Woodhaven, Maspeth, Sunnyside, and Long Island City. The district is currently represented by Democrat Nydia Velázquez, who was elected with 78.1% of the vote in 2024.[4] Velázquez is not seeking re-election.

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Claire Valdez, state assemblymember from the 37th district (2025–present)[105]

Eliminated in primary

  • Vichal Kumar, advocate[106][107]
  • Antonio Reynoso, Brooklyn Borough President (2022–present)[108]
  • Julie Won, New York City councilmember from the 26th district (2022–present)[109]

Disqualified

  • Steven Carbajal, location manager[110][35]
  • Sydney Martinez, advocate[88][35]
  • Paperboy Prince, artist, perennial candidate, and candidate for this district in 2020 and 2022[88][35]

Withdrawn

  • Edwin Osorio, president of AFGE Local 3369[111][35]

Declined

  • Alexa Avilés, New York City councilmember from the 38th district (2022–present)[112]
  • Tiffany Cabán, New York City councilmember from the 22nd district (2021–present) and candidate for Queens District Attorney in 2019[105]
  • Emily Gallagher, state assemblymember from the 50th district (2021–present)[113]
  • Jennifer Gutiérrez, New York City councilmember from the 34th district (2022–present) (endorsed Reynoso)[108]
  • Sandy Nurse, New York City councilmember from the 37th district (2022–present) (endorsed Reynoso)[108]
  • Lincoln Restler, New York City councilmember from the 33rd district (2022–present) (endorsed Reynoso)[108]
  • Julia Salazar, state senator from the 18th district (2019–present) (running for re-election)[114]
  • Nydia Velázquez, incumbent U.S. representative[115] (endorsed Reynoso)[116]

Endorsements

Antonio Reynoso
U.S. representatives
  • Jerry Nadler, NY-12 (1992–present)[117]
  • Pat Ryan, NY-18 (2022–present)[117]
  • Nydia Velázquez, NY-07 (1993–present)[118]
Statewide officials
  • Letitia James, attorney general of New York (2019–present)[119]
Local officials
  • Jennifer Gutiérrez, New York City councilmember from the 34th district (2022–present)[108]
  • Crystal Hudson, New York City councilmember from the 35th district (2022–present)[120]
  • Shekar Krishnan, New York City councilmember from the 25th district (2022–present)[108]
  • Sandy Nurse, New York City councilmember from the 37th district (2022–present)[108]
  • Lincoln Restler, New York City councilmember from the 33rd district (2022–present)[108]
  • Donovan Richards, borough president of Queens (2020–present)[121]
  • Jumaane Williams, public advocate of New York City (2019–present)[122]
Labor unions
  • 1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers East[123]
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
  • District Council 37[77]
  • Hotel and Gaming Trades Council[124]
  • New York City Central Labor Council[92]
  • New York State AFL-CIO[93]
  • New York State Nurses Association[94]
  • New York State United Teachers[65]
  • Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union[125]
  • SEIU 32BJ[126]
  • UNITE HERE Local 100[125]
Organizations
  • Citizen Action New York[117]
  • Make the Road Action[127]
  • New York Communities for Change[127]
  • Stonewall Democratic Club of New York[99]
Political parties
  • Queens County Democratic Party[126]
  • Working Families Party[128]
Claire Valdez
U.S. senators
  • Bernie Sanders, Vermont (2007–present) (Independent)[129]
State legislators
  • Jabari Brisport, state senator from the 25th district (2021–present)[129]
  • Emily Gallagher, state assemblymember from the 50th district (2021–present)[130]
  • Michael Gianaris, state senator from the 12th district (2011-present)[131]
  • Diana Moreno, state assemblymember from the 36th district (2026–present)[132]
  • Chris Rabb, state representative from Pennsylvania's 200th district (2017–present)[133]
  • Phara Souffrant Forrest, state assemblymember from the 57th district (2021–present)[132]
Local officials
  • Zohran Mamdani, mayor of New York City (2026–present)[134]
Individuals
  • Shawn Fain, president of United Auto Workers (2023–present)[134]
  • Mahmoud Khalil, activist[135]
  • Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants[136]
  • Zephyr Teachout, attorney and political advocate[129]
Labor unions
  • Association of Flight Attendants[136]
  • International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers[137]
  • United Auto Workers[138]
  • United Auto Workers Region 9A[139]
Organizations
  • A New Policy PAC[140]
  • American Priorities[141]
  • Christopher Street Project[142]
  • Jewish Voice for Peace[129]
  • Justice Democrats[143]
  • Leaders We Deserve[144]
  • PAL PAC[145]
  • New York City Democratic Socialists of America[146]
  • Our Revolution[147]
  • Progressive Change Campaign Committee[148]
  • Progressive Democrats of America[149]
  • Track AIPAC[16]
  • Sunrise Movement[150]
Julie Won
U.S. senators
  • Andy Kim, New Jersey (2024–present)[151]
U.S representatives
  • Derek Tran, CA-45 (2025–present)[132]
  • Dave Min, CA-47 (2025–present)[132]
  • Marilyn Strickland, WA-10 (2021–present)[132]
  • Jill Tokuda, HI-02 (2023–present)[132]
State legislators
  • Ron Kim, state assemblymember from the 40th district (2013–present)[152]
  • John Liu, state senator from the 16th district (2019–present)[152]
Local officials
  • Shanel Thomas-Henry, New York City councilmember from the 21st district (2026–present)[152]
Organizations
  • ASPIRE PAC[153]
  • Jim Owles Liberal Democratic Club[97]
  • Vote Run Lead[154]
Edwin Osorio (withdrawn)
Labor unions
  • American Federation of Government Employees (candidate's employer)[155]
Julia Salazar (declined)
State legislators
  • James Skoufis, state senator from the 42nd district (2019–present)[156]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Vichal Kumar $136,840 $121,431 $15,409
Antonio Reynoso (D) $882,912 $571,380 $311,532
Claire Valdez (D) $1,346,740 $928,623. $418,117
Julie Won (D) $857,883 $537,869 $320,014
Source: Federal Election Commission[157]

Polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Vichal
Kumar
Antonio
Reynoso
Julie
Won
Claire
Valdez
Undecided
Emerson College[158][B] May 16–17, 2026 350 (LV) ± 5.2% 1% 21% 13% 23% 43%
Data for Progress (D)[159][C] January 15–19, 2026 366 (LV) ± 5.0% 28% 24% 46%

Debates

2026 New York's 7th congressional district Democratic primary debates
No. Date Host Moderator Link Democratic Democratic Democratic Democratic
Key:
 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Not invited   I  Invited  W  Withdrawn
Claire Valdez Antonio Reynoso Julie Won Vichal Kumar
1 Jun. 3, 2026[160][161] NY1 Errol Louis
Courtney Gross
YouTube P P P N
2 Jun. 10, 2026[162] PIX11 Dan Mannarino YouTube P P P N

Results

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Claire Valdez 37,531 56.1
Democratic Antonio Reynoso 23,960 35.8
Democratic Julie Won 4,231 6.3
Democratic Vichal Kumar 1,134 1.7
Democratic Write-in 97 0.1
Total votes 66,953 100.0

Independents

Filed paperwork

  • Priscilla Ghaznavi, designer and artist[163]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Claire Valdez (D) $1,346,740 $928,623 $418,117
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 7th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Claire Valdez
Republican Melvin Rivera
Total votes

District 8

2026 New York's 8th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Hakeem Jeffries Lewis Mizrahi
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Hakeem Jeffries
Democratic



The 8th district is based in Southern and Eastern Brooklyn, including the neighborhoods of Bed-Stuy, Brownsville, East New York, Canarsie, Bergen Beach, Sheepshead Bay, Gravesend, and Coney Island. This district is currently represented by Democrat Hakeem Jeffries, the Minority Leader in the House, who was re-elected with 75.4% of the vote in 2024.[4]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Hakeem Jeffries, incumbent U.S. representative and House Minority Leader[164]

Disqualified

  • Vance Bostic, hospitality manager[88]
Withdrawn
  • Chi Ossé, New York City councilmember from the 36th district (2022–present)[165]
Declined
  • Jabari Brisport, New York state senator from the 25th district (2021–present)[166]

Endorsements

Hakeem Jeffries
Labor unions
  • Association of Flight Attendants[167]
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • District Council 37[77]
  • New York State United Teachers[65]
  • NYC District Council of Carpenters[38]
Organizations
  • AIPAC[39]
  • Joint Action Committee for Political Affairs[45]
  • J Street PAC[168]
  • League of Conservation Voters Action Fund[46]
  • Natural Resources Defense Council[169]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
  • Population Connection[80]
  • Reproductive Freedom for All[98]
  • Stonewall Democratic Club of New York[99]

Fundraising

Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Hakeem Jeffries (D) $13,992,480 $14,002,285 $4,944,760
Source: Federal Election Commission[170]

Polling

Hypothetical polling
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Hakeem
Jeffries
Chi
Ossé
Undecided
Z to A Research (D)[171] September 15–30, 2025 371 (RV) ± 5.0% 72% 21% 7%

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Lewis Mizrahi, data analyst[172]

Independent and third party candidates

Filed paperwork

  • Soyoung Kim (Communist Party)[173]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Hakeem Jeffries (D) $13,992,480 $14,002,285 $4,944,760
Lewis Mizrahi (R) $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 8th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Hakeem Jeffries (incumbent)
Republican Lewis Mizrahi
Total votes

District 9

2026 New York's 9th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Yvette Clarke Joel Anabilah-Azumah
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Yvette Clarke
Democratic



The 9th district is based in South and Central Brooklyn, including the neighborhoods of Prospect Heights, Crown Heights, Midwood, and Borough Park. The district is currently represented by Yvette Clarke, first elected in 2006, who was re-elected with 81.3% of the vote in 2024.[4]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Yvette Clarke, incumbent U.S. representative[35]

Eliminated in primary

  • Joshua Bristol, retail cashier and activist[35]
  • Michael Goldfarb, financial technology executive[174]

Endorsements

Yvette Clarke
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
  • District Council 37[77]
  • New York City Central Labor Council[92]
  • New York State AFL-CIO[93]
  • New York State United Teachers[65]
  • NYC District Council of Carpenters[38]
Organizations
  • AIPAC[39]
  • J Street PAC[175]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
  • League of Conservation Voters Action Fund[46]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Yvette Clarke (D) $893,852 $940,582 $63,325
Michael Goldfarb (D) $308,850 $255,452 $53,398
Source: Federal Election Commission[176]

Results

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Yvette Clarke (incumbent) 29,670 68.6
Democratic Michael Goldfarb 6,686 15.4
Democratic Joshua Bristol 6,372 14.7
Democratic Write-in 550 1.3
Total votes 43,278 100.0

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Joel Anabilah-Azumah, bus company owner and perennial candidate[88]

Filed paperwork

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of April 15, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Jean Depalis (R) $12,404 $8,339 $1,055
Source: Federal Election Commission[176]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Tom Suozzi (D) $893,852 $940,582 $63,325
Joel Anabilah-Azumah (R) $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 9th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Yvette Clarke (incumbent)
Republican Joel Anabilah-Azumah
Total votes

District 10

2026 New York's 10th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Brad Lander Jennifer Moore
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Dan Goldman
Democratic



The 10th district is based in Lower Manhattan and Brooklyn, including the neighborhoods of Park Slope, Windsor Terrace, Brooklyn Gowanus, Brooklyn Heights, Cobble Hill, Red Hook, Sunset Park, Alphabet City, East Village, the Lower East Side, Greenwich Village, and the Financial District. The district is currently represented by Democrat Dan Goldman, first elected in 2022, who was re-elected with 82.3% of the vote in 2024.[4] He faced a primary challenge by former New York City Comptroller Brad Lander, who has positioned himself as the more progressive candidate. Lander won the primary on June 24, 2026.[178]

Democratic primary

Goldman, the incumbent representative, was widely viewed as vulnerable to a primary challenge coming into the 2026 electoral cycle.[179] While generally considered a progressive Democrat, Goldman had only narrowly won the Democratic primary in 2022 with 26% of the vote against a split field of more left-wing candidates, and his re-election campaign in 2024 was considered by analysts such as David Weigel to have been unimpressive, with the congressman winning only 66% of the primary vote against two low-profile challengers.[179][180] Goldman's electoral struggles were attributed to his staunch support for Israel, which had become extremely unpopular among left-wing voters as a result of the Gaza war.[179]

These left-wing concerns were heightened following the 2025 New York City mayoral election. In the Democratic primary for that election, pro-Palestine democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani defeated moderate, pro-Israel Andrew Cuomo handily, in a performance which included defeating Cuomo by 23 percentage points in the 10th district.[180] In the ensuing general election, where Cuomo ran as an independent, Goldman refused to endorse Mamdani due to the latter's pro-Palestine stance.[179] Mamdani nevertheless again prevailed, winning the 10th by 25 percentage points. Goldman's refusal to endorse Mamdani made him an immediate target of the progressive and socialist forces that had backed the incoming mayor, and also showcased the lack of influence the incumbent had over voters in his district.[181]

Following Mamdani's victory, emboldened progressives began searching for a candidate to challenge Goldman. A favoured choice was former New York City Comptroller Brad Lander, who had finished third in the mayoral primary behind Mamdani and Cuomo, and had cross-endorsed with Mamdani in the latter stages of the campaign.[182] Lander was considered a strong candidate for several reasons; he had wide name recognition from his service as Comptroller, and despite finishing a distant third behind Mamdani and Cuomo in the mayoral primary had performed well in the 10th district itself, where he took 23% of the first-preference vote.[182]

Lander announced that he would be challenging Goldman on the 10th of December 2025, with mayor-elect Mamdani's explicit backing.[183] He immediately became the prohibitive frontrunner, with polls showing him beating Goldman by over 20 percentage points.[179] Lander primarily attacked Goldman over his refusal to co-sign the Block the Bombs Act that proposed to ban American weapon sales to Israel, and for not condemning the Gaza genocide as a genocide.[184]

Nominee

  • Brad Lander, New York City Comptroller (2022–2025) and candidate for mayor of New York City in 2025[185]

Eliminated in primary

  • Dan Goldman, incumbent U.S. representative[186]

Disqualified

  • Nickie Kane, activist and candidate for New York City's 39th City Council district in 2023 and 2025[88]
  • Savail Majid, attorney[88]

Declined

  • Alexa Avilés, New York City councilmember from the 38th district (2022–present)[187]
  • Cameron Kasky, co-founder of Never Again MSD[188][189]
  • Yuh-Line Niou, former state assemblymember from the 65th district (2017–2022) and candidate for this district in 2022[190] (ran for state senate)[191]
  • Scott Stringer, former New York City Comptroller (2014–2021) and candidate for mayor of New York City in 2021 and 2025[192]

Endorsements

Dan Goldman
U.S. representatives
  • Pete Aguilar, CA-33 (2015–present)[193]
  • Katherine Clark, House minority whip (2023–present) from MA-05 (2013–present)[193]
  • Hakeem Jeffries, House minority leader (2023–present) from NY-08 (2013–present)[194]
  • Nancy Pelosi, former speaker of the House (2007–2011, 2019–2023) from CA-11 (1987–present)[195]
Statewide officials
  • Kathy Hochul, governor of New York (2021–present)[194]
State legislators
  • Erik Bottcher, state senator from the 47th district (2026–present)[196]
  • Deborah Glick, state assemblymember from the 66th district (1991–present)[197]
  • Grace Lee, state assemblymember from the 65th district (2023–present)[198]
  • Tony Simone, state assemblymember from the 75th district (2023–present)[196]
Local officials
  • Adrienne Adams, former speaker of the New York City Council (2022–2025) from the 28th district (2017–2025)[199]
  • Mark Levine, comptroller of New York City (2026–present)[200]
  • Gifford Miller, former speaker of the New York City Council (2002–2005) from the 5th district (1996–2005)[199]
  • Christine Quinn, former speaker of the New York City Council (2006–2013) from the 3rd district (1999–2013)[199]
  • Brad Hoylman-Sigal, borough president of Manhattan (2026–present)[198]
  • Scott Stringer, former comptroller of New York City (2014–2021)[200]
Labor unions
  • Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1181[125]
  • Civil Service Employees Association[201]
  • Council of School Supervisors and Administrators[201]
  • District Council 37[77]
  • IBEW Local 3[202]
  • LIUNA-NY[203]
  • National Association of Letter Carriers[204]
  • New York City Central Labor Council[92]
  • New York State AFL-CIO[93]
  • NYC District Council of Carpenters[38]
  • Teamsters Local 237[204]
  • Building & Construction Trades Council of Greater New York[205]
  • United Federation of Teachers[206]
  • United Food and Commercial Workers Local 1500[203]
Organizations
  • AIPAC[39]
  • Animal Wellness Action[207]
  • ASPIRE PAC[208]
  • Brady Campaign[40]
  • Congressional Hispanic Caucus BOLD PAC[209]
  • Democratic Majority for Israel[210]
  • Equality PAC[211]
  • Jewish Democratic Council of America[212]
  • Joint Action Committee for Political Affairs[45]
  • J Street PAC[213]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
  • Reproductive Freedom for All[98]
Brad Lander
U.S. senators
  • Bernie Sanders, Vermont (2007–present) (Independent)[214]
  • Elizabeth Warren, Massachusetts (2013–present)[214]
State legislators
  • Jabari Brisport, state senator from the 25th district (2021–present)[215]
  • Robert Carroll, state assemblymember from the 44th district (2017–present)[216]
  • Andrew Gounardes, state senator from the 26th district (2019–present)[216]
  • Yuh-Line Niou, former state assemblymember from the 65th district (2017–2022)[215]
  • Julia Salazar, state senator from the 18th district (2019–present)[217]
  • Emily Gallagher, state assemblymember from the 50th district (2021–present)[217]
  • Jessica González-Rojas, state assemblymember from the 34th district (2021–present)[217]
Local officials
  • Alexa Avilés, New York City councilmember from the 38th district (2022–present)[215]
  • Justin Brannan, New York City councilmember from the 47th district (2018–2025)[215]
  • Shahana Hanif, New York City councilmember from the 39th district (2022–present)[215]
  • Crystal Hudson, New York City councilmember from the 35th district (2022–present)[215]
  • Zohran Mamdani, mayor of New York City (2026–present)[214]
  • Jumaane Williams, public advocate of New York City (2019–present)[214]
  • Lincoln Restler, New York City councilmember from the 33rd district (2022–present)[215]
  • Jennifer Gutiérrez, New York City councilmember from the 34th district (2022–present)[217]
  • Sandy Nurse, New York City councilmember from the 37th district (2022–present)[217]
Individuals
  • Ana María Archila, activist and former co-director of the New York Working Families Party[218]
  • Ben McKenzie, actor, author, and commentator[219]
  • Jennifer Welch, political commentator[220]
Labor unions
  • 32BJ SEIU[221]
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • New York State Nurses Association[94]
  • Professional Staff Congress[222]
  • United Auto Workers Region 9A[223]
Organizations
  • American Priorities[141]
  • Christopher Street Project[224]
  • Citizen Action of New York[225]
  • College Democrats of America[226]
  • IfNotNow[227]
  • Indivisible[228]
  • The Jewish Vote[229]
  • Make the Road Action[215]
  • MoveOn[230]
  • Our Revolution[231]
  • Progressive Change Campaign Committee[232]
  • Progressive Democrats of America[149]
  • Progressive Victory[233]
  • Stonewall Democratic Club of New York[99]
Political parties
  • Working Families Party[214]
Alexa Avilés (declined)
Organizations
  • New York City Democratic Socialists of America[234]

Fundraising

Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Dan Goldman (D) $7,809,407 $7,192,470 $1,549,186
Brad Lander (D) $2,249,342 $1,756,066 $493,275
Source: Federal Election Commission[235]

Polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Dan
Goldman
Brad
Lander
Other Undecided
Emerson College[158][B] May 16–17, 2026 450 (LV) ± 4.6% 23% 57% 20%
Schoen Cooperman Research (D)[236][D] May 1–4, 2026 465 (LV) ± 4.5% 42% 47% 3%[b] 8%
Data For Progress (D)[237][E] September 2–8, 2025 553 (LV) ± 4.0% 33% 52% 15%
Hypothetical polling

Dan Goldman vs. Alexa Avilés

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Dan
Goldman
Alexa
Avilés
Undecided
Stand Up Action, Inc[238] November 3–6, 2025 500 (LV) 45% 16% 39%

Dan Goldman vs. another Democratic candidate

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Dan
Goldman
Another
Democratic candidate
Undecided
Data For Progress (D)[237] September 2–8, 2025 553 (LV) ± 4.0% 41% 32% 28%

Debates

2026 New York's 10th congressional district Democratic primary debates
No. Date Host Moderator Link Democratic Democratic
Key:
 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Not invited   I  Invited  W  Withdrawn
Dan Goldman Brad Lander
1 Jun. 1, 2026[239] NY1 Courtney Gross
Errol Louis
YouTube P P
2 Jun. 15, 2026[240] PIX11 Dan Mannarino YouTube P P

Results

In line with polling, Lander easily defeated Goldman by a margin of over 30 percentage points. His victory was called by media outlets only five minutes after polling stations had closed.[241]

Results by county
  Lander
  •   50–60%
  •   70–80%
Results by precinct
  Lander
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  •   70–80%
  •   80–90%
  •   90–100%
  •   100%
  Goldman
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  •   70–80%
  •   80–90%
  •   90–100%
  •   100%
Democratic primary results[242]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Brad Lander 55,060 65.8
Democratic Dan Goldman (incumbent) 28,445 34.0
Democratic Write-in 156 0.2
Total votes 83,661 100.0

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Jennifer Moore, activist[243]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Brad Lander (D) $2,249,342 $1,756,066 $493,275
Jennifer Moore (R) $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 10th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Brad Lander
Republican Jennifer Moore
Total votes

District 11

2026 New York's 11th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Nicole Malliotakis Michael DeCillis
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Nicole Malliotakis
Republican



The 11th district includes all of Staten Island as well as the Brooklyn neighborhoods of Bay Ridge, Fort Hamilton, Dyker Heights, Bath Beach, and Bensonhurst. The incumbent is Republican Nicole Malliotakis, who was re-elected with 64.1% of the vote in 2024.[4]

A decision by a judge on New York's trial court to declare the district's lines unconstitutional was upheld by the intermediate appeals court in February 2026.[244]

On March 2, 2026, the Supreme Court of the United States issued a stay blocking implementation of the lower court ruling pending further litigation.[245]

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Nicole Malliotakis, incumbent U.S. representative[246]

Endorsements

Nicole Malliotakis
Executive branch officials
  • Donald Trump, president of the United States (2017–2021, 2025–present)[247]
Labor unions
  • Detectives' Endowment Association[248]
Organizations
  • Log Cabin Republicans[27]
Political parties
  • Staten Island Republican Party[249]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Nicole Malliotakis (R) $2,574,566 $1,272,731 $2,648,082
Source: Federal Election Commission[250]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Michael DeCillis, retired police officer and candidate for this district in 2018 and 2022[251]

Withdrawn

  • Allison Ziogas, electrician and labor organizer (remained on ballot)[252]

Disqualified

  • Troy McGhie, educator[253]
  • Umar Usman, former assistant to Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso[254]

Endorsements

Michael DeCillis
Organizations
  • Jim Owles Liberal Democratic Club[97]
  • Stonewall Democratic Club of New York[99]
Allison Ziogas (withdrawn)
State legislators
  • Charles Fall, state assemblymember from the 61st district (2019–present) and chair of the Staten Island Democratic Party (2025–present)[252]
Individuals
  • Morris Katz, political strategist[255]
Party chapters
  • Staten Island Democratic Party[252]
Labor unions
  • NYC District Council of Carpenters[38]

Fundraising

Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Michael DeCillis (D) $45,867 $20,259 $25,607
Source: Federal Election Commission[250]

Results

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Michael DeCillis 10,001 61.0
Democratic Allison Ziogas (withdrawn) 6,140 37.5
Democratic Write-in 241 1.5
Total votes 16,382 100.0

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Nicole Malliotakis (R) $2,574,566 $1,272,731 $2,648,082
Michael DeCillis (D) $45,867 $20,259 $25,607
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 11th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Nicole Malliotakis (incumbent)
Democratic Michael DeCillis
Total votes

District 12

2026 New York's 12th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Micah Lasher Caroline Shinkle
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Jerry Nadler
Democratic



The 12th district is entirely based in Manhattan, comprising the Upper West Side, Upper East Side, Midtown, Hell's Kitchen, Chelsea, Murray Hill, and Gramercy. The incumbent is Democrat Jerry Nadler, who was re-elected with 80.6% of the vote in 2024.[4] He is not running for re-election in 2026.

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Micah Lasher, state assemblymember from the 69th district (2025–present) and candidate for New York's 31st State Senate district in 2016[256][35]

Eliminated in primary

  • Alex Bores, state assemblymember from the 73rd district (2023–present)[257][35]
  • George Conway, lawyer and activist[258][35]
  • Chris Diep[35]
  • Laura Dunn, attorney[88][35]
  • Jack Schlossberg, political commentator and grandson of President John F. Kennedy[259][35]
  • Nina Schwalbe, scientist[260][35]
  • Patrick Timmins[35]

Withdrawn

  • Erik Bottcher, former New York City Councilmember from the 3rd district (2022–2026) (running for re-election, endorsed Lasher)[261][262]
  • Liam Elkind, non-profit CEO (endorsed Lasher)[263][264]
  • Jami Floyd, journalist and member of Manhattan Community Board 7 (endorsed Schlossberg)[265][266][267]
  • Cameron Kasky, co-founder of Never Again MSD and March for Our Lives organizer[268]
  • Alan Pardee, private equity firm executive[269]
  • Mathew Shurka, activist (endorsed Bores)[270]

Declined

  • Lindsey Boylan, former New York State deputy secretary for economic development, candidate for this district in 2020, and candidate for Manhattan Borough President in 2021 (ran for city council)[271]
  • Chelsea Clinton, writer and daughter of former U.S. Senator Hillary Clinton and former president Bill Clinton[272]
  • Andrew Cuomo, former Governor and candidate for mayor in 2025[273]
  • Dan Goldman, incumbent U.S. representative from the 10th district (running for re-election)[274]
  • Molly Jong-Fast, journalist and author[275]
  • Lina Khan, former chair of the Federal Trade Commission (2021–2025)[276]
  • Liz Krueger, state senator from the 28th district (2002–present) (running for re-election)[277]
  • Carolyn Maloney, former U.S. representative (1993–2023) (endorsed Bores)[278]
  • Julie Menin, New York City councilmember from the 5th district (2022–present)[277] and Speaker of the New York City Council (2026–present)[279]
  • Jerry Nadler, incumbent U.S. representative[280] (endorsed Lasher)
  • Scott Stringer, former New York City Comptroller (2014–2021) and candidate for mayor in 2021 and 2025[281] (endorsed Lasher)[282]

Endorsements

Alex Bores
U.S. representatives
  • Steve Israel, former NY-03 (2001–2017)[283]
  • Carolyn Maloney, former NY-12 (1993–2023)[284]
  • Pat Ryan, NY-18 (2022–present)[285]
State legislators
  • Monique Chandler-Waterman, state assemblymember from the 58th district (2022–present)[286]
  • Brian Cunningham, state assemblymember from the 43rd district (2022–present)[283]
  • Maritza Davila, state assemblymember from the 53rd district (2013–present)[283]
  • Eddie Gibbs, state assemblymember from the 68th district (2022–present)[283]
  • Larinda Hooks, state assemblymember from the 35th district (2025–present)[286]
  • Nikki Lucas, state assemblymember from the 60th district (2022–present)[286]
  • Latrice Walker, state assemblymember from the 55th district (2015–present)[283]
Local officials
  • Kevin Riley, New York City councilmember from the 12th district (2021–present)[286]
  • Julie Won, New York City councilmember from the 26th district (2022–present)[286]
Individuals
  • Kurt Andersen, writer and co-founder of Spy magazine[287]
  • Mathew Shurka, activist and former candidate for this seat[270]
  • Andrew Yang, entrepreneur, chair of the Forward Party (2022–present), candidate for president of the United States in 2020, candidate for mayor of New York City in 2021 (Forward)[287]
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America[288]
  • District Council 37[77]
  • New York City Central Labor Council[92]
  • New York State AFL-CIO[93]
  • New York State United Teachers[289]
  • Professional Staff Congress[289]
  • United Auto Workers Region 9A[290]
  • United Federation of Teachers[291]
Organizations
  • 314 Action[292]
  • Humane World Action Fund[293]
  • Our Revolution[294]
  • Stonewall Democratic Club of New York[99]
Laura Dunn
Organizations
  • National Organization for Women PAC[295]
Micah Lasher
U.S. representatives
  • Jerry Nadler, NY-12 (1992–present)[296]
  • Nydia Velázquez, NY-07 (1993–present)[63]
Statewide officials
  • Kathy Hochul, governor of New York (2021–present)[297]
  • David Paterson, former governor of New York (2008–2010)[298]
  • Eric Schneiderman, former attorney general of New York (2011–2018)[287]
State legislators
  • Erik Bottcher, state senator from the 47th district (2026–present) and former candidate for this seat[262]
  • Deborah Glick, state assemblymember from the 66th district (1991–present)[299]
  • Linda Rosenthal, state assemblymember from the 67th district (2006–present)[282]
Local officials
  • Shaun Abreu, New York City councilmember from the 7th district (2022–present)[300]
  • Michael Bloomberg, former mayor of New York City (2002–2013)[301]
  • Gale Brewer, New York City councilmember from the 6th district (2002–2013, 2022–present) and former borough president of Manhattan (2014–2021)[282]
  • Daniel Garodnick, chair of the New York City Planning Commission (2022–present)[302]
  • Brad Hoylman-Sigal, borough president of Manhattan (2026–present)[303]
  • Mark Levine, comptroller of New York City (2026–present)[303]
  • Christine Quinn, former speaker of the New York City Council (2006–2013) from the 3rd district (1999–2013)[304]
  • Scott Stringer, former comptroller of New York City (2014–2021)[282]
  • Ruth Messinger, former borough president of Manhattan (1990–1997)[282]
  • Carl Wilson, New York City councilmember from the 3rd district (2026–present)[305]
Individuals
  • Liam Elkind, non-profit CEO and former candidate for this seat[264]
  • Josh Safdie, filmmaker[287]
Labor unions
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
Jack Schlossberg
Executive branch officials
  • Caroline Kennedy, former ambassador to Australia (2022–2024) and Japan (2013–2017) (candidate's mother)[306]
U.S. representatives
  • Nancy Pelosi, former Speaker of the House (2007–2011, 2019–2023) from CA-11 (1987–present)[307]
Labor unions
  • Association of Flight Attendants[167]
Individuals
  • Jami Floyd, journalist, member of Manhattan Community Board 7, and former candidate for this seat[308]
Erik Bottcher (withdrawn)
State legislators
  • Evan Low, former California state assemblymember from the 26th district (2014–2024)[309]
Organizations
Liam Elkind (withdrawn)
Local officials
  • Daniel Doctoroff, former New York City deputy mayor (2002–2007)[312]
  • Rafael Espinal, Executive Director of Freelancers Union, former New York City councilmember from the 37th district (2014–2020)[312]
Party officials
  • Howard Dean, former chair of the Democratic National Committee (2005–2009)[313]
Individuals
  • Reid Hoffman, co-founder of LinkedIn[312]
Cameron Kasky (withdrawn)
Individuals
  • Kyle Kulinski, political commentator and media host[314]
Organizations
Declined to endorse
Political parties
  • Working Families Party[128]
Local officials
  • Zohran Mamdani, mayor of New York City (2026–present)[315]

Fundraising

Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Alex Bores (D) $3,651,284 $1,865,443 $1,785,840
George Conway (D) $6,648,636 $5,734,432 $914,204
Christopher Diep (D) $90,235 $89,065 $1,170
Laura Dunn (D) $189,258 $157,318 $31,940
Micah Lasher (D) $2,621,078 $1,558,633 $1,062,445
Jack Schlossberg (D) $3,919,837 $2,657,145 $1,262,692
Nina Schwalbe (D) $574,780 $457,827 $116,952
Patrick Timmins (D) $28,871 $26,428 $2,443
Source: Federal Election Commission[316]

Polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Alex
Bores
George
Conway
Micah
Lasher
Jack
Schlossberg
Other Undecided
Emerson College[158][B] May 16–17, 2026 425 (LV) ± 4.8% 20% 10% 22% 11% 5%[c] 32%
Tavern Research (D)[317] May 11–15, 2026 910 (LV) ± 4.1% 20% 9% 16% 17% 10%[d] 28%
GQR (D)[318][F] May 12–14, 2026 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 26% 17% 23% 14% 20%
Hart Research (D)[319][G] May 6–9, 2026 400 (LV) ± 5.0% 21% 10% 20% 17% 4%[e] 28%
Honan Strategy Group (D)[320][H] April 16–22, 2026 300 (LV) ± 5.6% 19% 9% 28% 20% 23%
Hart Research (D)[321][G] March 9–13, 2026 404 (LV) ± 5.0% 19% 10% 14% 22% 4%[f] 31%
GQR (D)[322][F] February 25 – March 2, 2026 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 11% 16% 11% 25% 3%[g] 33%
Public Policy Polling (D)[323][I] February 26–27, 2026 608 (LV) 20% 13% 19% 18% 30%
Schoen Cooperman Research (D)[324][J] February 22–25, 2026 300 (LV) ± 5.7% 11% 13% 6% 23% 11%[h] 36%
Schoen Cooperman Research (D)[324][J] February 4–9, 2026 300 (LV) ± 5.7% 9% 16% 8% 23% 11%[i] 33%

Debates

2026 New York's 12th congressional district Democratic primary debates
No. Date Host Moderator Link Democratic Democratic Democratic Democratic Democratic
Key:
 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Not invited   I  Invited  W  Withdrawn
Alex Bores George Conway Micah Lasher Jack Schlossberg Nina Schwalbe
1 Jun. 4, 2026 WPIX Dan Mannarino YouTube P P P P N
2[325] Jun. 9, 2026 Baruch College
Gothamist
NY1
WNYC
Brigid Bergin
Brian Lehrer
Errol Louis
YouTube P P P P P

Results

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Micah Lasher 40,106 39.1
Democratic Alex Bores 35,822 35.0
Democratic Jack Schlossberg 11,036 10.8
Democratic Nina Schwalbe 7,266 7.1
Democratic George Conway 6,212 6.1
Democratic Laura Dunn 1,361 1.3
Democratic Patrick Timmins 306 0.3
Democratic Chris Diep 194 0.2
Democratic Write-in 160 0.2
Total votes 102,463 100.0

Republican primary

Nominee

Endorsements

Caroline Shinkle

Party officials

  • Edward F. Cox, Chair of the New York Republican Party[328]

Organizations

  • Log Cabin Republicans[329]

Fundraising

Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Caroline Shinkle (R) $133,639 $58,915 $74,725
Source: Federal Election Commission[316]

Third parties and independents

Declared

  • Karen Ortiz, former Equal Employment Opportunity Commission administrative judge (2018–2025) (Independent)[330]

Filed paperwork

  • Robb Hur (Unaffiliated)[331]
  • Wilneida Negron, political scientist (Independence Party of New York)[332]

Endorsements

Karen Ortiz

Organizations

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Micah Lasher (D) $2,621,078 $1,558,633 $1,062,445
Caroline Shinkle (R) $133,639 $58,915 $74,725
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 12th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Micah Lasher
Republican Caroline Shinkle
Total votes

District 13

2026 New York's 13th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Darializa Avila Chevalier Jomo M. Williams Bob Cohen
Party Democratic Republican Working Families
Alliance Democratic Socialists of America Conservative

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Adriano Espaillat
Democratic



The 13th district is based in Upper Manhattan and the Northwest Bronx, including the neighborhoods of Harlem, Morningside Heights, Spanish Harlem, Hamilton Heights, Washington Heights, Inwood, Marble Hill, Fordham, Kingsbridge, and Bedford Park. The incumbent is Democrat Adriano Espaillat, who was first elected in 2016, re-elected with 83.5% of the vote in 2024, and defeated in the 2026 Democratic primary by Darializa Avila Chevalier.[4]

Democratic primary

Campaign

Darializa Avila Chevalier, a community organizer in Harlem, challenged and defeated the incumbent Espaillat, a five-term incumbent, in the Democratic primary.[333][334][335][336] The primary received national attention as a fight between the Democratic Party's mainstream wing and the party's democratic socialist wing.[337][338][339][340]

Espaillat is the chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, which spent heavily to support him,[341][342][343][344][345] as did the Congressional Black Caucus, which endorsed Espaillat for the first time despite past clashes.[346] Espaillat also retained the support of several progressive Democrats, including Greg Casar, chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus.[347] Espaillat was also supported by AIPAC, a pro-Israel lobby group that has long endorsed him, and which has directly spent $145,000 in support of him.[348][341][342][343] AIPAC-associated donors have spent significantly more to oppose Avila Chevalier, although the exact amount will not be known until after the election.[348][342][343]

Avila Chevalier was recruited by the Justice Democrats to run a progressive campaign to Espaillat's left.[337][349][350][351] Avila Chevalier is a member of the New York City Democratic Socialists of America and volunteered for Zohran Mamdani in the 2025 New York City mayoral election.[352][353][337][354][349] Though sources said Mamdani had privately indicated in 2025 that he would endorse Espaillat, Mamdani announced his endorsement of Avila Chevalier in a joint interview on MS NOW on May 25, 2026.[355][356][357][358][359][360] Avila Chevalier was among the three candidates backed by Mamdani, along with Brad Lander and Claire Valdez[361]—all of whom won their respective primary races.[362][363] Avila Chevalier's campaign received $1.5 million from the Justice Democrats. American Priorities, a pro-Palestine super PAC established to oppose AIPAC, spent $1.3 million to support Avila Chevalier.[348][364]

Both Espaillat and Avila Chevalier are Dominican-Americans.[365] Espaillat said Immigrations and Customs Enforcement should be "dismantled", while Avila Chevalier seeks to "Abolish ICE".[366][367] Espaillat was the first former undocumented immigrant to serve in Congress.[368]

During the campaign, Avila Chevalier was the target of racism animated by antihaitianismo in conservative Dominican circles.[369][370][371] Some supporters of Espaillat falsely claimed she was Haitian, questioned her fidelity to the Dominican community in New York City, and referred to her as "Haitian" as a racial slur.[369][370][372] City & State reported that a senior adviser to Espaillat, Rusking Pimentel, made racist and Islamophobic comments regarding Avila Chevalier in Spanish media, claiming that she and Mamdani sought to replace Dominicans with Muslims and Haitians.[371] Espaillat disavowed the comments and told his supporters not to question Avila Chevalier’s heritage, asserting "she's Dominican”.[371]

Avila Chevalier seeks to end United States support for Israel in the Gaza war whom she claims is committing a genocide.[353][341] Espaillat supports a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war and has called it a "horrific situation", but rejects the word "genocide" and does not blame Israel as the culprit in the conflict.[373] On October 8, 2023, Chevalier attended a pro-Palestinian rally in Times Square organized by the Party for Socialism and Liberation that was condemned by many politicians including New York Governor Kathy Hochul and Brad Lander.[374][375] Despite declining to condemn Hamas when asked directly in March 2026, Avila Chevalier did so in June at the WNYC candidate forum, while noting that "the U.S. does not send a single dime to Hamas. What we fund is the Israeli military."[376]

Both Espaillat and Avila Chevalier support more affordable housing, with different policy agendas.[377][353] Espaillat described Avila Chevalier's voter base as transplant "gentrifiers" who drive up rent.[378] Avila Chevalier supports federal funding for new social housing to lower rents.[353][379]

Between 2018 and 2022, Avila Chevalier made tweets which criticized mainstream Democrats and advocated for the abolition of police, prisons and borders.[380][381][382] She responded to the coverage by saying "I was young, yes, and I was a millennial with internet access".[381] Mamdani repeated his endorsement of Avila Chevalier, labelling her "the champion we need for a city New Yorkers can actually afford".[382]

Avila Chevalier defeated Espaillat in the Democratic primary in an upset.[383]

Candidates

Nominee
  • Darializa Avila Chevalier, community organizer[384]
Eliminated in primary
  • Adriano Espaillat, incumbent U.S. representative[384]
  • Theo Chino-Tavarez, first national secretary at the Social Democrats of America[35]
  • Oscar Romero, chief information officer of the New York City Civic Engagement Commission[385]
Withdrawn
  • Jaliel Amador, healthcare sales executive[386]
  • Michael Hano, candidate for this district in 2022[387]

Debates

On June 4, Avila Chevalier and Espaillat participated in a radio forum hosted by Brian Lehrer on WNYC.[388][389] On June 12, Avila Chevalier and Espaillat participated in a forum hosted by Dan Mannarino on PIX11 News.[390]

On June 15, Avila Chevalier, Espaillat, Oscar Romero, and Theo Chino-Tavarez participated in a debate hosted by Gary Axelbank on BronxNet in partnership with City & State.[391] The interview was aired the following day.[391] On June 16, Avila Chevalier and Espaillat participated in a televised debate hosted by Errol Louis and Courtney Gross on NY1.[392]

On June 17, Telemundo 47 aired a debate in Spanish with Avila Chevalier, Chino-Tavarez, Espaillat, and Romero, hosted by presenter Allan Villafaña and journalist Yolanda Vásquez.[393][394]

2026 New York's 13th congressional district Democratic primary debates
No. Date Host Moderator Link Democratic Democratic Democratic Democratic
Key:
 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Not invited   I  Invited  W  Withdrawn
Darializa Avila Chevalier Adriano Espaillat Theo Chino-Tavarez Oscar Romero
1 Jun. 4, 2026[395][396] WNYC Brian Lehrer Audio P P N N
2 Jun. 12, 2026[397] PIX11 Dan Mannarino YouTube P P N N
3 Jun. 15, 2026[398] BronxNet
City & State
Gary Axelbank YouTube P P P P
4 Jun. 16, 2026[399] NY1 Errol Louis
Courtney Gross
YouTube P P N N
5 Jun. 17, 2026[400][401] Telemundo 47 Allan Villafaña
Yolanda Vásquez
YouTube P P P P

Endorsements

Adriano Espaillat
U.S. representatives
  • Greg Casar, TX-35 (2023–present)[347]
  • Maxwell Frost, FL-10 (2023–present)[347]
  • Pramila Jayapal, WA-07 (2017–present)[347]
  • Hakeem Jeffries, House minority leader (2023–present) from NY-08 (2013–present)[402]
  • Nydia Velázquez, NY-07 (1993–present)[63]
Statewide officials
  • Kathy Hochul, governor of New York (2021–present)[402]
  • Letitia James, attorney general of New York (2019–present)[402]
State legislators
  • George Alvarez, state assemblymember from the 78th district (2023–present)[403]
  • Manny De Los Santos, state assemblymember from the 72nd district (2022–present)[403]
  • Yudelka Tapia, state assemblymember from the 86th district (2021–present)[403]
  • Jordan Wright, state assemblymember from the 70th district (2025–present)[404]
  • Cordell Cleare, state senator from the 30th district (2021–present)[404]
Local officials
  • Shaun Abreu, New York City councilmember from the 7th district (2022–present)[403]
  • Carmen De La Rosa, New York City councilmember from the 10th district (2022–present)[403]
  • Elsie Encarnacion, New York City councilmember from the 8th district (2026–present)[405]
  • Oswald Feliz, New York City councilmember from the 15th district (2021–present)[403]
  • Christopher Marte, New York City councilmember from the 1st district (2022–present)[403]
  • Julie Menin, speaker of the New York City Council (2026–present) from the 5th district (2022–present)[405]
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • District Council 37[77]
  • New York City Central Labor Council[92]
  • New York State AFL-CIO[93]
  • New York State Nurses Association[94]
  • New York State United Teachers[65]
  • NYC District Council of Carpenters[38]
Organizations
  • AIPAC[39][348]
  • Congressional Black Caucus PAC[406]
  • Congressional Hispanic Caucus BOLD PAC[407]
  • Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC[347]
  • Jim Owles Liberal Democratic Club[97]
  • League of Conservation Voters Action Fund[46]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
  • Population Connection[80]
  • Stonewall Democratic Club of New York[99]
Darializa Avila Chevalier
U.S. representatives
  • Jamaal Bowman, former NY-16 (2021–2025)[403]
State legislators
  • Chris Rabb, Pennsylvania state representative from the 200th district (2017–present)[133]
  • Claire Valdez, state assemblymember from the 37th district (2025–present)[408]
  • Jabari Brisport, state senator from the 25th district (2021–present)[409]
  • Robert Jackson, state senator from the 31st district (2019–present)[410]
Local officials
  • Chi Ossé, New York City councilmember from the 36th district (2022–present)[409]
  • Zohran Mamdani, mayor of New York City (2026–present)[411]
Individuals
  • Kat Abughazaleh, journalist and social media influencer[412]
  • Cameron Kasky, co-founder of Never Again MSD and March for Our Lives organizer[412]
  • Hasan Piker, political commentator[413]
Labor unions
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
  • United Auto Workers Region 9[414]
Organizations
  • American Priorities[141]
  • College Democrats of America[415]
  • Council on American–Islamic Relations Action New York[416]
  • Indivisible[417]
  • Jewish Voice for Peace Action[418]
  • Justice Democrats[384]
  • New York City Democratic Socialists of America[146]
  • Our Revolution[419]
  • PAL PAC[420]
  • Progressive Change Campaign Committee[148]
  • Progressive Democrats of America[149]
  • Progressive Victory[233]
  • Sunrise Movement[421]
  • Third Act Movement[422]
  • Track AIPAC[16]
  • US Campaign for Palestinian Rights Action[423]
Declined to endorse
Political parties
  • Working Families Party[424]

Fundraising

Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Darializa Avila Chevalier (D) $929,685 $699,869 $229,817
Adriano Espaillat (D) $2,104,259 $1,537,250 $963,434
Oscar Romero (D) $19,378[j] $18,479 $899
Source: Federal Election Commission[425]

Polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Darializa
Avila Chevalier
Adriano
Espaillat
Other Undecided
Mercury Public Affairs (D)[426][K] June 9–11, 2026 468 (LV) ± 4.5% 27% 35% 38%
Data for Progress (D)[427][L] June 3–9, 2026 319 (LV) 39% 35% 4%[k] 22%
Upswing Research & Strategy (D)[428][M] March 25–30, 2026 598 (LV) ± 4.0% 28% 42% 4%[l] 26%

Results

Democratic primary results by county
  Avila Chevalier
  •   50–60%
  Espaillat
  •   50–60%
Democratic primary results by precinct
  Avila Chevalier
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  •   70–80%
  Espaillat
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  •   70–80%
  •   80–90%
  •   90–100%
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Darializa Avila Chevalier 32,790 49.4
Democratic Adriano Espaillat (incumbent) 30,464 45.9
Democratic Oscar Romero 2,340 3.5
Democratic Theo Chino-Tavarez 532 0.8
Democratic Write-in 253 0.4
Total votes 66,379 100.0

Republican primary

Candidates

Declared
  • Manual "Jomo" Williams, businessman and candidate for New York City Council in 2025[429]

Working Families primary

Candidates

Declared
  • Bob Cohen, former policy director of Citizen Action

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Darializa Avila Chevalier (D) $929,685 $699,869 $229,817
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 13th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Darializa Avila Chevalier
Republican Manual "Jomo" Williams
Working Families Bob Cohen
Total votes

District 14

2026 New York's 14th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Diamant Hysenaj
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Democratic



The 14th district is based in North Queens and the East Bronx, including the neighborhoods of Corona, East Elmhurst, Astoria, College Point, Hunts Point, Castle Hill, Throggs Neck, Parkchester, Country Club, Co-Op City, and City Island. The district is currently represented by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who was re-elected with 69.2% of the vote in 2024.[4]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, incumbent U.S. representative[430][431]

Eliminated in primary

  • Marty Dolan, candidate for this district in 2024 and candidate for New York City Public Advocate in 2025[432][433]
  • Felipe Garcia, former business executive[434]

Endorsements

Marty Dolan
Individuals
  • Bryant McKinnie, former NFL offensive tackle[435]
  • Rahzel, beatboxer and rapper[435]
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Labor unions
  • Association of Flight Attendants[167]
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
  • District Council 37[77]
  • New York State Nurses Association[94]
  • New York State United Teachers[65]
  • NYC District Council of Carpenters[38]
  • United Auto Workers Region 9[414]
Organizations
  • Citizen Action of New York[225]
  • Justice Democrats[436]
  • The Jewish Vote[229]
  • League of Conservation Voters Action Fund[46]
  • Our Revolution[437]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
  • Progressive Democrats of America[149]
  • Peace Action[438]
  • New York City Democratic Socialists of America[439]
  • Track AIPAC[16]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Marty Dolan (D) $70,953 $66,181 $4,771
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D) $31,095,335 $18,890,837 $15,939,145
Source: Federal Election Commission[440]

Results

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (incumbent) 30,189 86.9
Democratic Felipe Garcia 2,336 6.7
Democratic Marty Dolan 2,058 5.9
Democratic Write-in 141 0.4
Total votes 34,724 100.0

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Diamant Hysenaj, real estate developer[441][442]

Disqualified

  • Aurelio Arcabascio, retired project manager and perennial candidate[443]
  • Tina Forte, social media influencer and nominee for this district in 2022 and 2024[444]
  • Ariel Rivera-Diaz, NYC Board of Elections worker and candidate for State Assembly in 2018[445]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Diamant Hysenaj (R) $319,496 $303,150 $16,345
Source: Federal Election Commission[440]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D) $31,095,335 $18,890,837 $15,939,145
Diamant Hysenaj (R) $319,496 $303,150 $16,345
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 14th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (incumbent)
Republican Diamant Hysenaj
Total votes

District 15

2026 New York's 15th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Ritchie Torres Stylo Sapaskis
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Ritchie Torres
Democratic



The 15th district is based in the West Bronx, including the neighborhoods of Mott Haven, Melrose, Morrisania, Highbridge, Tremont, West Farms, Belmont, Norwood, Woodlawn Heights, Riverdale, and Spuyten Duyvil. The district is currently represented by Democrat Ritchie Torres, first elected in 2020, who was re-elected with 76.5% of the vote in 2024. He is running for re-election.

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Ritchie Torres, incumbent U.S. representative[446]

Eliminated in primary

  • Michael Blake, former state assemblymember from the 79th district (2015–2021), former DNC vice chair (2017–2021), candidate for New York City Public Advocate in 2019, candidate for this district in 2020, and candidate for mayor of New York City in 2025[447]
  • Jose Vega, LaRouche Youth Movement activist and independent candidate for this seat in 2024[448]

Withdrawn

  • Dalourny Nemorin, member of Bronx Community Board 1[449]
  • Amanda Septimo, state assemblymember from the 84th district (2021–present) (running for re-election)[286]

Declined

  • Jamaal Bowman, former U.S. representative for the 16th district (2021–2025)[450]

Endorsements

Michael Blake
Local officials
  • Ras Baraka, mayor of Newark (2014–present)[451]
  • Bill de Blasio, former mayor of New York City (2014–2021)[452]
Labor unions
  • UNITE HERE Local 100[453]
Organizations
  • Citizen Action of New York[454]
  • College Democrats of America[455]
  • Jim Owles Liberal Democratic Club[97]
  • People for the American Way[456]
  • Progressive Victory[233]
  • Track AIPAC[16]
Ritchie Torres
U.S. representatives
  • Adriano Espaillat, NY-13 (2017–present)[457]
  • Hakeem Jeffries, House minority leader (2023–present) from NY-08 (2013–present)[458]
  • Gregory Meeks, NY-05 (1998–present)[459]
  • Nancy Pelosi, former speaker of the House (2007–2011, 2019–2023) from CA-11 (1987–present)[460]
  • Linda Sánchez, CA-38 (2003–present)[63]
  • Mark Takano, CA-39 (2013–present)[63]
State legislators
  • George Alvarez, state assemblymember from the 78th district (2023–present)[457]
  • Jamaal Bailey, state senator from the 36th district (2017–present) and chair of the Bronx Democratic Party (2020–present)[457]
  • Landon Dais, state assemblymember from the 77th district (2024–present)[457]
  • Jeffrey Dinowitz, state assemblymember from the 81st district (1994–present)[457]
  • Carl Heastie, speaker of the New York State Assembly (2015–present) from the 83rd district (2001–present)[457]
  • Chantel Jackson, state assemblymember from the 79th district (2021–present)[457]
  • John Zaccaro, state assemblymember from the 80th district (2023–present)[457]
Local officials
  • Eric Dinowitz, New York City councilmember from the 11th district (2021–present)[457]
  • Oswald Feliz, New York City councilmember from the 15th district (2021–present)[457]
  • Vanessa Gibson, Bronx Borough President (2022–present)[457]
  • Kevin Riley, New York City councilmember from the 12th district (2021–present)[457]
  • Pierina Sanchez, New York City councilmember from the 14th district (2022–present)[457]
  • Justin Sanchez, New York City councilmember from the 17th district (2026–present)[457]
  • Althea Stevens, New York City councilmember from the 16th district (2022–present)[457]
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
  • New York State United Teachers[65]
  • NYC District Council of Carpenters[38]
Organizations
  • AIPAC[39]
  • Congressional Black Caucus[459]
  • Congressional Hispanic Caucus[458]
  • Democratic Majority for Israel[41]
  • Equality PAC[461]
  • Jewish Democratic Council of America[212]
  • Joint Action Committee for Political Affairs[45]
  • National Organization for Women[460]
  • Stonewall Democratic Club of New York[99]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
Declined to endorse
Local officials
  • Zohran Mamdani, mayor of New York City (2026–present)[315]

Fundraising

Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Michael Blake (D) $412,123 $326,953 $85,170
Ritchie Torres (D) $6,684,978 $3,538,208 $14,570,752
Jose Vega (D) $264,784 $255,458 $10,599
Source: Federal Election Commission[462]

Polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Michael
Blake
Ritchie
Torres
Jose
Vega
Undecided
Braun Research[463][N] April 28 – May 10, 2026 422 (LV) ± 4.9% 15% 60% 7% 18%

Results

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Ritchie Torres (incumbent) 23,531 71.9
Democratic Michael Blake 7,132 21.8
Democratic Jose Vega 1,824 5.6
Democratic Write-in 218 0.7
Total votes 32,705 100.0

Third party and independent candidates

Declared

  • Gonzalo Duran (Conservative), conservative activist and nominee for this seat in 2024[459]
  • Andre Easton (Independent), teacher[459]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Andre Easton (I) $27,245 $18,317 $3,468
Source: Federal Election Commission[462]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Ritchie Torres (D) $6,684,978 $3,538,208 $14,570,752
Stylo Sapaskis (R) $0 $0 $0
Gonzalo Duran $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 15th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Ritchie Torres (incumbent)
Republican Stylo Sapaskis
Conservative Gonzalo Duran
Total votes

District 16

2026 New York's 16th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee George Latimer Joseph Cinquemani
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

George Latimer
Democratic



The 16th district is based in southern Westchester County, including Yonkers, White Plains, New Rochelle, and Rye. It also includes Co-op City in the Bronx. The incumbent is Democrat George Latimer, who was elected with 71.5% of the vote in 2024.

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • George Latimer, incumbent U.S. representative[25]

Declined

  • Jamaal Bowman, former U.S. representative for this district (2021–2025)[464]

Endorsements

George Latimer
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
  • NYC District Council of Carpenters[38]
Organizations
  • AIPAC[39]
  • Democratic Majority for Israel[41]
  • Jewish Democratic Council of America[212]
  • Joint Action Committee for Political Affairs[45]
  • League of Conservation Voters Action Fund[46]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
  • Stonewall Democratic Club of New York[99]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
George Latimer (D) $489,300 $587,833 $94,120
Source: Federal Election Commission[465]

Republican primary

Nominee

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
George Latimer (D) $489,300 $587,833 $94,120
Joseph Cinquemani (R) $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 15th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic George Latimer (incumbent)
Republican Joseph Cinquemani
Total votes

District 17

2026 New York's 17th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Mike Lawler Cait Conley
Party Republican Democratic
Alliance Working Families

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Mike Lawler
Republican



The 17th district is based in the Lower Hudson Valley, including all of Rockland and Putnam counties, northern Westchester County, and a small part of Dutchess County. The incumbent is Republican Mike Lawler, who was re-elected with 51.3% of the vote in 2024.[4] Lawler is one of only three Republicans in the 119th Congress to represent a district that was carried by Democrat Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election, making this race a key Democratic target.[467] Lawler is running for re-election.

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Mike Lawler, incumbent U.S. representative[468]

Declined

  • Bill Weber, state senator from the 38th district (2023–present) (running for re-election)[469]

Endorsements

Mike Lawler
Executive branch officials
  • Donald Trump, president of the United States (2017–2021, 2025–present)[470]
U.S. representatives
  • Mike Johnson, speaker of the House (2023–present) from LA-04 (2017–present)[63]
Organizations
  • Republican Jewish Coalition[471]
Political parties
  • Conservative Party of New York State[25]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Mike Lawler (R) $7,472,987 $3,286,804 $4,355,552
Source: Federal Election Commission[472]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Cait Conley, former senior advisor to the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency[473]

Eliminated in primary

  • John Cappello, non-profit executive[474]
  • Beth Davidson, Rockland County legislator[475]
  • Effie Phillips-Staley, Tarrytown village trustee[476]
  • Mike Sacks, former WNYW political reporter[477]

Withdrawn

  • Peter Chatzky, former mayor of Briarcliff Manor[478]
  • Jessica Reinmann, nonprofit CEO (endorsed Conley)[479]
  • John Sullivan, former FBI intelligence analyst[480]

Declined

  • Sean Patrick Maloney, former U.S. Ambassador to the OECD (2024–2025) and former U.S. representative from the 18th district (2013–2023)[481]
  • Brandon del Pozo, professor and former NYPD officer[482]
  • Neal Zuckerman, Metropolitan Transportation Authority board member[483]

Endorsements

Cait Conley
Executive branch officials
  • Maura Sullivan, former Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs (2015)[484]
U.S. representatives
  • Jason Crow, CO-06 (2019–present)[485]
  • Mark Takano, CA-39 (2013–present)[310]
  • Max Rose, former NY-11 (2019–2021)[63]
  • Pat Ryan, NY-18 (2022–present)[486]
  • Ritchie Torres, NY-15 (2021–present)[310]
  • Sean Patrick Maloney, former NY-18 (2013-2023)[487]
  • Seth Moulton, MA-06 (2015–present)[63]
Statewide officials
  • Eliot Spitzer, former governor of New York (2007–2008)[488]
Local officials
  • Mimi Rocah, former District Attorney of Westchester County (2021-2024)[489]
Individuals
  • Jessica Reinmann, nonprofit CEO and former candidate for this seat[479]
  • Gloria Steinem, prominent feminism activist
Labor unions
  • New York State United Teachers[65]
Organizations
Party branches
  • Dutchess County Democratic Committee[496]
  • Putnam County Democratic Committee[496]
Beth Davidson
U.S. representatives
  • Mondaire Jones, former NY-17 (2021–2023)[497]
State legislators
  • Patrick Carroll, New York state assemblymember from the 96th district (2025-present)[498]
  • Sandy Galef, former New York state assemblymember from the 90th district (1993-2012) and the 95th district (2013-2022)[499]
Party branches
  • Rockland County Democratic Committee[500]
Effie Phillips-Staley
U.S. representatives
  • Jamaal Bowman, former NY-16 (2021–2025)[501]
  • Ro Khanna, CA-17 (2017–present)[502]
State legislators
  • Nina Turner, former Ohio state senator from the 25th district (2008–2014)[503]
Individuals
  • Zephyr Teachout, attorney[502]
Organizations
Political parties
  • Working Families Party[119]
Declined to endorse
Party branches
  • Westchester County Democratic Committee[496]

Fundraising

Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
John Cappello (D) $77,637 $56,527 $21,110
Cait Conley (D) $3,258,198 $2,317,224 $940,973
Beth Davidson (D) $2,062,801 $1,648,553 $414,247
Effie Phillips-Staley (D) $695,629 $640,371 $55,333
Mike Sacks (D) $298,002 $281,081 $16,921
Source: Federal Election Commission[472]

Polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Peter
Chatzky
Cait
Conley
Beth
Davidson
Effie
Phillips-Staley
Other Undecided
Public Policy Polling (D)[506][O] June 15–16, 2026 553 (LV) 33% 19% 14% 6%[m] 28%
Tavern Research (D)[507] June 12–16, 2026 574 (LV) ± 5.0% 34% 23% 13% 2%[n] 28%
Global Strategy Group (D)[508][P] May 7–12, 2026 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 29% 22% 6% 6%[o] 37%
Data for Progress (D)[509][Q] April 17–24, 2026 436 (LV) 15% 26% 8% 51%
April 9, 2026 Chatzky withdraws from the race
Impact Research (D)[510][R] February 24–26, 2026 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 8% 17% 23% 8% 2%[p] 45%
Lake Research Partners (D)[511][S] January 27 – February 1, 2026 401 (LV) ± 4.9% 12% 18% 17% 5% 2%[q] 41%

Results

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Cait Conley 22,749 49.5
Democratic Beth Davidson 14,671 31.9
Democratic Effie Phillips-Staley 7,012 15.3
Democratic Michael Sacks 742 1.6
Democratic John Cappello 740 1.6
Democratic Write-in 44 0.1
Total votes 45,958 100.0

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Tossup January 15, 2026
Inside Elections[20] Tossup November 11, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Lean R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Tossup October 11, 2025

Post-primary endorsements

Cait Conley (D)
Organizations

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Mike Lawler (R) $7,472,987 $3,286,804 $4,355,552
Cait Conley (D) $3,258,198 $2,317,224 $940,973
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 17th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Mike Lawler (incumbent)
Democratic Cait Conley
Total votes

District 18

2026 New York's 18th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Pat Ryan Jacqueline Auringer
Party Democratic Republican
Alliance Working Families Conservative

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Pat Ryan
Democratic



The 18th district is based in the mid-Hudson Valley, including all of Orange County and most of Dutchess and Ulster counties. The incumbent is Democrat Pat Ryan, who was re-elected with 57.2% of the vote in 2024.[4]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Pat Ryan, incumbent U.S. representative[25]

Endorsements

Pat Ryan
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
  • New York State Nurses Association[94]
Organizations
  • AIPAC[39]
  • Brady Campaign[40]
  • Citizen Action of New York[225]
  • Democratic Majority for Israel[41]
  • End Citizens United[513]
  • Jewish Democratic Council of America[212]
  • Joint Action Committee for Political Affairs[45]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
  • Population Connection[80]
  • Reproductive Freedom for All[98]
Political parties
  • New York Working Families Party[15]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Pat Ryan (D) $4,465,683 $1,684,537 $2,948,337
Source: Federal Election Commission[514]

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Jackie Auringer, businesswoman[515]

Withdrawn

  • Sharanjit Thind, former Nassau County human rights commissioner[516]

Endorsements

Jackie Auringer
Political parties
  • Conservative Party of New York State[25]

Fundraising

Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Jackie Auringer (R) $49,265 $9,914 $39,351
Source: Federal Election Commission[514]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D January 15, 2026
Inside Elections[20] Solid D December 5, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D March 26, 2026
Race to the WH[22] Safe D February 2, 2026

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Pat Ryan (D) $4,465,683 $1,684,537 $2,948,337
Jacqueline Auringer (R) $49,265 $9,914 $39,351
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 18th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Pat Ryan (incumbent)
Republican Jacqueline Auringer
Total votes

District 19

2026 New York's 19th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Josh Riley Peter Oberacker
Party Democratic Republican
Alliance Working Families Conservative

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Josh Riley
Democratic



The 19th district stretches from the Upper Hudson Valley across the Catskill Mountains to parts of the Southern Tier and Finger Lakes, including Hudson, Monticello, Oneonta, Binghamton, and Ithaca. It includes all of Columbia, Greene, Sullivan, Delaware, Otsego, Chenango, Broome, and Tompkins counties, and parts of Rensselaer, Cortland, and Ulster counties. The incumbent is Democrat Josh Riley, who flipped the district and was elected with 51.1% of the vote in 2024.

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Josh Riley, incumbent U.S. representative[517]

Endorsements

Josh Riley
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
Organizations
  • AIPAC[39]
  • Brady Campaign[40]
  • Democratic Majority for Israel[41]
  • End Citizens United[42]
  • Giffords[43]
  • Jewish Democratic Council of America[212]
  • Joint Action Committee for Political Affairs[45]
  • League of Conservation Voters Action Fund[46]
  • Natural Resources Defense Council[47]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
  • Population Connection[80]
  • Reproductive Freedom for All[49]
Political parties
  • New York Working Families Party[15]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Josh Riley (D) $4,336,327 $1,484,272 $2,920,374
Source: Federal Election Commission[518]

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Peter Oberacker, state senator from the 51st district (2021–present)[519]

Eliminated in primary

  • Alexander Portelli, small business owner[520]

Declined

  • Haris Alic, communications director for the House Foreign Affairs Committee (endorsed Oberacker)[521]
  • Marc Molinaro, former administrator of the Federal Transit Administration (2025–2026) and former U.S. Representative from New York's 19th congressional district (2023–2025) (running for state assembly)[522]

Endorsements

Peter Oberacker
Executive branch officials
  • Donald Trump, president of the United States (2017–2021, 2025–present)[523]
U.S. representatives
  • Richard Hudson, NC-09 (2013–present)[58]
  • Mike Johnson, Speaker of the House (2023–present) from LA-04 (2017–present)[523]
  • Mike Lawler, NY-17 (2023–present)[524]
State legislators
  • Chris Tague, AD-102 (2018–present)[525]
Political parties
  • Conservative Party of New York State[25]
Organizations
  • NRCC MAGA Majority[58]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Peter Oberacker (R) $956,745 $704,594 $252,151
Source: Federal Election Commission[518]

Results

Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Peter Oberacker 13,387 77.6
Republican Alexander Portelli 3,779 21.9
Republican Write-in 77 0.4
Total votes 17,243 100.0

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Lean D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Lean D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Lean D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Likely D November 19, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Josh Riley (D) $4,336,327 $1,484,272 $2,920,374
Peter Oberacker (R) $956,745 $704,594 $252,151
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 19th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Josh Riley (incumbent)
Republican Peter Oberacker
Total votes

District 20

2026 New York's 20th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Paul Tonko Ralph Ambrosio
Party Democratic Republican
Alliance Working Families Conservative

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Paul Tonko
Democratic



The 20th district is based in the Capital Region, including Albany, Troy, Schenectady, Saratoga Springs, and Amsterdam. It includes all of Albany and Schenectady counties, and parts of Saratoga, Rensselaer, and Montgomery counties. The incumbent is Democrat Paul Tonko, who was re-elected with 61.1% of the vote in 2024.[4]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Paul Tonko, incumbent U.S. representative[526]

Endorsements

Paul Tonko
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
Organizations
  • J Street PAC[527]
  • League of Conservation Voters Action Fund[46]
  • Peace Action[438]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
Political parties
  • New York Working Families Party[15]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Paul Tonko (D) $825,396 $1,043,497 $381,401
Source: Federal Election Commission[528]

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Ralph Ambrosio, attorney[529]

Endorsements

Ralph Ambrosio
Political parties
  • Conservative Party of New York State[25]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Ralph Ambrosio (R) $24,403 $14,513 $9,890
Source: Federal Election Commission[528]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Paul Tonko (D) $825,396 $1,043,497 $381,401
Ralph Ambrosio (R) $24,403 $14,513 $9,890
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 20th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Paul Tonko (incumbent)
Republican Ralph Ambrosio
Total votes

District 21

2026 New York's 21st congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Anthony Constantino Blake Gendebien Robert Smullen
Party Republican Democratic Conservative

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Elise Stefanik
Republican



The 21st district is based in the North Country and the Adirondack Mountains, and also includes parts of the Mohawk Valley and the Capital District. It includes Glens Falls, Lake George, Plattsburgh, Potsdam, Herkimer, and Rome. The incumbent is Republican Elise Stefanik, who was re-elected with 62.1% of the vote in 2024. She is not seeking re-election.

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Anthony Constantino, businessman and candidate for this district in the canceled 2025 special election[530]

Eliminated in primary

  • Robert Smullen, state assemblymember from the 118th district (2019–present) and candidate for this district in the canceled 2025 special election[531]

Declined

  • Liz Joy, realtor, nominee for the 20th district in 2020 and 2022, and candidate for this district in the canceled 2025 special election[532]
  • Marc Molinaro, former administrator of the Federal Transit Administration (2025–2026) and former U.S. Representative from New York's 19th congressional district (2023–2025) (running for state assembly)[522]
  • Josh Parker, businessman and candidate for this district in the canceled 2025 special election[533]
  • Dan Stec, state senator from the 45th district (2021–present) and candidate for this district in the canceled 2025 special election (running for re-election)[532]
  • Elise Stefanik, incumbent U.S. representative (ran for governor, later withdrew)[534]
  • Christopher Tague, state assemblymember from the 102nd district (2018–present), chair of the Schoharie County Republican Party, and candidate for this district in the canceled 2025 special election (running for state senate)[156]
  • Mark Walczyk, state senator from the 49th district (2023–present)[532]

Endorsements

Robert Smullen
State legislators
  • William A. Barclay, minority leader of the New York State Assembly (2020–present) from AD-120 (2003–present)[535]
  • 45 other state assemblymembers[536]
Party officials
  • Edward F. Cox, chair of the New York Republican Party (2009–2019, 2023–present)[537]
Organizations
  • New York State Rifle and Pistol Association[538]
Political parties
  • Conservative Party of New York State[539]
  • New York Republican State Committee[537]
  • Warren County Conservative Party[540]
  • 11 Republican county commitees[536]
Anthony Constantino
Executive branch officials
  • Donald Trump, president of the United States (2017–2021, 2025–present)[541]
  • Michael Flynn, former National Security Adviser (2017)[542]
Members of Congress
Local officials
  • Rudy Giuliani, former mayor of New York City (1994–2001)[543]
Individuals
  • Roger Stone, political consultant[544]
  • Henry Cejudo, Olympic Gold Medalist[542]
Declined to endorse
U.S. representatives
  • Elise Stefanik, NY-21 (2015–present)[545]

Debates

2026 NY-21 Republican primary debates
No. Date Host Moderator Link Participants
 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Non-invitee   I  Invitee    W  Withdrawn  
Constantino Smullen
1 May 28, 2026 CBS6 Tom Eschen YouTube P P

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Anthony Constantino (R) $7,453,187 $6,633,205 $3,126,869
Robert Smullen (R) $1,300,134 $775,156 $524,978
Source: Federal Election Commission[546]

Polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Anthony
Constantino
Robert
Smullen
Undecided
McLaughlin & Associates (R)[547][T] April 14–16, 2026 300 (LV) ± 5.7% 33% 43% 24%
GrayHouse (R)[548][U] February 2026 500 (LV) 43% 16% 41%
McLaughlin & Associates (R)[547][T] January 2026 – (LV) 40% 26% 34%

Results

2026 Republican primary results by county
  Constantino
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  •   70–80%
  Smullen
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Anthony Constantino 26,565 59.3
Republican Robert Smullen 18,028 40.2
Republican Write-in 216 0.5
Total votes 44,809 100.0

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Blake Gendebien, dairy farmer and nominee for this district in the cancelled 2025 special election[549]

Eliminated in primary

  • Stuart Amoriell, restaurant owner[550]

Withdrawn

  • Maylon Haller, hip hop and folk artist[551]
  • Dylan Hewitt, former trade official[552]

Declined

  • Matt Castelli, nominee for this district in 2022[532]
  • Paula Collins, nominee for this district in 2024 (endorsed Hewitt)[532]

Endorsements

Blake Gendebien
U.S. representatives
  • Joe Morelle, NY-25 (2018–present)[63]
  • John Mannion, NY-22 (2025–present)[63]
  • Bill Owens, former NY-21 (2009–2015)[63]
  • Jamie Raskin, MD-08 (2017–present)[553]
Dylan Hewitt (withdrawn)
U.S. representatives
  • Ro Khanna, CA-17 (2017–present)[554]
Individuals
  • Zephyr Teachout, attorney[555]
Political parties
  • New York Working Families Party[556]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Stuart Amorelli (D) $137,556 $130,082 $7,474
Blake Gendebien (D) $5,012,014 $2,977,475 $2,286,881
Source: Federal Election Commission[546]

Results

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Blake Gendebien 15,186 64.7
Democratic Stuart Amoriell 8,189 34.9
Democratic Write-in 105 0.4
Total votes 23,480 100.0

Third parties and independents

Declared

  • Richard Grayson, writer and perennial candidate (Communist Party)[557]
  • Christopher Schmidt, educator[558]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Lean R March 19, 2026

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Anthony Constantino (R) $10,053,187 $6,926,318 $3,126,869
Blake Gendebien (D) $5,012,014 $2,977,475 $2,286,881
Robert Smullen $1,300,134 $775,156 $524,978
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Polling

Poll source Date(s)

administered

Sample

size[a]

Margin

of error

Anthony
Constantino (R)
Blake
Gendebien (D)
Robert
Smullen (C)
Other Undecided
Impact Research (D)[559][V] May 26–31, 2026 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 45% 44% 11%

Results

2026 New York's 21st congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Anthony Constantino
Democratic Blake Gendebien
Conservative Robert Smullen
Total votes

District 22

2026 New York's 22nd congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee John Mannion Kailee Buller
Party Democratic Republican
Alliance Working Families Conservative

Incumbent U.S. Representative

John Mannion
Democratic



The 22nd district is based in Central New York and the Mohawk Valley, including Syracuse and Utica. It includes all of Onondaga and Madison counties and parts of Oneida, Cayuga, and Cortland counties. The incumbent is Democrat John Mannion, who flipped the district and was elected with 54.6% of the vote in 2024.

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • John Mannion, incumbent U.S. representative[25]

Endorsements

John Mannion
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
Organizations
  • End Citizens United[42]
  • Giffords[43]
  • Jewish Democratic Council of America[212]
  • Joint Action Committee for Political Affairs[45]
  • J Street PAC[560]
  • League of Conservation Voters Action Fund[46]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
  • Reproductive Freedom for All[49]
Political parties
  • New York Working Families Party[15]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
John Mannion (D) $2,420,032 $904,629 $1,643,644
Source: Federal Election Commission[561]

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Kailee Buller, former chief of staff of the U.S. Department of Agriculture[562]

Withdrawn

  • David Hollenbeck, entrepreneur[563]
  • John Lemondes Jr., state assemblyman from the 126th district (2021–present) and candidate for this district[r] in 2014[564]
  • John Salka, former state assemblyman from the 121st district (2019–2023)[565]

Declined

  • Julie Abbott, Onondaga County legislator (2019–2025) and nominee for SD-48 in 2022[566]

Endorsements

Kailee Buller
U.S. Representatives
  • Mike Lawler, NY-17 (2023–present)[567]
  • Claudia Tenney, NY-24 (2021–present)[568]
Political parties
  • Conservative Party of New York State[25]

Fundraising

Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Kailee Buller (R) $241,523 $47,217 $194,306
Source: Federal Election Commission[561]

Independents

Declared

  • William Staton, educational consultant[569]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
William Staton (I) $16,344 $0 $16,358
Source: Federal Election Commission[561]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D January 15, 2026
Inside Elections[20] Solid D December 5, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D March 26, 2026
Race to the WH[22] Safe D January 25, 2026

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
John Mannion (D) $2,420,032 $904,629 $1,643,622
Kailee Buller (R) $241,523 $47,217 $194,306
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 22nd congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic John Mannion (incumbent)
Republican Kailee Buller
Total votes

District 23

2026 New York's 23rd congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Nick Langworthy Aaron Gies
Party Republican Democratic
Alliance Conservative Working Families

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Nick Langworthy
Republican



District 23 is based in the Southern Tier and Western New York, including Elmira, Corning, Jamestown, and outer Erie County. The district is currently represented by Republican Nick Langworthy, who was re-elected with 65.8% of the vote in 2024.[4]

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Nick Langworthy, incumbent U.S. representative[570]

Endorsements

Nick Langworthy
Executive branch officials
  • Donald Trump, president of the United States (2017–2021, 2025–present)[571]
Political parties
  • Conservative Party of New York State[25]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Nick Langworthy (R) $1,975,836 $934,863 $2,134,781
Source: Federal Election Commission[572]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Aaron Gies, college professor[573]

Eliminated in primary

  • Kevin Stocker, attorney and perennial candidate[574]

Endorsements

Aaron Gies
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • New York State United Teachers[65]
Political parties
  • New York Working Families Party[15]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Aaron Gies (D) $237,997 $176,447 $21,834
Kevin Stocker (D) $165,000 $167,348 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[572]

Results

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Aaron Gies 13,703 71.6
Democratic Kevin Stocker 5,376 28.1
Democratic Write-in 51 0.3
Total votes 19,130 100.0

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Nick Langworthy (R) $1,975,836 $934,863 $2,134,781
Aaron Gies (D) $237,997 $176,447 $21,834
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 23rd congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Nick Langworthy (incumbent)
Democratic Aaron Gies
Total votes

District 24

2026 New York's 24th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Claudia Tenney Alissa Ellman
Party Republican Democratic
Alliance Conservative Working Families

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Claudia Tenney
Republican



The 24th district is based along the Lake Ontario coast (minus Rochester) and the upper Finger Lakes, including Watertown, Oswego, Seneca Falls, and Batavia. The incumbent is Republican Claudia Tenney, who was re-elected with 65.7% of the vote in 2024.[4]

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Claudia Tenney, incumbent U.S. representative[575]

Endorsements

Claudia Tenney
Political parties
  • Conservative Party of New York State[25]
Organizations

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Claudia Tenney (R) $2,438,851 $1,664,984 $1,128,870
Source: Federal Election Commission[577]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Alissa Ellman, former program support assistant at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs[578]

Eliminated in primary

  • Diana Kastenbaum, manufacturing CEO and Genesee Community College trustee[579]

Withdrawn

  • Steven Holden, financial management consultant and nominee for this district in 2022[580][581]

Endorsements

Alissa Ellman
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
Political parties
  • New York Working Families Party[15]

Fundraising

Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Alissa Ellman (D) $167,918 $164,356 $3,562
Diana Kastenbaum (D) $71,710 $65,982 $5,729
Source: Federal Election Commission[577]

Results

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Alissa Ellman 9,927 61.7
Democratic Diana Kastenbaum 6,117 38.0
Democratic Write-in 33 0.2
Total votes 16,077 100.0

Independents

Declared

Filed paperwork

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Ken Estes (I) $40 $0 $80
Source: Federal Election Commission[577]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Claudia Tenney (R) $2,438,851 $1,664,984 $1,128,870
Alissa Ellman (D) $167,918 $164,356 $3,562
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 24th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Claudia Tenney (incumbent)
Democratic Alissa Ellman
Total votes

District 25

2026 New York's 25th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Joseph Morelle Virginia McIntyre
Party Democratic Republican
Alliance Working Families Conservative

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Joseph Morelle
Democratic



The 25th district is based in the Rochester area, including all of Monroe County and part of Ontario County. The incumbent is Democrat Joseph Morelle, who was re-elected with 60.8% of the vote in 2024.[4]

Democratic primary

Incumbent Joseph Morelle had first been elected to the 25th district in 2018 and had been re-elected comfortably since then, with a large financial advantage over his opponents.[586] He faced two primary challenges in 2026; former Brighton town board member Robin Wilt, who had ran against Morelle in the 2018 and 2020 primaries, and pastor Sherita Traywick.[587]

Wilt ran to Morelle's left, accusing him of not adequately opposing the presidency of Donald Trump and of being too closely affiliated with the congressional Democratic leadership.[587] Morelle responded by arguing his House committee assignments made him an effective anti-corruption advocate, and that he had successfully won funds for local infrastructure and businesses.[587] Traywick campaigned against migrant detention centres and the 2026 Iran war, arguing that new representatives were needed to address these issues.[588]

Nominee

  • Joseph Morelle, incumbent U.S. representative[589]

Eliminated in primary

  • Sherita Traywick, pastor & candidate for New York's 56th State Senate district in 2020[590]
  • Robin Wilt, former Brighton Town Board member and candidate for this seat in 2018 and 2020[591]

Endorsements

Joseph Morelle
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
  • New York State AFL-CIO[93]
  • New York State United Teachers[65]
Organizations
  • AIPAC[39]
  • Democratic Majority for Israel[41]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
Political parties
  • New York Working Families Party[15]
Robin Wilt
Organizations
  • Progressive Democrats of America[149]
  • Track AIPAC[16]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Joseph Morelle (D) $1,530,683 $1,558,742 $352,146
Sherita Traywick (D) $12,188 $13,054 $2,184
Robin Wilt (D) $40,153 $38,221 $3,882
Source: Federal Election Commission[592]

Results

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Joseph Morelle (incumbent) 24,085 63.3
Democratic Robin Wilt 11,516 30.3
Democratic Sherita Traywick 2,273 6.0
Democratic Write-in 151 0.4
Total votes 38,025 100.0

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Virginia McIntyre, Monroe County legislator[593]

Endorsements

Virginia McIntyre
Political parties
  • Conservative Party of New York State[25]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Virginia McIntyre (R) $26,635 $13,298 $13,337
Source: Federal Election Commission[592]

Independents

Filed paperwork

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Daelin Walton (I) $1,711 $1,472 $414
Source: Federal Election Commission[592]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Joseph Morelle (D) $1,530,683 $1,558,742 $352,146
Virginia McIntyre (R) $26,635 $13,298 $13,337
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 25th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Joseph Morelle (incumbent)
Republican Virginia McIntyre
Total votes

District 26

2026 New York's 26th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Tim Kennedy Dennis Hannon
Party Democratic Republican
Alliance Working Families Conservative

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Tim Kennedy
Democratic



The 26th district is based in the Buffalo-Niagara Falls area, including the more urban parts of Erie County and western Niagara County. The incumbent is Democrat Tim Kennedy, who was re-elected with 65.2% of the vote in 2024.[4]

Democratic primary

Nominee

  • Tim Kennedy, incumbent U.S. representative[25]

Endorsements

Tim Kennedy
Labor unions
  • Communication Workers of America District 1[36]
  • Council of School Supervisors & Administrators[37]
Organizations
  • AIPAC[39]
  • Democratic Majority for Israel[41]
  • League of Conservation Voters Action Fund[46]
  • Planned Parenthood Action Fund[79]
Political parties
  • New York Working Families Party[15]

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Tim Kennedy (D) $2,027,438 $1,368,396 $998,106
Source: Federal Election Commission[595]

Republican primary

Nominee

  • Dennis Hannon, former construction worker[596]

Endorsements

Dennis Hammond
Political parties
  • Conservative Party of New York State[25]

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[19] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[20] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[22] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of June 3, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Tim Kennedy (D) $2,027,438 $1,368,396 $998,106
Dennis Hannon (R) $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[23]

Results

2026 New York's 26th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Tim Kennedy (incumbent)
Republican Dennis Hannon
Total votes

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  2. ^ Nickie Kane with 3%
  3. ^ Nina Schwalbe with 3%; "Other" with 2%
  4. ^ Laura Dunn with 5%; Nina Schwalbe and "Other" with 2%; Mathew Shurka with 1%; Christopher Diep and Patrick Timmins with 0%
  5. ^ Nina Schwalbe with 3%; "Other candidate" with 1%
  6. ^ Nina Schwalbe with 4%
  7. ^ "Some other candidate" with 3%
  8. ^ Laura Dunn with 3%; Jami Floyd, Alan Pardee, Nina Schwalbe, and Mathew Shurka with 2%
  9. ^ Jami Floyd with 3%; Alan Pardee and Nina Schwalbe with 2%; Christopher Diep, Laura Dunn, Mathew Shurka, and "Someone else" with 1%
  10. ^ $8,754 of this total was self-funded by Romero.
  11. ^ Oscar Romero with 2%, Theo Chino-Tavarez with 2%
  12. ^ Oscar Romero with 4%
  13. ^ Mike Sacks with 5%; John Cappello with 1%
  14. ^ John Cappello & Mike Sacks with 1%
  15. ^ Mike Sacks with 4%; John Cappello with 2%
  16. ^ John Cappello and Mike Sacks with 1%
  17. ^ Mike Sacks with 2%; John Cappello with 0%
  18. ^ This district was numbered as the 24th district prior to the 2020 redistricting cycle.

Partisan clients

  1. ^ Poll sponsored by House Majority PAC, which is focused on electing Democrats to the U.S. House of Representatives
  2. ^ a b c Poll sponsored by WPIX
  3. ^ Poll sponsored by Justice Democrats, who have endorsed Valdez's campaign
  4. ^ Poll sponsored by New Yorkers Fighting Back PAC, which supports Goldman
  5. ^ Poll sponsored by Demand Progress
  6. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Conway's campaign
  7. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Bores's campaign
  8. ^ Poll commissioned for the Grand Penn Community Alliance
  9. ^ Poll sponsored by a pro-Bores group
  10. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Leading the Future, which opposes Bores
  11. ^ Poll sponsored by National Black Empowerment Action Fund, which supports Espaillat
  12. ^ Poll sponsored by Justice Democrats, which supports Chevalier
  13. ^ Poll sponsored by Chevalier's campaign
  14. ^ Poll sponsored by A Fight Worth Having PAC, which supports Blake
  15. ^ Poll commissioned by Majority Democrats, which supports Conley
  16. ^ Poll sponsored by VoteVets, which supports Conley
  17. ^ Poll sponsored by Phillips-Staley's campaign.
  18. ^ Poll sponsored by Davidson's campaign.
  19. ^ Poll sponsored by Chatzky's campaign.
  20. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Smullen's campaign
  21. ^ Poll sponsored by Constantino's campaign
  22. ^ Poll sponsored by Gendebien’s campaign

References

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