For related races, see 2026 United States House of Representatives elections .
2026 United States House of Representatives elections in New York
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
Nominee
Nick LaLota
Chris Gallant
Party
Republican
Democratic
Alliance
Conservative
Working Families
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Nick LaLota Republican
See also: New York's 1st congressional district
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Withdrawn
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
District 2
2026 New York's 2nd congressional district election
Nominee
Andrew Garbarino
Patrick Halpin
Party
Republican
Democratic
Alliance
Conservative
Working Families
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Andrew Garbarino Republican
See also: New York's 2nd congressional district
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
District 3
2026 New York's 3rd congressional district election
Nominee
Tom Suozzi
Mike LiPetri
Party
Democratic
Republican
Alliance
Common Sense
Conservative
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Tom Suozzi Democratic
See also: New York's 3rd congressional district
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
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
District 4
2026 New York's 4th congressional district election
Nominee
Laura Gillen
Jeanine Driscoll
Party
Democratic
Republican
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Laura Gillen Democratic
See also: New York's 4th congressional district
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
District 5
2026 New York's 5th congressional district election
Nominee
Gregory Meeks
George Marsh
Party
Democratic
Republican
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Gregory Meeks Democratic
See also: New York's 5th congressional district
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)
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
District 6
2026 New York's 6th congressional district election
Nominee
Grace Meng
Joseph Chou
Party
Democratic
Republican
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Grace Meng Democratic
See also: New York's 6th congressional district
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
District 7
2026 New York's 7th congressional district election
Nominee
Claire Valdez
Melvin Rivera
Party
Democratic
Republican
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Nydia Velázquez Democratic
See also: New York's 7th congressional district
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
District 8
2026 New York's 8th congressional district election
Nominee
Hakeem Jeffries
Lewis Mizrahi
Party
Democratic
Republican
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Hakeem Jeffries Democratic
See also: New York's 8th congressional district
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
District 9
2026 New York's 9th congressional district election
Nominee
Yvette Clarke
Joel Anabilah-Azumah
Party
Democratic
Republican
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Yvette Clarke Democratic
See also: New York's 9th congressional district
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
District 10
2026 New York's 10th congressional district election
Nominee
Brad Lander
Jennifer Moore
Party
Democratic
Republican
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Dan Goldman Democratic
See also: New York's 10th congressional district
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 GrossErrol 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
County results
Results by precinct
50–60%
60–70%
70–80%
80–90%
90–100%
100%
50–60%
60–70%
70–80%
80–90%
90–100%
100%
Precinct results
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
District 11
2026 New York's 11th congressional district election
Nominee
Nicole Malliotakis
Michael DeCillis
Party
Republican
Democratic
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Nicole Malliotakis Republican
See also: New York's 11th congressional district
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
District 12
2026 New York's 12th congressional district election
Nominee
Micah Lasher
Caroline Shinkle
Party
Democratic
Republican
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Jerry Nadler Democratic
See also: New York's 12th congressional district
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]
Marginof 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 LehrerErrol 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
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
District 13
2026 New York's 13th congressional district election
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
See also: New York's 13th congressional district
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
DarializaAvila 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
County results
Democratic primary results by precinct
40–50%
50–60%
60–70%
70–80%
40–50%
50–60%
60–70%
70–80%
80–90%
90–100%
Precinct results
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
District 14
2026 New York's 14th congressional district election
Nominee
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Diamant Hysenaj
Party
Democratic
Republican
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Democratic
See also: New York's 14th congressional district
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
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
District 15
2026 New York's 15th congressional district election
Nominee
Ritchie Torres
Stylo Sapaskis
Party
Democratic
Republican
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Ritchie Torres Democratic
See also: New York's 15th congressional district
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
District 16
2026 New York's 16th congressional district election
Nominee
George Latimer
Joseph Cinquemani
Party
Democratic
Republican
Incumbent U.S. Representative
George Latimer Democratic
See also: New York's 16th congressional district
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
District 17
2026 New York's 17th congressional district election
Nominee
Mike Lawler
Cait Conley
Party
Republican
Democratic
Alliance
Working Families
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Mike Lawler Republican
See also: New York's 17th congressional district
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]
Marginof error
Peter
Chatzky
Cait
Conley
Beth
Davidson
EffiePhillips-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
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
District 18
2026 New York's 18th congressional district election
Nominee
Pat Ryan
Jacqueline Auringer
Party
Democratic
Republican
Alliance
Working Families
Conservative
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Pat Ryan Democratic
See also: New York's 18th congressional district
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
District 19
2026 New York's 19th congressional district election
Nominee
Josh Riley
Peter Oberacker
Party
Democratic
Republican
Alliance
Working Families
Conservative
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Josh Riley Democratic
See also: New York's 19th congressional district
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
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
District 20
2026 New York's 20th congressional district election
Nominee
Paul Tonko
Ralph Ambrosio
Party
Democratic
Republican
Alliance
Working Families
Conservative
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Paul Tonko Democratic
See also: New York's 20th congressional district
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
District 21
2026 New York's 21st congressional district election
Nominee
Anthony Constantino
Blake Gendebien
Robert Smullen
Party
Republican
Democratic
Conservative
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Elise Stefanik Republican
See also: New York's 21st congressional district
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
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
District 22
2026 New York's 22nd congressional district election
Nominee
John Mannion
Kailee Buller
Party
Democratic
Republican
Alliance
Working Families
Conservative
Incumbent U.S. Representative
John Mannion Democratic
See also: New York's 22nd congressional district
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
District 23
2026 New York's 23rd congressional district election
Nominee
Nick Langworthy
Aaron Gies
Party
Republican
Democratic
Alliance
Conservative
Working Families
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Nick Langworthy Republican
See also: New York's 23rd congressional district
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
District 24
2026 New York's 24th congressional district election
Nominee
Claudia Tenney
Alissa Ellman
Party
Republican
Democratic
Alliance
Conservative
Working Families
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Claudia Tenney Republican
See also: New York's 24th congressional district
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
District 25
2026 New York's 25th congressional district election
Nominee
Joseph Morelle
Virginia McIntyre
Party
Democratic
Republican
Alliance
Working Families
Conservative
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Joseph Morelle Democratic
See also: New York's 25th congressional district
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
District 26
2026 New York's 26th congressional district election
Nominee
Tim Kennedy
Dennis Hannon
Party
Democratic
Republican
Alliance
Working Families
Conservative
Incumbent U.S. Representative
Tim Kennedy Democratic
See also: New York's 26th congressional district
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
Notes
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Key:
A – all adults
RV – registered voters
LV – likely voters
V – unclear
^ Nickie Kane with 3%
^ Nina Schwalbe with 3%; "Other" with 2%
^ Laura Dunn with 5%; Nina Schwalbe and "Other" with 2%; Mathew Shurka with 1%; Christopher Diep and Patrick Timmins with 0%
^ Nina Schwalbe with 3%; "Other candidate" with 1%
^ Nina Schwalbe with 4%
^ "Some other candidate" with 3%
^ Laura Dunn with 3%; Jami Floyd, Alan Pardee, Nina Schwalbe, and Mathew Shurka with 2%
^ Jami Floyd with 3%; Alan Pardee and Nina Schwalbe with 2%; Christopher Diep, Laura Dunn, Mathew Shurka, and "Someone else" with 1%
^ $8,754 of this total was self-funded by Romero.
^ Oscar Romero with 2%, Theo Chino-Tavarez with 2%
^ Oscar Romero with 4%
^ Mike Sacks with 5%; John Cappello with 1%
^ John Cappello & Mike Sacks with 1%
^ Mike Sacks with 4%; John Cappello with 2%
^ John Cappello and Mike Sacks with 1%
^ Mike Sacks with 2%; John Cappello with 0%
^ This district was numbered as the 24th district prior to the 2020 redistricting cycle .
Partisan clients
^ Poll sponsored by House Majority PAC, which is focused on electing Democrats to the U.S. House of Representatives
^ a b c Poll sponsored by WPIX
^ Poll sponsored by Justice Democrats , who have endorsed Valdez's campaign
^ Poll sponsored by New Yorkers Fighting Back PAC, which supports Goldman
^ Poll sponsored by Demand Progress
^ a b Poll sponsored by Conway's campaign
^ a b Poll sponsored by Bores's campaign
^ Poll commissioned for the Grand Penn Community Alliance
^ Poll sponsored by a pro-Bores group
^ a b Poll sponsored by Leading the Future , which opposes Bores
^ Poll sponsored by National Black Empowerment Action Fund, which supports Espaillat
^ Poll sponsored by Justice Democrats , which supports Chevalier
^ Poll sponsored by Chevalier's campaign
^ Poll sponsored by A Fight Worth Having PAC, which supports Blake
^ Poll commissioned by Majority Democrats , which supports Conley
^ Poll sponsored by VoteVets , which supports Conley
^ Poll sponsored by Phillips-Staley's campaign.
^ Poll sponsored by Davidson's campaign.
^ Poll sponsored by Chatzky's campaign.
^ a b Poll sponsored by Smullen's campaign
^ Poll sponsored by Constantino's campaign
^ Poll sponsored by Gendebien’s campaign
References
^
"2026 State Primary Election Dates" . National Council of State Legislatures. May 9, 2025. Retrieved August 5, 2025 .
^
"Clean sweep as 3 candidates endorsed by Mamdani win primaries in New York" . ABC News . June 24, 2026. Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^
Armus, Teo (June 23, 2026). "Mamdani-backed candidates sweep House primaries in NYC. See live results" . The Washington Post . ISSN 0190-8286 . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u
"2024 House Vote Tracker" . Cook Political Report . Retrieved December 2, 2024 .
^ https://apps2.suffolkcountyny.gov/boe/documents/2026%20Primary%20-%20Who%20Filed.html
^ a b c
"2026 Election United States House - New York 1st" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^ https://apps2.suffolkcountyny.gov/boe/documents/2026%20Primary%20-%20Who%20Filed.html
^
Frey, Kevin (July 18, 2025). "More than a year out from the 2026 midterms, how much have N.Y.'s battleground congressional candidates raised?" . Spectrum News . Retrieved August 7, 2025 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1956480" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 28, 2026 .
^ https://apps2.suffolkcountyny.gov/boe/documents/2026%20Primary%20-%20Who%20Filed.html
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1944975" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved February 5, 2026 .
^
Janison, Dan (August 7, 2025). "Avlon steps aside for veteran Chris Gallant to challenge LaLota" . Newsday . Retrieved August 7, 2025 .
^
Beeferman, Jason; Reisman, Nick; Sommerfeldt, Chris (June 12, 2026). "Self-funding by the millions" . Politico . Retrieved June 13, 2026 .
^ a b c d
Walsh, Christopher (May 21, 2026). "Welker Endorses Gallant for Congress" . East Hampton Star . Retrieved June 13, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j
"Our 2026 Candidates" . Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k
"Candidates Endorsed By Citizens Against AIPAC Corruption" . Track AIPAC. Retrieved January 9, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1913407" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved September 28, 2025 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1848725" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved November 1, 2025 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
"2026 CPR House Race Ratings" . Cook Political Report. Retrieved February 6, 2025 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
"2026 House Ratings" . Inside Elections .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
"2026 House" . Center For Politics . Retrieved October 19, 2025 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
"The 2026 House Forecast" . Race to the WH . Retrieved October 11, 2025 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
"2026 Election United States House - New York" . fec.gov . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 23, 2026 .
^
"New HMP Polling Shows Nick LaLota Vulnerable in November" . House Majority PAC. January 8, 2026. Retrieved January 8, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p
"Who Filed" . New York Board of Elections. Retrieved April 1, 2026 .
^
Nitzberg, Alex (May 26, 2025). "Trump endorses House Republican who failed to vote on the One Big Beautiful Bill Act" . Fox News . Retrieved May 26, 2025 .
^ a b
"22 Republicans endorsed by LGBT organization: Full list of names" . Newsweek . February 3, 2026. Retrieved February 4, 2026 .
^ a b
"2026 Election United States House - New York 2nd" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
"Patrick Halpin announces campaign to challenge Rep. Andrew Garbarino" . WLIW-FM . July 16, 2025. Retrieved July 19, 2025 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1923252" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved October 21, 2025 .
^
Patton, Connor (April 19, 2026). "Democratic congressional candidate suspends campaign amid invalid signature allegations" . Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^
"Taveras, Joshua J - Candidate overview" . Federal Election Commission . January 2023. Retrieved July 19, 2025 .
^
"Elected Officials & District Map" . New York State Board of Elections .
^
House, Billy (February 3, 2026). "LiPetri to pursue rematch against Suozzi after falling short in 2024" . Newsday . Retrieved February 9, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p
"Primary Contest List – Primary Election 2026 – 06/23/2026" (PDF) . NY Board of Elections .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t
"2026 Endorsements: New York" . Communication Workers of America District 12 . Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p
"Endorsements" . Council of School Supervisors & Administrators . Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j
"Endorsements" . NYC District Council of Carpenters . February 24, 2023. Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n
"AIPAC Political Portal" . AIPAC PAC. Retrieved February 21, 2026 .
^ a b c d e
"Candidates" . The Brady Campaign. Retrieved January 29, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j
"Endorsees" . DMFI PAC. Retrieved December 17, 2025 .
^ a b c d
"End Citizens United Endorses First Slate of Congressional Candidates" . End Citizens United. July 9, 2025. Retrieved July 15, 2025 .
^ a b c d
"Giffords PAC endorses key battleground champions running for reelection to Congress" . Giffords. September 30, 2025. Retrieved September 30, 2025 .
^ a b
"Key strategies for winning in 2026 & JDCA's first midterm endorsements" . Jewish Democratic Council of America. Retrieved October 23, 2025 .
^ a b c d e f g h i
"Candidates" . JACPAC.
^ a b c d e f g h i j k
"On Earth Week, We're Endorsing Climate Champions to Take Back the House" . League of Conservation Voters. April 25, 2025. Retrieved April 28, 2025 .
^ a b c d
"Who We Support - Environmental Candidates" . Natural Resources Defense Council.
^
"Tom Suozzi" . Retrieved May 30, 2026 .
^ a b c d
"Reproductive Freedom for All Endorses Slate of U.S. House Frontline Members for the 2026 Midterm Election" . Reproductive Freedom for All. May 8, 2025. Retrieved May 8, 2025 .
^
Pope, Lauren (September 10, 2025). "The Tom Suozzi Endorsement" . WelcomeStack . Retrieved November 30, 2025 .
^ a b
"We're endorsing working-class champions in CA and NY" . SURJ . April 7, 2026. Retrieved May 12, 2026 .
^ a b
"2026 Election United States House - New York 3rd" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Robinson, Pam (February 3, 2026). "LiPetri Seeking Rematch Against Suozzi in 3rd District" . Huntington Now . Retrieved February 3, 2026 .
^
Coltin, Jeff; Anuta, Joe; Reisman, Nick; Ngo, Emily (October 14, 2025). "You say you want a revolution" . Politico . Retrieved October 15, 2025 .
^ a b
Beeferman, Jason; Sommerfeldt, Chris; Fernandez, Madison; Reisman, Nick (June 17, 2026). "The crypto-powered content farm boosting Bores" . Politico . Retrieved June 18, 2026 .
^
Nir, David; Singer, Jeff (February 6, 2026). "Morning Digest: Republicans have their first shot at a special election flip on Saturday" . The Down Ballot . Retrieved February 6, 2026 .
^ a b c
Russell, Hank (February 6, 2026). "LiPetri Set to Challenge Suozzi Again for Congressional Seat" . Long Island Life & Politics . Retrieved February 7, 2026 .
^ a b c d
"NRCC Introduces "MAGA Majority" to Expand House GOP Majority in 2026" . National Republican Congressional Committee . March 17, 2026. Retrieved May 4, 2026 .
^
Booker, Brakkton; Coltin, Jeff; Gardiner, Dustin; Mason, Melanie; Schneider, Elena (August 2, 2025). "Kamala Harris has misgivings about government. Some Dems have misgivings about her" . Politico . Retrieved August 2, 2025 . Democratic Rep. Laura Gillen...will not be inviting Harris to visit her district next year as she defends her seat
^ a b
House, Billy (April 23, 2026). "Gillen avoids primary as two challengers miss ballot spots" . Newsday . Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^
Reisman, Nick (April 21, 2026). "Trump's pick to replace Stefanik" . Politico . Retrieved April 22, 2026 .
^
"Jones, Gian A - Candidate overview" . Federal Election Commission . January 2023. Retrieved July 19, 2025 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m
Eichholz, Jack (January 8, 2026). "2026 Endorsement Tracker" . VoteHub . Retrieved January 16, 2026 .
^ a b
Coltin, Jeff (February 15, 2026). "Former Assembly member plans to primary Rep. Laura Gillen over ICE funding vote" . City & State . Retrieved February 15, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j
"NYSUT issues a round of endorsements in 2026 congressional primaries" . April 20, 2026. Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^
"Candidates" .
^
"EMILYs List Endorses Nine Democratic Pro-Choice Women for Reelection to the U.S. House of Representatives" . EMILYs List. Retrieved June 13, 2025 .
^
"LCV Action Fund Announces New Slate of Endorsements for U.S. House of Representatives" . League of Conservation Voters. October 15, 2025.
^
Hofstra University Democrats. (April 5, 2026). "Hofstra University Democrats Endorses Kiana Bierria-Anderson's Candidacy in NY 4th Congressional District" . Retrieved April 5, 2026 .
^ a b
"2026 Election United States House - New York 4th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^ a b
Justin, Raga (April 14, 2026). "Labor's D'Esposito Won't Run for His Old NY House Seat" . Bloomberg Government . Retrieved April 14, 2026 .
^
"Lt. Col. Marvin Williams Launches Campaign for Congress" . The Register-Guard . March 20, 2026. Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^
"Matter of Mandel v Nassau County Bd. of Elections - 2026 NY Slip Op 03106" . www.nycourts.gov . Retrieved May 19, 2026 .
^
"John DeGrace, GOP candidate to run against Rep. Laura Gillen, bows out" . Newsday . April 10, 2026. Retrieved April 10, 2026 .
^
"Ny-05 2026" .
^
"Queens Dem. Primary Candidate Salvatore Padellaro: "District Lacks Leadership" " . La Voce di New York . February 19, 2026. Retrieved March 28, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h i
"District Council 37 Delegates Endorse Candidates for 2026 Primary Election - District Council 37" . DC37 . March 25, 2026. Retrieved March 26, 2026 .
^
"Gregory Meeks" .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o
"2026 Planned Parenthood Action Fund Endorsed Candidates" . Planned Parenthood Action Fund . Retrieved April 8, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f
"2026 Endorsements" . Population Connection Action Fund. Retrieved November 23, 2025 .
^
"2026 Election United States House - New York 5th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-36-507 9299" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved November 1, 2025 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-36-507 9299" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved November 1, 2025 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1955750" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 20, 2026 .
^ a b c d
Reisman, Nick; Sommerfeldt, Chris (March 16, 2026). "Mike Lawler's campaign is paying an activist" . Politico . Retrieved March 17, 2026 .
^
"Sen. Liu endorses incumbent Rep. Grace Meng in 2026 election" . Queens Courier . March 18, 2026. Retrieved March 19, 2026 .
^
Kaye, Jacob (November 17, 2025). "Queens government worker to challenge Meng" . Queens Daily Eagle . Retrieved November 17, 2025 .
^ a b c d e f g h
Hartley, Lauren (November 25, 2025). "Who's Running in the 2026 Congressional Primaries in NYC" . The City . Retrieved November 25, 2025 .
^
Sterne, Peter (March 19, 2026). "WFP isn't endorsing Meng challenger Chuck Park after all" . City & State NY . Retrieved March 19, 2026 .
^ a b c d
DeLorenzo, Renee (April 10, 2026). "Rep. Meng racks up endorsements from labor unions ahead of Democratic primary" . QNS . Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^
DeLorenzo, Renee (May 12, 2026). "Major labor union, LIUNA, endorses incumbent Grace Meng for Congress" . Queens News Service . Retrieved May 12, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f
"Endorsed Candidates" . Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g
"New York State AFL-CIO Primary Endorsements 2026" . New York State AFL-CIP . Retrieved May 20, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f
"NYSNA 2026 Endorsements" . May 13, 2026. Retrieved May 30, 2026 .
^ a b
DeLorenzo, Renee (May 11, 2026). "Rep. Grace Meng receives endorsement of hospitality and carpenters unions in re-election bid" . Queens News Service . Retrieved May 11, 2026 .
^
DeLorenzo, Renee (May 5, 2026). "Candidate profile: Grace Meng is fighting for Queens" . QNS. Retrieved June 19, 2026 .
^ a b c d e
"2026 U.S. House of Representatives" . Retrieved May 28, 2026 .
^ a b c d
"Elections" .
^ a b c d e f g h i
"2026 SDNYC Endorsements" . Retrieved May 28, 2026 .
^
"Vote Mama PAC Candidates" . Vote Mama PAC. Retrieved June 13, 2025 .
^
DeLorenzo, Renee (May 12, 2026). "Candidates Raj Goyle and Chuck Park cross-endorse each other in upcoming elections" . QNS . Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^ a b
"Chuck Park endorsed by Sunrise NYC, youth-led org advocating for Green New Deal" . Queens Courier . April 17, 2026. Retrieved April 18, 2026 .
^ a b c
"Chuck Park" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved June 4, 2026 .
^
"2026 Election United States House - New York 6th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^ a b
Pretsky, Holly; Sterne, Peter (January 8, 2026). "Claire Valdez launches a bid for Congress staffed by Mamdani's consigliere" . City & State . Retrieved January 8, 2026 .
^
"Indian American launches bid in crowded Democratic primary for US Congress from NY-7 - News India Times" . News India Times . March 4, 2026. Retrieved May 21, 2026 .
^
Davey, Emma (March 6, 2026). "Vichal Kumar Launches Campaign for New York's 7th Congressional District" . Greenpointers . Retrieved May 21, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h
Fandos, Nicholas; Oreskes, Benjamin (December 4, 2025). "Brooklyn Borough President Will Run for House Seat as Socialists Circle" . The New York Times . Retrieved December 4, 2025 .
^
McDonough, Annie (February 2, 2026). "Julie Won files to run in NY-7" . City & State NY . Retrieved February 3, 2026 .
^
"First-Time Candidate Steven Carbajal Announces Run in NY's 7th Congressional District" . BKReader . December 20, 2025. Retrieved December 20, 2025 .
^
"Edwin Withdraws" . April 6, 2026. Retrieved April 6, 2026 – via Facebook.
^
Beeferman, Jason (December 4, 2025). "Hochul starts the Zohran buffer" . Politico . Retrieved December 4, 2025 .
^
Lange, Michael (December 17, 2025). "The Socialists vs. The Progressives" . Retrieved December 19, 2025 .
^
Reisman, Nick; Ngo, Emily (December 4, 2025). "Hochul's tax talk" . Politico . Retrieved December 4, 2025 .
^
King, Maya (November 20, 2025). "Nydia Velázquez, a New York Trailblazer in Congress, to Retire Next Year" . The New York Times . Retrieved November 20, 2025 .
^
O'Brien, Shane (January 16, 2026). "Nydia Velázquez endorses Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso in NY-7 congressional race" . Brooklyn Paper . Retrieved January 16, 2026 .
^ a b c
Daly, Adam (March 19, 2026). "NY-7 Congress Race: Antonio Reynoso lands Rep. Pat Ryan backing in race to replace Velázquez" . AMNY . Retrieved March 19, 2026 .
^
Fandos, Nicholas (January 15, 2026). "Nydia Velázquez Gives Mamdani a Warning as She Endorses a Successor" . The New York Times . Retrieved January 16, 2026 .
^ a b
Sommerfeldt, Chris; Reisman, Nick; Beeferman, Jason (March 2, 2026). "Mamdani's Signal habit tests transparency pledge" . Politico . Retrieved March 3, 2026 .
^
Reisman, Nick; Ngo, Emily (December 19, 2025). "Minimum wage Zo-mentum" . Politico . Retrieved December 19, 2025 .
^
Stratman, Josephine (January 30, 2026). "Queens BP Richards endorses Antonio Reynoso for Congress" . New York Daily News . Retrieved January 31, 2026 .
^
Goldiner, Dave (December 16, 2025). "Jumaane Williams endorses Antonio Reynoso for Velazquez seat" . New York Daily News . Retrieved December 16, 2025 .
^
Coltin, Jeff (April 16, 2026). "1199 backs Reynoso, three others running against DSA" . City & State NY . Retrieved April 17, 2026 .
^
Brendlen, Kirstyn (January 21, 2026). "Reynoso endorsed by Hotel and Gaming Trades Council in NY-7 Democratic primary" . Brooklyn Paper . Retrieved January 21, 2026 .
^ a b c
Reisman, Nick; Sommerfeldt, Chris; Beeferman, Jason; Ngo, Emily (February 5, 2026). "Suburbia's ICE shift" . Politico . Retrieved February 9, 2026 .
^ a b
Krichevsky, Sophie; Sterne, Peter (April 6, 2026). "Reynoso quietly secures Queens Dems endorsement for NY-7" . City & State NY . Retrieved April 7, 2026 .
^ a b
Sommerfeldt, Chris (January 13, 2026). "Reynoso wins endorsements of left-wing groups in race for Rep. Velazquez seat" . New York Daily News . Retrieved January 14, 2026 .
^ a b
Fandos, Nicholas (February 23, 2026). "Working Families Party Backs Reynoso for Congress, Breaking With Mamdani" . The New York Times . Retrieved February 23, 2026 .
^ a b c d
"Bernie Sanders backs Claire Valdez in NYC House race dividing left and progressives" . The Intercept . Retrieved April 2, 2026 .
^
Broszkowski, Roman. "Lander Announces Five New State Legislature, City Council Endorsements" . The Indypendent . Retrieved March 28, 2026 .
^
O'Brien, Shane (June 16, 2026). "Exclusive: Gianaris endorses Claire Valdez for NY-7" . QNS . Retrieved June 16, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f
O'Brien, Shane (May 12, 2026). "CM Julie Won picks up several AAPI endorsements ahead of NY-7 primary" . QNS . Retrieved May 20, 2026 .
^ a b
Janesch, Sam (June 1, 2026). "Chris Rabb's campaign was a massive win for Philly progressives. Now, he wants to replicate it across the country" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved June 1, 2026 .
^ a b
Kim, Elizabeth (January 9, 2026). "Mamdani endorses DSA ally in race for Brooklyn-Queens congressional seat" . Gothamist . Retrieved January 9, 2026 .
^
"Anti-Israel activist introduces congressional candidate at NYC event" . Cleveland Jewish News . January 13, 2026. Retrieved January 14, 2026 .
^ a b
Beeferman, Jason; Reisman, Nick; Fernandez, Madison; Sommerfeldt, Chris (May 27, 2026). "Jack Schlossberg's closed-door Israel views" . Politico . Retrieved May 28, 2026 .
^
"IFPTE Endorses Claire Valdez for Congress" . International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers. February 18, 2026. Retrieved February 19, 2026 .
^
Mayhugh, Justin (January 9, 2026). "UAW Endorses Union Member Claire Valdez for Congress in NY-7" . UAW. Retrieved January 22, 2026 .
^
"UAW & NY Assembly Member Claire Valdez Launches Run for Congress with Pres. Fain & Mayor Mamdani" . UAW Region 9A. January 9, 2026. Retrieved January 10, 2026 .
^
"Claire Valdez" . A New Policy PAC . Retrieved June 18, 2026 .
^ a b c
King, Maya; Fandos, Nicholas (June 2, 2026). "Group Pledges $2 Million to Fight AIPAC in House Races" . The New York Times . Retrieved June 2, 2026 .
^
"Claire Valdez" . Christopher Street Project.
^
Schor, Elana (January 14, 2026). "Progressive group backs Mamdani ally in key NY race" . Semafor . Retrieved January 14, 2026 .
^
"Hogg's political group makes endorsements in Utah, New York House races" . The Hill . Retrieved March 13, 2026 .
^
"Pro-Palestinian PAL PAC endorses Claire Valdez for Congress" . City & State New York . March 24, 2026.
^ a b
Sterne, Peter (January 23, 2026). "DSA votes to endorse Espaillat challenger Darializa Avila Chevalier" . City & State NY . Retrieved January 23, 2026 .
^
"Claire Valdez for Congress in NY-07" . Our Revolution. May 7, 2026. Retrieved May 21, 2026 .
^ a b
"Learning to love James Dolan" . Politico . June 16, 2026.
^ a b c d e
"Endorsements" . Progressive Democrats of America. Retrieved June 13, 2026 .
^
"Sunrise is proud to endorse Claire Valdez in New York's 7th Congressional District! Claire is a union organizer who's spent years fighting alongside workers. We need leaders who aren't afraid to challenge the status quo. Claire is ready to bring that fight to Congress" . Instagram . Sunrise Movement. Retrieved May 15, 2026 .
^
Beeferman, Jason; Fernandez, Madison; Sommerfeldt, Chris; Reisman, Nick (May 8, 2026). "Mamdani 'hopeful' amid so many fiscal feelings in Albany" . Politico . Retrieved May 8, 2026 .
^ a b c
O'Brien, Shane (March 10, 2026). "CM Julie Won officially launches congressional campaign for NY-7" . QNS . Retrieved March 12, 2026 .
^
"JULIE WON" . ASPIRE PAC . Retrieved June 21, 2026 .
^
"Julie Won" . Ballotpedia . May 16, 2026. Retrieved June 4, 2026 .
^
"Largest Federal Employee Union Endorses Edwin Osario for Election to Congress" . American Federation of Government Employees. March 6, 2026. Retrieved March 7, 2026 .
^ a b
Reisman, Nick (November 26, 2025). "Signing off in Albany" . Politico . Retrieved November 26, 2025 .
^
"2026 Election United States House - New York 7th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^ a b c
"New York City 2026 Congressional Polling: NY-07, NY-10, NY-12" . Emerson College Polling . May 21, 2026. Retrieved May 21, 2026 .
^
Sommerfeldt, Chris; Reisman, Nick; Beeferman, Jason; Anuta, Joe (February 20, 2026). "Mamdani's endorsement power" . Politico . Retrieved February 20, 2026 .
^
Garcia, Deanna (June 2, 2026). "How to watch New York's 7th Congressional District debate on NY1" . NY1 . Retrieved June 26, 2026 .
^
"Democratic Primary Debate for the 7th Congressional District | Full Debate" . YouTube . NY1 . June 3, 2026. Retrieved June 26, 2026 .
^
"NY-7 candidates fight for your vote in spirited debate" . YouTube . PIX11 . June 10, 2026. Retrieved June 26, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1957716" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved April 3, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1849014" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved December 4, 2025 .
^
Wardwell, Faith (December 5, 2025). "Chi Ossé ends early bid to challenge Jeffries" . Politico . Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^
Dovere, Edward-Isaac (July 9, 2025). "Mamdani's far-left allies want to primary Hakeem Jeffries and other NYC Democrats" . CNN . Retrieved July 9, 2025 .
^ a b c
"Endorsements" . Association of Flight Attendants-CWA. Retrieved April 16, 2026 .
^
"Hakeem Jeffries" .
^
"NRDC Action Fund Endorsements" . NRDC Action Fund. Retrieved April 23, 2026 .
^
"2026 Election United States House - New York 8th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Pretsky, Holly (October 16, 2025). "Private poll shows Hakeem Jeffries with 50-point lead over Chi Ossé in hypothetical congressional primary" . City & State . Retrieved October 19, 2025 .
^
"New York House District 8 Primary 2026 Live Results" . www.nbcnews.com . June 24, 2026. Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1899714" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved November 1, 2025 .
^
Amanda L Gordon (October 6, 2025). "Brooklyn's New Congress Hopeful Helped Sell Dodgers at Blackstone" . Bloomberg.com . Retrieved October 6, 2025 .
^
"Yvette Clarke" .
^ a b
"2026 Election United States House - New York 9th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1933371" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
^
Solender, Andrew (June 24, 2026). "Rep. Dan Goldman unseated by Mamdani-backed Brad Lander" . Axios . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^ a b c d e
Weigel, David (September 10, 2025). "Progressive poll: Mamdani skeptic is vulnerable in NY primary" . Semafor . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^ a b
Ngo, Emily (December 9, 2025). "Brad Lander set to challenge Rep. Dan Goldman from the left" . Politico . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^
Berman, Russel (June 7, 2026). "The Liberal District That Could Oust a Trump-Defying Democrat" . The Atlantic . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^ a b
Nivokoff, Devyn (June 30, 2025). "Could Brad Lander primary Dan Goldman in NY-10?" . City & State . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^
Pazmino, Gloria (December 11, 2025). "Brad Lander, a Mamdani ally, challenges Rep. Dan Goldman in Democratic primary with mayor-elect's backing" . CNN . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^
Kashinsky, Lisa; Sommerfeldt, Chris; Reisman, Nick (June 24, 2026). "Pro-Israel politics just took a huge hit in New York" . Politico . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^
"Brad Lander, New York City's outgoing comptroller, launches congressional bid" . Associated Press. December 10, 2025. Retrieved December 10, 2025 .
^
Brosnan, Erica (January 6, 2026). "Goldman launches reelection campaign amid challenge from Lander" . Spectrum News NY1 . Retrieved January 6, 2026 .
^
Ngo, Emily (December 10, 2025). "Mister Rogers vs. 'dark oppression' " . Politico . Retrieved December 10, 2025 .
^
Reisman, Nick; Coltin, Jeff; Ngo, Emily (November 19, 2025). "GOP's 2026 abortion conundrum" . Politico . Retrieved November 19, 2025 .
^
Smilk, Carin M. (January 14, 2026). "Kasky drops out of NYC congressional race, aims to stop 'settler violence' " . Jewish News Service. Retrieved January 23, 2026 .
^
Fitzsimmons, Emma (December 10, 2025). "Lander Will Run for House Seat With Mamdani's Support" . The New York Times . Retrieved December 10, 2025 .
^
Lisa, Kate; Lewis, Rebecca (February 3, 2026). "Brian Kavanagh won't seek reelection to state Senate" . City & State NY . Retrieved March 8, 2026 .
^
Novikoff, Devyn (June 30, 2025). "Could Brad Lander primary Dan Goldman in NY-10?" . City & State . Retrieved June 30, 2025 . Despite some raised eyebrows in response to his recent tweet, Stringer said he's 'absolutely not' running for the seat himself.
^ a b
"Dan Goldman officially launches congressional re-election bid, backed by Hochul and Jeffries • Brooklyn Paper" . Brooklyn Paper . January 6, 2026. Retrieved January 7, 2026 .
^ a b
Goldiner, Dave (January 6, 2026). "Rep. Dan Goldman scores Jeffries and Hochul endorsements in NY-10 fight" . New York Daily News . Retrieved January 6, 2026 .
^
Kassel, Matthew (December 15, 2025). "Lander struggles to land hits on Goldman — beyond disagreeing on Israel" . Retrieved December 19, 2025 .
^ a b
Cordero, Katelyn; Reisman, Nick; Beeferman, Jason; Sommerfeldt, Chris (February 18, 2026). "Hitting a health care wall" . Politico .
^
Walker, Jack (May 6, 2026). "Two NYC Democratic Candidates Are Competing to Prove They're the Most Pro-LGBTQ+" . Them . Retrieved May 20, 2026 .
^ a b
Pretsky, Holly (January 6, 2026). "Dan Goldman vows to keep his fellow 1 percenters in check" . City & State NY . Retrieved January 7, 2026 .
^ a b c
"Rep. Dan Goldman nets endorsement of trio of former NYC council speakers" . New York Daily News . April 8, 2026. Retrieved April 13, 2026 .
^ a b
Pretsky, Holly (February 2, 2026). "Mark Levine endorses Dan Goldman for Congress" . City & State NY . Retrieved February 3, 2026 .
^ a b
Sommerfeldt, Chris; Reisman, Nick; Beeferman, Jason; Fernandez, Madison (May 5, 2026). "Another Adams ally axed in Mamdani purge" . Politico . Retrieved May 6, 2026 .
^
Pretsky, Holly (January 6, 2026). "Dan Goldman vows to keep his fellow 1 percenters in check" . City & State NY . Retrieved January 9, 2026 .
^ a b
Sommerfeldt, Chris; Reisman, Nick (March 5, 2026). "NYC Council lefties butt into Albany's tax-the-rich debate" . Politico . Retrieved March 6, 2026 .
^ a b
"New York Playbook" . Politico . January 15, 2026. Retrieved January 6, 2026 . Teamsters Local 237 is endorsing Rep. Dan Goldman in his bid for reelection, giving him a labor boost against challenger Brad Lander ... The incumbent also was recently endorsed by the National Association of Letter Carriers.
^
"New York Playbook" . Politico . January 20, 2026. Retrieved January 21, 2026 .
^
Kassel, Matthew (May 14, 2026). "Dan Goldman notches key endorsement from United Federation of Teachers" . Jewish Insider . Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^
"Animal Wellness Action Endorses Dan Goldman in 2026 Democratic Primary for New York's 10th Congressional District" . Animal Wellness Action. January 20, 2026. Retrieved February 11, 2026 .
^
@ASPIRE_PAC (January 20, 2026). "ASPIRE PAC is proud to endorse Dan Goldman for NY-10!" (Tweet ) – via X (formerly Twitter) .
^
Reisman, Nick; Negesse, Gelila; Sommerfeldt, Chris; Beeferman, Jason (February 25, 2026). "Mamdani's tax battle comes to Albany" . Politico . Retrieved February 26, 2026 .
^
Kassel, Matthew (December 15, 2025). "Lander struggles to land hits on Goldman — beyond disagreeing on Israel" . Jewish Insider . Retrieved December 16, 2025 .
^
Tracy, Matt (April 7, 2026). "Congressional Equality Caucus' Equality PAC endorses Dan Goldman in NY-10" . Gay City News . Retrieved April 8, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f
"Jewish Dems Endorsed Candidates" . Jewish Democratic Council of America. Retrieved November 14, 2025 .
^
"Dan Goldman" . JStreetPAC. Retrieved January 2, 2026 .
^ a b c d e
Fitzsimmons, Emma G. (December 10, 2025). "Lander Will Run for House Seat With Mamdani's Support" . The New York Times . Mr. Lander, who is backed by Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, hopes to capitalize on the left-leaning roots of the district, which overwhelmingly supported Mr. Mamdani, a democratic socialist, in November. Mr. Lander earned the endorsement on Wednesday of Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, and was also expected to announce endorsements from Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, the left-leaning Working Families Party and Jumaane Williams, the city's public advocate.
^ a b c d e f g h
Anuta, Joe (December 18, 2025). "Mamdani's new appointments chief resigns over anti-Jewish posts" . Politico . Retrieved February 2, 2026 .
^ a b
"Brad Lander launches run for Congress against pro-Israel Jewish incumbent Dan Goldman" . The Jewish Post & News . December 10, 2025. Retrieved December 10, 2025 .
^ a b c d e
"Lander Announces Five New State Legislature, City Council Endorsements" . The Indypendent . Retrieved February 23, 2026 .
^
Reisman, Nick; Anuta, Joe; Ngo, Emily (December 11, 2025). "Mamdani's role in the speaker's race" . Politico . Retrieved December 11, 2025 .
^
"Everyone Is Lying to You For Money" . Slate (Podcast transcript). April 17, 2026.
^
IHIP News: Trump Admin SPIRALING As Dems RISE UP Against FUNDING ISRAEL! . I've Had It – via YouTube.
^
Donaldson, Sahalie (April 2, 2026). "First Read" . City & State . Retrieved April 3, 2026 .
^
"PSC Primary Endorsements 2026" . Retrieved May 28, 2026 .
^
Lucas, Peter (January 5, 2026). "Dan Goldman Voted With Labor. The UAW Is Still Choosing Brad Lander" . The Nation . Retrieved January 5, 2026 .
^
"Brad Lander – Endorsement" . Christopher Street Project. Retrieved January 21, 2026 .
^ a b c
"Endorsements & Elections" . Retrieved May 30, 2026 .
^
@collegedems; (May 27, 2026). "We are proud to support these congressional candidates who are fighting for change in the Empire State" – via Instagram .
^
"Jewish protesters arrested outside Schumer's office while calling for US to 'stop arming Israel" . Cleveland Jewish News . April 14, 2026. Retrieved April 17, 2026 .
^
Howard, Andrew (February 9, 2026). "The big ads from the big game" . Politico . Retrieved February 9, 2026 .
^ a b
"Candidates endorsed by The Jewish Vote in 2026" . Retrieved May 30, 2026 .
^
"Brad Lander" .
^
"Brad Lander for Congress in NY-10" . Our Revolution. March 19, 2026. Retrieved April 16, 2026 .
^
Reisman, Nick; Coltin, Jeff; Ngo, Emily (December 17, 2025). "Goldman, Lander and 26 Federal Plaza" . Politico . Retrieved December 18, 2025 .
^ a b c
"Endorsements for 2026" . Progressive Victory. Retrieved June 2, 2026 .
^
Fandos, Nicholas; Oreskes, Benjamin (November 14, 2025). "The Strategic Uncoupling of Zohran Mamdani and Brad Lander" . The New York Times . Retrieved November 17, 2025 .
^
"2026 Election United States House - New York 10th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Pretsky, Holly; Coltin, Jeff (May 11, 2026). "Goldman trails Lander by 5 points in supportive super PAC poll" . City & State . Retrieved May 11, 2026 .
^ a b
"Demand Progress NY-10 poll" . Data For Progress . September 10, 2025. Retrieved September 10, 2025 – via Scribd .
^
Lewis, Rebecca (November 8, 2025). "Poll shows young voters would back Avilés over Goldman in NY-10" . City & State . Retrieved November 8, 2025 .
^
Spectrum News Staff (June 1, 2026). "Full Debate: Dan Goldman, Brad Lander go head-to-head in NY-10 debate" . NY1 . Retrieved June 26, 2026 .
^
Rahhal, Emily (May 1, 2026). "PIX11 will host primary debates for contentious NY congressional races" . PIX11 . Retrieved June 26, 2026 – via AOL.
^
Gabbatt, Adam (June 24, 2026). " 'Glorious time to be a New Yorker' as Lander's win highlights Mamdani effect" . The Guardian . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^
"New York U.S. House Primary Election Live Results 2026 | District 10 | Democratic Primary" . AP News . June 22, 2026. Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^
Fischetti, Matthew; Propper, David (June 24, 2026). "Meet the GOP hopefuls taking on Mamdani-endorsed NY House Dems" . New York Post . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^
Parrott, Max (February 19, 2026). "Appeals court green lights effort to redraw U.S. Rep. Nicole Malliotakis' district" . AMNY . Retrieved February 20, 2026 .
^
"Supreme Court blocks redrawing of New York congressional map, dealing a win for the GOP" . NPR. March 2, 2026. Retrieved April 25, 2026 .
^
Rogerson, Riley; González, Oriana; Luetkemeyer, Em (December 19, 2025). "What Utah Reps. Blake Moore, Mike Kennedy, Celeste Maloy and Burgess Owens said about running in 2026" . The Salt Lake Tribune . Retrieved December 19, 2025 .
^
"Nicole Malliotakis" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved June 4, 2026 .
^
"Staten Island's Rep. Malliotakis picks up law enforcement union endorsement" . Staten Island Advance . Retrieved March 20, 2026 .
^
Delaney, Jillian (February 15, 2026). "Staten Island Republicans announce 2026 election endorsements" . Staten Island Advance . Retrieved February 16, 2026 .
^ a b
"2026 Election United States House - New York 11th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Cavallaro, Nicolette (April 30, 2026). "Another twist in Staten Island congressional primary: Judge gives Dem new life" . silive . Retrieved May 1, 2026 .
^ a b c
Peteley, Luke (April 20, 2026). "Surprise twist in congressional race: Staten Island Dem suspends campaign" . Staten Island Advance . Retrieved April 21, 2026 .
^
Liotta, Paul (June 6, 2025). "Career educator, basketball coach launches early bid for Staten Island congressional seat" . Staten Island Advance . Retrieved June 16, 2025 .
^
"Pakistani-American Umar Usman announces to run for Congress NY-11" . Voice of South Asia . January 24, 2026. Retrieved February 8, 2026 .
^
Fandos, Nicholas (March 10, 2026). "Can a Populist Democrat Flip New York City's Only G.O.P. House Seat?" . The New York Times . Retrieved March 10, 2026 .
^
Ashford, Grace (September 15, 2025). "Lasher, Nadler's Protégé, Says He Is Running to Succeed His Mentor" . The New York Times . Retrieved September 15, 2025 .
^
"Alex Bores, Assemblyman, Joins Primary to Succeed Nadler in Congress" . The New York Times . October 20, 2025. Retrieved October 20, 2025 .
^
Gangel, Jamie; Herb, Jeremy (January 6, 2026). "George Conway launches congressional bid with one goal: Taking on Trump" . CNN . Retrieved January 6, 2026 .
^
King, Maya (November 11, 2025). "Jack Schlossberg, Kennedy Heir, to Seek Nadler's N.Y. Congressional Seat" . The New York Times . Retrieved November 11, 2025 .
^
Kelly, Keith J. (January 11, 2026). "Exclusive: Health Activist Nina Schwalbe Enters Race to Replace Congressman Nadler" . OurTownNY . Retrieved January 12, 2026 .
^
Sterne, Peter; Coltin, Jeff (December 22, 2025). "Erik Bottcher drops out of House race, will run for state Senate instead" . City & State . Retrieved December 22, 2025 .
^ a b
Reisman, Nick; Sommerfeldt, Chris; Ngo, Emily; Beeferman, Jason; Anuta, Joe (February 17, 2026). "Mamdani weathers messy storm aftermath" . Politico . Retrieved February 17, 2026 .
^
Reisman, Nick; Coltin, Jeff; Ngo, Emily (November 26, 2025). "Black Friday, Cyber Monday... Super PAC Summer?" . Politico . Retrieved November 26, 2025 .
^ a b
Reisman, Nick; Coltin, Jeff; Ngo, Emily (December 8, 2025). "One of Mamdani's first tests is also one of the oldest" . Politico . Retrieved December 11, 2025 .
^
Rosenblum, Tara (October 20, 2025). "Exclusive: Jami Floyd, veteran journalist and attorney, will run for Rep. Nadler's seat" . News 12 Networks . Retrieved October 20, 2025 .
^
Floyd, Jami (February 23, 2026). "I'm Suspending My Congressional Campaign. Here's Why" . Jami Floyd for Congress . Retrieved February 23, 2026 .
^
Floyd, Jami (February 23, 2026). "Why I'm Endorsing Jack Schlossberg" . Retrieved June 13, 2026 .
^
Ngo, Emily; Reisman, Nick (January 14, 2026). "Another shake-up in tumultuous NY-12 race" . Politico . Retrieved January 14, 2026 .
^
Nir, David (March 6, 2026). "Morning Digest: A GOP congresswoman thought she got a lifeline. Now it might be the end of the line" . The Downballot . Retrieved March 8, 2026 .
^ a b
Reisman, Nick; Sommerfeldt, Chris; Beeferman, Jason (March 11, 2026). "Affordability trumps all" . Politico . Retrieved March 12, 2026 .
^
Sterne, Peter (September 4, 2025). "Micah Lasher files to run for Congress" . City & State . Retrieved September 4, 2025 .
^
Stahl, Jay (September 3, 2025). "Chelsea Clinton passes on Congressional bid as Jack Schlossberg considers run" . USA Today . Retrieved September 3, 2025 .
^
Coltin, Jeff; Ngo, Emily; Reisman, Nick (November 20, 2025). "Mamdani: No way, Ossé" . Politico . Retrieved November 20, 2025 . That was nothing more than a rum-fueled rumor at Somos," Rich Azzopardi said of the annual post-election gathering for New York politicos in Puerto Rico. "I wish the high-school-basketball-team-sized field nothing but the best of luck.
^
Kassel, Matthew (September 2, 2025). "Nadler's handpicked successor drawing scrutiny over Mamdani endorsement" . Jewish Insider . Retrieved September 2, 2025 .
^
Jong-Fast, Molly (February 24, 2025). "I'm Not Running for Congress" . Vanity Fair . Retrieved February 24, 2025 .
^
Miller, Tim (September 3, 2025). "Lina Khan: The Impunity of the Elites" . The Bulwark (Podcast). Retrieved September 3, 2025 . [Tim Miller]: 'A congressional seat just opened up in New York. People have been tossing you out there.'...[Lina Khan]: 'No, that's not something that-that I'm considering.'
^ a b
Fandos, Nicholas (September 2, 2025). "A Kennedy, a Protégé and a Progressive Star Eye Nadler's N.Y. House Seat" . The New York Times . Retrieved September 2, 2025 .
^
Coltin, Jeff (February 11, 2026). "Former Rep. Carolyn Maloney endorses Alex Bores in East Side versus West Side House race" . City & State NY . Retrieved February 12, 2026 .
^
"Julie Menin Elected Speaker of New York City Council" . New York City Council . January 7, 2026. Retrieved January 8, 2026 .
^
Fandos, Nicholas (September 1, 2025). "Nadler, Pillar of Democratic Party's Old Guard, Will Retire Next Year" . The New York Times . Retrieved September 1, 2025 .
^
Campbell, Jon (September 2, 2025). " 'An extremely crowded race': NYC Democrats angle for Rep. Jerry Nadler's soon-open seat" . The City . Retrieved September 2, 2025 .
^ a b c d e
Sterne, Peter (September 22, 2025). "Upper West Side elected officials back Micah Lasher's congressional run" . City & State . Retrieved September 22, 2025 .
^ a b c d e
Reisman, Nick; Coltin, Jeff; Ngo, Emily (November 10, 2025). "Striving to be the bigger boogeyman" . Politico . Retrieved November 11, 2025 .
^
Coltin, Jeff (February 10, 2026). "Former Rep. Carolyn Maloney endorses Alex Bores in East Side versus West Side House race" . City & State New York . Retrieved February 16, 2026 .
^
Fernandez, Madison (May 11, 2026). "Ryan backs Bores to replace Rep. Nadler, citing the battle over AI's future" . Politico . Retrieved May 13, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f
Beeferman, Jason (January 16, 2026). "NYC public school hosts Mamdani's political pick, flouting policy" . Politico . Retrieved January 16, 2026 .
^ a b c d
McDonough, Annie (June 15, 2026). "Meet the voters of New York's 12th Congressional District" . City & State . Retrieved June 15, 2026 .
^
"2026 Endorsements: New York" . Communication Workers of America . 2026. Retrieved May 3, 2026 .
^ a b
Kayatt, Arlene (May 12, 2026). "Early Voting Starts June 13 in Tense CD 12 Congressional Race" . Chelsea News . Retrieved May 20, 2026 .
^
"NYC CAP Announces Fourth Round of 2026 Endorsements" . UAW Region 9A . May 12, 2026. Retrieved May 20, 2026 .
^
Donaldson, Sahalie (May 8, 2026). "UFT backs Alex Bores in NY-12" . City & State . Retrieved May 13, 2026 .
^
"Alex Bores" . 3.14 Action. Retrieved November 27, 2025 .
^
"Humane World Action Fund endorses Alex Bores for NY-12 congressional race" . Humane World Action Fund . May 27, 2026. Retrieved May 31, 2026 .
^
Fernandez, Madison; Sommerfeldt, Chris; Beeferman, Jason; Reisman, Nick (May 7, 2026). "Mamdani ally's awkward AI connection" . Politico . Retrieved May 8, 2026 .
^
"NOW PAC Endorses Laura L. Dunn for U.S. Congress in NY-12" . April 6, 2026. Retrieved May 20, 2026 .
^
Lebowitz, Megan (February 9, 2026). "Rep. Jerry Nadler endorses former aide Micah Lasher to be his successor" . NBC News . Retrieved February 9, 2026 .
^
Levingston, Miranda (April 13, 2026). "Governor Hochul Endorses A Candidate In NY-12's Race" . Patch . Retrieved April 13, 2026 .
^
Paterson, David (April 30, 2026). "OP-ED: I'm supporting Micah Lasher for Congress. Here's why" . New York Amsterdam News . Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^
Sterne, Peter (December 15, 2025). "Glick endorses Lasher for NY-12" . City & State . Retrieved December 15, 2025 .
^
Reisman, Nick; Coltin, Jeff; Ngo, Emily (September 15, 2025). "Mamdani's center lane" . Politico . Retrieved September 15, 2025 .
^
"Bloomberg endorses former aide in crowded New York House race" . The Hill . Retrieved March 13, 2026 .
^
Chadha, Janaki; Beeferman, Jason; Sommerfeldt, Chris; Reisman, Nick; Ngo, Emily (January 21, 2026). "Mamdani's housing trade-offs" . Retrieved January 22, 2026 .
^ a b
Sterne, Peter (November 13, 2025). "Mark Levine endorses Assembly Member Micah Lasher in NY-12" . City & State . Retrieved November 13, 2025 .
^
"NY-12 Congress primary: New Manhattan Council Member Carl Wilson backs Micah Lasher in crowded contest | amNewYork" .
^
"NY-12 Congress primary: New Manhattan Council Member Carl Wilson backs Micah Lasher in crowded contest" . amNewYork . May 22, 2026. Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
^
"He's JFK's only grandson. But Jack wants to make a name for himself" . Denver: KUSA . March 2, 2026. Retrieved March 3, 2026 . His mother Caroline Kennedy, daughter of Jackie Kennedy and JFK, officially endorsed her son's bid to join the US House of Representatives in a rare TV interview.
^
Salam, Erum (February 10, 2026). "Nancy Pelosi endorses JFK grandson Jack Schlossberg for Congress" . MS NOW . Retrieved February 10, 2026 .
^
Floyd, Jami (February 23, 2026). "Why I'm Endorsing Jack Schlossberg" . Retrieved June 13, 2026 .
^
Low, Evan (September 9, 2025). "Congress needs Erik Bottcher" . The Advocate . Retrieved September 22, 2025 .
^ a b c d
"Equality PAC Endorses Three LGBTQ Candidates for 2026 Midterms" . December 11, 2025. Retrieved December 12, 2025 .
^
"LGBTQ+ Victory Fund Endorses Erik Bottcher, Ryan Hampton, Felipe Sousa-Lazaballet & Jake Lepper for 2026 Races" . November 26, 2025. Retrieved December 11, 2025 .
^ a b c
Dovere, Edward-Isaac (July 30, 2025). "New York Rep. Jerry Nadler draws a 26-year-old Democratic primary challenger" . CNN . Retrieved July 30, 2025 .
^
Beeferman, Jason (September 3, 2025). "The mayor's race is suddenly alive" . Politico . Retrieved September 3, 2025 .
^
Kulinski, Kyle (January 22, 2026). CNN's Resident Prick Gets The Doüchey Smirk Wiped Off His Face (video). The Kyle Kulinski Show. Retrieved January 22, 2026 – via YouTube .
^ a b
Fernandez, Madison (May 28, 2026). "Mamdani endorses Espaillat challenger" . Politico . Retrieved May 30, 2026 .
^ a b
"2026 Election United States House - New York 12th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
"NY-12 Toplines" (PDF) . Tavern Research. Retrieved May 18, 2026 .
^
"Conway Remains Competitive in U.S. House Democratic Primary" . GQR. May 17, 2026. Retrieved May 18, 2026 – via Politico .
^
Carlson, Adam [@admcrlsn] (May 20, 2026). "Newly released poll from Alex Bores' campaign in NY-12 (Hart Research, 5/6 - 5/9, n=400 LV), along with movement from their 3/9 - 3/13 poll: 🟣 21% Bores (+2), 🟡 20% Lasher (+6), 🟢 17% Schlossberg (-5), 🟠 10% Conway (0), 🟤 3% Schwalbe (-1), ⚪️ 1% Other (-1), ⚫️ 28% Undecided (0)" (Tweet ). Retrieved May 20, 2026 – via X (formerly Twitter) .
^
"Polling Results – NY 12th Congressional District and Penn Station" . Honan Strategy Group. April 24, 2026. Retrieved May 18, 2026 .
^
Beeferman, Jason; Sommerfeldt, Chris; Reisman, Nick; Fernandez, Madison (April 17, 2026). "Jack Schlossberg in the lead" . Politico . Retrieved April 18, 2026 .
^
"Conway Competitive in U.S. House Democratic Primary – NY-12 March Public Release Memo" (PDF) . GQR. March 4, 2026. Retrieved March 6, 2026 – via DocumentCloud .
^
"New York CD 12 Survey Results" (PDF) . Public Policy Polling . March 10, 2026. Retrieved March 10, 2026 .
^ a b
@PollTracker2024 (March 10, 2026). "Schoen Cooperman Research poll" (Tweet ). Retrieved March 10, 2026 – via X (formerly Twitter) .
^
Cuza, Bobby (June 10, 2026). "A fiery five-way debate for a Manhattan congressional seat" . NY1 . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Etkin (March 19, 2026). "Meet Caroline Shinkle, a Republican Candidate Running to Represent the UWS in Congress" . West Side Rag . Retrieved May 21, 2026 .
^
Kayatt, Arlene. "A Leading GOP Candidate Emerges in Race for Nadler Seat" . www.ourtownny.com . Retrieved May 21, 2026 .
^
"NYGOP Chair ed Cox Endorses Caroline Shinkle in NY-12" . April 6, 2026.
^
"February Wine Wednesday" .
^
"Meet Karen Ortiz, an Independent Candidate Running to Represent the UWS in Congress" . West Side Rag . Retrieved March 16, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1930168" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 7, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1927228" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved December 2, 2025 .
^
Fahy, Claire (June 24, 2026). "Who Is Darializa Avila Chevalier?" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^
Pretsky, Holly (June 15, 2026). "Like AOC, but to the left" . City & State NY . Retrieved June 19, 2026 .
^
"Adriano Espaillat, Darializa Avila Chevalier to face off in contentious New York-13 primary" . ABC7 New York . June 18, 2026. Retrieved June 19, 2026 .
^
"Darializa Avila Chevalier on Running for Congress in Zohran's NYC" . Jacobin . June 18, 2026. Retrieved June 19, 2026 .
^ a b c
King, Maya (November 20, 2025). "Justice Democrats Re-Emerge in New York to Try to Unseat Espaillat" . New York Times . Retrieved February 7, 2026 . That candidate, Darializa Avila Chevalier, a Harlem-based organizer, received the group's first endorsement in New York City for the 2026 midterms, and its fifth in a new crop of progressive challengers to establishment moderates in Congress across the nation.
^
Silva, Manuela (June 19, 2026). "This New York Race Is a Microcosm of Democrats' Identity Fight" . Notus . Archived from the original on June 21, 2026. Retrieved May 12, 2026 . Both candidates in the congressional race are generally thought of as progressives, but the race has become a contest between young and old, upstart versus establishment, ideas versus experience. In other words, it's a microcosm of the broader fight for the Democratic Party's identity and sparking a debate about what the Democratic brand should look like in its most progressive districts.
^
Robillard, Kevin (November 20, 2025). "Mamdani's Win Is Inspiring A Wave Of Left-Wing Challengers In NYC" . HuffPost . Widely considered the most influential Latino politician in the city, Espaillat is a mainstream Democrat[.] [....] Avila Chevalier's critique of Espaillat echoes the cases made by other young progressive primary challengers around the country: the incumbent is too old, out of touch with the district, too close to Israel and to well-funded interest groups.
^
Bergin, Brigid (June 4, 2026). "From Insurgent to Establishment: Rep. Espaillat Reckons With Uptown's Shift to the Left" . Gothamist . Archived from the original on June 4, 2026. Retrieved May 12, 2026 .
^ a b c
"An Anti-AIPAC Insurgent Tests Her Message in a Working-Class Stronghold" . Jewish Currents . Retrieved June 20, 2026 .
^ a b c
Grim, Ryan. "Pro-Israel Donors Power Last-Minute Surge of Espaillat Spending" . www.dropsitenews.com . Retrieved June 20, 2026 .
^ a b c
King, Maya; Fandos, Nicholas (June 2, 2026). "Group Pledges $2 Million to Fight AIPAC in House Races" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved June 20, 2026 .
^
Pretsky, Holly (June 16, 2026). "Super PACs have spent millions boosting Adriano Espaillat and Darializa Avila Chevalier. Both candidates think that's super hypocritical!" . City & State NY . Retrieved June 20, 2026 .
^
Solender, Andrew (June 11, 2026). "Hispanic Caucus spending "heavily" to save its chair from Mamdani-backed challenger" . Axios . Retrieved June 12, 2026 .
^
"Congressional Black Caucus endorses former rival Rep. Adriano Espaillat over Black primary challenger" . POLITICO . January 15, 2026. Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^ a b c d e
Beeferman, Jason; Fernandez, Madison; Reisman, Nick; Sommerfeldt, Chris (May 14, 2026). "Progressives for Espaillat" . Politico . Retrieved May 25, 2026 .
^ a b c d
Sterne, Peter (June 20, 2026). "AIPAC is helping boost Espaillat against DSA challenge" . City & State New York . Archived from the original on June 21, 2026. Retrieved May 12, 2026 .
^ a b
Donaldson, Sahalie (April 27, 2026). "DSA is targeting Rep. Adriano Espaillat in NY-13" . City & State . Retrieved June 13, 2026 .
^
"Endorsed Candidates" . Justice Democrats. Retrieved February 7, 2026 .
^
"Darializa Avila Chevalier Thinks She Can Overthrow the 'Dean of Dominican Elected Officials' " . Hell Gate . May 29, 2026. Retrieved June 5, 2026 .
^
Long, Ariama C. (December 11, 2025). "Another political upstart? Darializa Avila Chevalier challenges U.S. Rep. Adriano Espaillat" . Amsterdam News . Retrieved February 7, 2026 .
^ a b c d
Day, Meagan (January 21, 2026). "In Harlem, a Democratic Socialist Takes On the Dem Machine" . Jacobin (magazine) . Retrieved February 7, 2026 .
^
Aponte, Claudia Irizarry; Samuel, Marina (November 24, 2025). "Union Members Take On Congressional Incumbents in Manhattan and The Bronx" . The City (website) . Retrieved February 7, 2026 .
^ "Mamdani Vowed to Back Espaillat. Now He’s Endorsing a D.S.A. Challenger." The New York Times,
^
"Mamdani's Highest Stakes Endorsement Yet" . New York Magazine . Retrieved May 12, 2026 .
^
Solender, Andrew (May 29, 2026). "House's top Hispanic Dem is in a fight for his political life" . Axios . Retrieved June 13, 2026 .
^
Bergin, Brigid (May 29, 2026). "Mayor Mamdani flexes political power with endorsement of Espaillat challenger" . Gothamist . Retrieved June 5, 2026 .
^
Oreskes, Benjamin (June 4, 2026). "We Interrupt This Knicks Victory for a Political Ad Starring Mamdani" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved June 5, 2026 .
^
Wright, David (June 17, 2026). "A Mamdani-backed progressive's challenge to a veteran Democrat highlights party fractures | CNN Politics" . CNN . Retrieved June 19, 2026 .
^
Oreskes, Benjamin (June 4, 2026). "We Interrupt This Knicks Victory for a Political Ad Starring Mamdani" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^
Fandos, Nicholas (June 24, 2026). "Mamdani Emerges as Kingmaker, Pushing His Slate to a Primary Sweep" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^
Goldberg, Emma (June 24, 2026). "Three Parties, Two Boroughs, One Message: Mamdani's Gamble Pays Off" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^
King, Maya; Fandos, Nicholas (June 2, 2026). "Group Pledges $2 Million to Fight AIPAC in House Races" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved June 5, 2026 .
^
Sterne, Peter (June 22, 2026). "Espaillat senior adviser made racist and Islamophobic comments about congressional challenger" . City & State New York . Retrieved May 12, 2026 .
^
"How fights over ICE funding are playing out on the Hill and in midterm races : The NPR Politics Podcast" . NPR . Archived from the original on February 8, 2026. Retrieved June 20, 2026 .
^
"Will calls to 'abolish ICE' sway voters in 2026? The strategy has Democrats split" . NPR . Archived from the original on February 5, 2026. Retrieved June 20, 2026 .
^
"Adriano Espaillat es juramentado como congresista de EEUU - CDN" . Archived from the original on January 4, 2017. Retrieved January 3, 2017 .
^ a b
Neel, Macollvie J. (June 24, 2026). "Anti-Haitian bias in Dominican political circles laid bare in NY congressional race" . The Haitian Times . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^ a b
Fahy, Claire (June 24, 2026). "Who Is Darializa Avila Chevalier?" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^ a b c
Sterne, Peter (June 22, 2026). "Espaillat senior adviser made racist and Islamophobic comments about congressional challenger" . City & State NY . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^
Mays, Jeffery C. (June 23, 2026). "Ethnicity Becomes Instrument of Division in Espaillat's Re-election Bid" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^
Grim, Ryan; Andreone, Julian (June 16, 2026). "Pro-Israel Donors Power Last-Minute Surge of Espaillat Spending" . Drop Site News . Archived from the original on June 16, 2026. Retrieved May 12, 2026 .
^
Tress, Luke (June 5, 2026). "Mamdani-backed Congress candidate defends joining Oct. 8 rally celebrating Hamas atrocities" . The Times of Israel . ISSN 0040-7909 . Retrieved June 8, 2026 .
^
Coltin, Jeff (June 4, 2026). "Avila Chevalier attended the Oct. 8 pro-Palestinian rally Lander condemned" . City & State . Retrieved June 5, 2026 .
^
Coltin, Jeff (June 4, 2026). "Avila Chevalier attended the Oct. 8 pro-Palestinian rally Lander condemned" . City & State NY . Retrieved June 18, 2026 .
^ "Adriano Espaillat" , Observer.
^
Sterne, Peter (June 20, 2026). "Espaillat, Avila Chevalier spar over gentrification in Harlem church" . City & State New York . Archived from the original on June 21, 2026. Retrieved May 12, 2026 .
^
Breaking Points (May 22, 2026). Fran Lebowitz Tells NYC Billionaires JUST LEAVE . Retrieved June 11, 2026 – via YouTube.
^
Goldenberg, Sally; King, Maya (June 14, 2026). "Tweet, Delete, Repeat: Social Media Posts Overshadow N.Y. House Race" . The New York Times . Retrieved June 21, 2026 .
^ a b
City, Spectrum News Staff New York. "Why Darializa Avila Chevalier wants to challenge Rep. Espaillat" . ny1.com . Retrieved June 2, 2026 .
^ a b
Kaczynski, Andrew; Steck, Em (June 1, 2026). "Mamdani-backed congressional candidate deleted posts calling to seize private property, abolish police, borders, prisons" . CNN . Retrieved June 2, 2026 .
^
"Democratic Rep. Adriano Espaillat loses primary to Mamdani-backed Darializa Avila Chevalier" . NBC News . June 24, 2026. Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^ a b c
King, Maya (November 20, 2025). "Justice Democrats Re-Emerge in New York to Try to Unseat Espaillat" . The New York Times . Retrieved November 20, 2025 .
^
Hartley, Lauren (November 11, 2025). "Who's Running in the 2026 Congressional Primaries in NYC" . The City . Retrieved December 12, 2025 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1912788" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1934592" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved February 17, 2026 .
^
"Democratic Primary Forum: Adriano Espaillat and Darializa Avila Chevalier | WNYC" . WNYC | New York Public Radio, Podcasts, Live Streaming Radio, News . Retrieved June 5, 2026 .
^
"NY-13 Congress primary: Espaillat and Avila Chevalier spar over ICE, campaign funding in radio debate | amNewYork" . www.amny.com . June 4, 2026. Retrieved June 5, 2026 .
^
"NY-13 candidates go head-to-head in fiery PIX11 forum" .
^ a b
Pretsky, Holly (June 16, 2026). "Super PACs have spent millions boosting Adriano Espaillat and Darializa Avila Chevalier. Both candidates think that's super hypocritical!" . City & State NY . Retrieved June 17, 2026 .
^
"Full Debate: Espaillat, Avila Chevalier face off in NY-13 debate" . ny1.com . Retrieved June 17, 2026 .
^
Telemundo 47 • •, Por (June 16, 2026). "Telemundo 47 transmitirá hoy el debate de las primarias demócratas para el Congreso" . Telemundo New York (47) (in Spanish). Retrieved June 18, 2026 . {{cite web }}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link )
^
"La batalla por el corazón latino de NYC: aspirantes al curul del Distrito 13 del Congreso chocan en un tenso debate en español" . El Diario NY (in Spanish). June 18, 2026. Retrieved June 19, 2026 .
^
"Democratic Primary Forum: Adriano Espaillat and Darializa Avila Chevalier" . WNYC . June 4, 2026. Retrieved June 5, 2026 .
^
Brown, Sadie (June 4, 2026). "NY-13 Congress primary: Espaillat and Avila Chevalier spar over ICE, campaign funding in radio debate" . amNewYork . Retrieved June 5, 2026 .
^
"NY-13 candidates go head-to-head in fiery PIX11 forum" . PIX11 . June 12, 2026. Retrieved June 26, 2026 .
^
Pretsky, Holly (June 16, 2026). "Super PACs have spent millions boosting Adriano Espaillat and Darializa Avila Chevalier. Both candidates think that's super hypocritical!" . City & State New York . Retrieved June 17, 2026 .
^
"Full Debate: Adriano Espaillat, Darializa Avila Chevalier face off in NY-13 debate" . NY1 . June 16, 2026. Retrieved June 17, 2026 .
^
"Telemundo 47 transmitirá este miércoles el debate de las primarias demócratas para el Congreso" . Telemundo 47 (in Spanish). June 16, 2026. Retrieved June 18, 2026 .
^
"La batalla por el corazón latino de NYC: aspirantes al curul del Distrito 13 del Congreso chocan en un tenso debate en español" . El Diario NY (in Spanish). June 18, 2026. Retrieved June 19, 2026 .
^ a b c
Bergin, Brigid (May 29, 2026). "Mayor Mamdani flexes political power with endorsement of Espaillat challenger" . Gothamist . Retrieved May 31, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h
Beeferman, Jason; McCarthy, Caroline (December 15, 2025). "Inside the New York Young Republican Club gala" . Politico . Retrieved December 15, 2025 .
^ a b
Lewis, Rebecca C. (June 14, 2026). "Adriano Espaillat, Jordan Wright, join with Black leaders in show of unity to fend off DSA" . City & State . Retrieved June 19, 2026 .
^ a b
Reisman, Nick; Sommerfeldt, Chris; Beeferman, Jason (March 17, 2026). "The budget dance begins" . Politico . Retrieved March 18, 2026 .
^
Beeferman, Jason (January 15, 2026). "Congressional Black Caucus endorses former rival Rep. Adriano Espaillat over Black primary challenger" . Politico . Retrieved January 15, 2026 .
^
"Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC and Congressional Hispanic Caucus BOLD PAC Stand Together Behind Rep. Adriano Espaillat" . BOLD Democrats . Retrieved June 21, 2026 .
^
Sommerfeldt, Chris; Reisman, Nick; Fernandez, Madison; Beeferman, Jason (April 24, 2026). "Mamdani rent board pick's fraught landlord record" . Politico . Retrieved April 24, 2026 .
^ a b
Kane, Alex (June 11, 2026). "An Anti-AIPAC Insurgent Tests Her Message in a Working-Class Stronghold" . JewishCurrents . Retrieved June 15, 2026 .
^
"DSA Canvasser: Here's Why I Believe Darializa Can Beat Espaillat in NY-13 Congressional Race" . The Indypendent . Retrieved June 4, 2026 .
^
"Mamdani endorses primary challenger over Democratic incumbent in House race" . MS Now . May 28, 2026. Retrieved May 28, 2026 .
^ a b
Strauss, Joseph (May 1, 2026). "These progressives lost their races. Now they're backing a new pro-Palestinian contender for Congress in NY" . Jewish Telegraphic Agency . Retrieved May 27, 2026 .
^
" 'I'm not a kingmaker': Hasan Piker grapples with limits of his influence" . Politico . Retrieved June 4, 2026 .
^ a b
"NYC CAP Announces Third Round of 2026 Endorsements" . UAW Region 9A. April 17, 2026. Retrieved April 19, 2026 .
^
"We are proud to support these congressional candidates who are fighting for change in the Empire State" . Instagram . College Democrats of America. Retrieved June 4, 2026 .
^
"New York" . CAIR Action. Retrieved March 6, 2026 .
^
"Darializa Avila Chevalier" . Indivisible . Retrieved May 22, 2026 .
^
@JvpAction (December 9, 2025). "Meet JVP Action's latest endorsed candidate for Congress: Darializa Avila Chevalier" (Tweet ) – via X (formerly Twitter) .
^
"Darializa Avila Chevalier for Congress in NY-13" . Our Revolution. May 7, 2026. Retrieved May 9, 2026 .
^
"Candidates" . Peace, Accountability, and Leadership PAC. Retrieved March 6, 2026 .
^
"We are proud to endorse Darializa Avila Chevalier in New York's 13th Congressional District!
@DarializaforNY has been organizing alongside immigrant communities and standing up for justice" . Instagram . Sunrise Movement. Retrieved June 4, 2026 .
^
"June 23 Primary Endorsements" . Third Act . Retrieved June 7, 2026 .
^
"USCPR Action endorses nine bold progressives in first slate" . uscpraction.org . May 14, 2026. Retrieved May 27, 2026 .
^
Sommerfeldt, Chris (May 29, 2026). "Brisport walks off the $$$ plank" . Politico . Retrieved May 30, 2026 .
^
"2026 Election United States House - New York 13th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Campanile, Carl (June 15, 2026). "Mamdani-backed DSA House candidate trails longtime NY Rep. Espaillat by just 8 points: poll" . New York Post . Retrieved June 15, 2026 .
^
Weigel, David (June 11, 2026). "Mamdani-backed democratic socialist leads incumbent Espaillat in key House race" . Semafor . Retrieved June 12, 2026 .
^
Aponte, Claudia Irizarry (April 20, 2026). "DSA-Backed Challenger Says She's Gaining on Rep. Adriano Espaillat" . The City - NYC News . Retrieved April 20, 2026 .
^
Fallert, Nicole. "New York election results: Here's how Mamdani-backed candidates fared" . USA TODAY . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^
"The Case For NYC-DSA Endorsing AOC in 2026" . Groundwork . Retrieved May 21, 2026 .
^
"Citizen Action of New York Endorses Proven Champions for Working Families in 2026 Re-Election Races" . Citizen Action of New York . Retrieved May 21, 2026 .
^
Rosenblum, Tara; Danuff, Lee (March 9, 2026). "VOTE 2026: Wall Street investor Marty Dolan launching another primary challenge against Rep. Ocasio-Cortez" . News 12 Westchester . Retrieved March 10, 2026 .
^
Swanson, Emily (October 8, 2024). "Marty Dolan, who unsuccessfully challenged U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, announces candidacy for NYC public advocate" . Bronx Times . Retrieved April 30, 2026 .
^
Swanson, Emily (May 14, 2026). "Hunts Point native Felipe Garcia challenging AOC in June primary" . Bronx Times . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^ a b
"NFL Star Bryant McKinnie and Rahzel, Co-Founder of The Roots, Join TBOC Super PAC to Back Harvard MBA and Wall Street Banker Marty Dolan to Defeat AOC" (Press release) . Cision . May 7, 2026. Retrieved May 7, 2026 .
^
"Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez" . Justice Democrats. Retrieved March 26, 2026 .
^
"AOC for re-election to Congress (NY-14)" . Our Revolution . May 12, 2026. Retrieved May 15, 2026 .
^ a b
"Meet Our 2026 Candidates" . Peace Action. Retrieved November 14, 2025 .
^
Sterne, Peter (April 9, 2026). "DSA unsurprisingly votes to endorse AOC for reelection" . City and State . Retrieved April 9, 2026 .
^ a b
"2026 Election United States House - New York 14th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Campanile, Carl (June 29, 2025). "Diamant Hysenaj, GOP businessman and immigrant from Kosovo, to challenge AOC" . New York Post . Retrieved July 19, 2025 .
^
"Gjakova's Diamant Hysenaj enters race for US Congress" . Retrieved December 18, 2025 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1897422" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved November 1, 2025 .
^
"Forte, Tina - Candidate overview" . Federal Election Commission . January 2023. Retrieved July 19, 2025 .
^
"Congressional Candidate Ariel Rivera-Diaz Commemorates OXI Day" . Greek News . October 28, 2025. Retrieved October 30, 2025 .
^
Lewis, Rebecca C. (November 12, 2025). "Public defender and DSA organizer challenges Ritchie Torres" . City & State . Retrieved November 12, 2025 .
^
Goldenberg, Sally (November 5, 2025). "Democratic Rep. Ritchie Torres faces primary challenge over his fierce Israel support" . Politico . Retrieved November 5, 2025 .
^
"Jose Vega Challenges Rep. Ritchie Torres in New York's 15th Congressional District" . Norwood News . December 11, 2025. Retrieved December 13, 2025 .
^
Nir, David (March 26, 2026). "Morning Digest: Five fundraising questions we have as we await first-quarter numbers" . The Downballot . Retrieved March 26, 2026 .
^
Frey, Kevin (December 13, 2024). " 'I wish I didn't pull that damn fire alarm': Rep. Bowman reflects on his time in Congress, primary loss" . NY1 . Retrieved December 16, 2024 . Asked if he is at all eying the nearby U.S. House district currently held by Bronx Congressman Ritchie Torres...Bowman said, 'No, not at all.'
^
Reisman, Nick; Sommerfeldt, Chris; Ngo, Emily; Beeferman, Jason (February 3, 2026). "Suozzi, Gillen and Riley have a midterm $tash" . Politico . Retrieved February 3, 2026 .
^
Anuta, Joe (November 17, 2025). "The revolution will not be organized" . Politico . Retrieved November 17, 2025 .
^
"UNITE HERE Local 100 union endorses Michael Blake over Ritchie Torres for NY-15" . AMNY . April 21, 2026. Retrieved April 22, 2026 .
^
"Citizen Action of New York Endorses Another Slate of Champions for Working Families in 2026 Races Across the State" . Citizen Action of New York . Retrieved April 22, 2026 .
^ https://www.instagram.com/p/DY3JlRilWoX/
^
"Elections and Endorsements" . People For the American Way .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o
"Rep. Ritchie Torres endorsed by over a dozen Bronx elected officials" . New York Daily News . February 17, 2026. Retrieved February 17, 2026 .
^ a b
"Exclusive: House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries endorses Rep. Ritchie Torres for re-election" . Bronx Times . March 16, 2026. Retrieved March 17, 2026 .
^ a b c d
"Rep. Ritchie Torres secures Congressional Black Caucus PAC endorsement – Bronx Times" . Bronx Times . February 12, 2026. Retrieved February 13, 2026 .
^ a b
"Nancy Pelosi Endorses Ritchie Torres for Reelection to Congress" . Norwood News . March 23, 2026. Retrieved March 24, 2026 .
^
"2026 Endorsed LGBTQ Candidates" . Equality PAC. Retrieved November 6, 2025 .
^ a b
"2026 Election United States House - New York 15th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Feld, Peter (May 22, 2026). "Democratic Primary poll in New York's 15th Congressional District" . A Fight Worth Having . Retrieved May 26, 2026 .
^
Magner, Mike; et al. (July 31, 2025). "Where are they now? Happily, often anyplace but here" . Roll Call . Retrieved July 31, 2025 .
^
"2026 Election United States House - New York 16th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1955260" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 20, 2026 .
^
Kondik, Kyle (January 16, 2025). "The 2024 Crossover House Seats: Overall Number Remains Low with Few Harris-District Republicans" . Retrieved January 18, 2025 .
^
Fandos, Nicholas; Haberman, Maggie (July 23, 2025). "Lawler Will Seek Re-election to House, Forgoing Run for N.Y. Governor" . The New York Times . Retrieved July 23, 2025 .
^
Coltin, Jeff; Reisman, Nick; Ngo, Emily (July 8, 2025). "Cuomo FOIL'd" . Politico . Retrieved July 8, 2025 .
^
McKenna, Chris. "Trump sends signal on NY governor race by backing Lawler for House re-election instead" . The Journal News . Retrieved June 13, 2025 .
^
"RJC endorses 16 congressional incumbents, including 4 Jews" . San Diego Jewish World . March 12, 2026. Retrieved March 13, 2026 .
^ a b
"2026 Election United States House - New York 17th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Oreskes, Benjamin (March 24, 2025). "Cait Conley, a Democrat, Enters House Race in Mike Lawler's District" . The New York Times . Retrieved March 24, 2025 .
^
Rodriguez, Justin (August 9, 2025). "NRCC goes on attack after eighth Democrat enters Lawler race" . Mid Hudson News . Retrieved August 16, 2025 .
^
Fandos, Nicholas (February 18, 2025). "As a G.O.P. Congressman Takes Aim at Hochul, a Democrat Eyes His Seat" . The New York Times . Retrieved February 18, 2025 .
^
McKenna, Chris (May 12, 2025). "Sixth Democrat joins 2026 race for Mike Lawler's seat. Who is Effie Phillips-Staley?" . The Journal News . Retrieved May 13, 2025 – via Yahoo News .
^
McKenna, Chris (April 9, 2025). "Former TV reporter Mike Sacks joins field of Democrats running for Rep. Mike Lawler's seat" . The Journal News . Retrieved April 9, 2025 – via Yahoo News .
^
Facciola, Timmy (April 9, 2026). "Exclusive: Peter Chatzky Suspends Democratic Primary Campaign in NY-17" . Retrieved April 9, 2026 – via Substack .
^ a b
Anuta, Joe (November 12, 2025). "Mamdani makes moves on NYPD appointment" . Politico . Retrieved November 13, 2025 .
^
Sommerfeldt, Chris (January 29, 2026). "NYC Council gets last laugh over Eric Adams" . Politico . Retrieved January 29, 2026 .
^
"Former DCCC chair Sean Patrick Maloney passes on comeback bid" . Axios . January 6, 2026. Retrieved January 6, 2026 .
^
Nir, David; Singer, Jeff (June 6, 2025). "Morning Digest: Why Democrats worry they might lose Texas' second-biggest city" . The Downballot . Retrieved June 6, 2025 .
^
"Zuckerman not running for congress" . Mid-Hudson News . June 10, 2025. Retrieved June 11, 2025 .
^
"Four Female Veterans Running for Congress Launch: "The Hell Cats" " . November 12, 2025. Retrieved November 13, 2025 .
^ a b
"Congressman Jason Crow Endorses Cait Conley for Congress in New York's 17th Congressional District" . River Journal Online . February 21, 2026. Retrieved February 21, 2026 .
^
McKenna, Chris (January 16, 2026). "Rep. Pat Ryan backs Cait Conley in packed Dem primary for Lawler seat" . Lohud . Retrieved January 16, 2026 .
^
Gross, Eric (June 6, 2026). "Sean Patrick Maloney endorses Cait Conley for Congress" . Mid Hudson News . Retrieved June 9, 2026 .
^
Reisman, Emily; Coltin; Ngo (October 21, 2025). "The delicate Trump dance" . Politico . Retrieved October 21, 2025 .
^
Murphy, Dan (June 4, 2026). "Conley Leads in New NY-17 Poll by 7" . Yonkers Times . Retrieved June 8, 2026 .
^
Schneider, Elena (February 19, 2026). "Pro-Israel group wades into Democratic House primaries" . Politico . Retrieved February 19, 2026 .
^
"End Citizens United Endorses Cait Conley for New York's 17th Congressional District" . endcitizensunited.org . May 5, 2026. Retrieved May 11, 2026 .
^
"Cait Conley" .
^
"Endorsed Candidates" . LPAC. Retrieved March 30, 2025 .
^
Altimari, Daniela; McIntire, Mary Ellen (March 26, 2026). "At the Races: Belaboring the point" . Roll Call . Retrieved April 16, 2026 .
^
Kashinsky, Lisa; Mccarthy, Mia; Razor, Calen (June 17, 2025). "Thune's biggest megabill fires" . Politico . Archived from the original on June 18, 2025. Retrieved November 25, 2025 .
^ a b c
Seaman, Barrett (April 20, 2026). "Democrats Split On Party Endorsement, Leaving CD-17 Challenger Choice Up To Voters" . The Hudson Independent . Retrieved June 8, 2026 .
^
Coltin, Jeff; Reisman, Nick; Ngo, Emily (February 26, 2025). "From 'Defund' to 'Now Hiring' " . Politico . Retrieved February 26, 2025 .
^
Trufelman, Lloyd (October 14, 2025). "Beth Davidson Announces 20 New Clarkstown Endorsements for NY-17 Democratic Congressional Campaign" . Patch . Retrieved June 8, 2026 .
^
Trufelman, Lloyd (April 17, 2026). "Beth Davidson Announces New Endorsements from Key Westchester Democratic Committees and Officials" . Patch . Retrieved June 8, 2026 .
^
McKenna, Chris. "Rockland Democratic leaders back Beth Davidson in crowded primary for Mike Lawler seat" . The Journal News . Retrieved January 16, 2026 .
^
Ngo, Emily; Reisman, Nick (January 5, 2026). "Mamdani's early trials by fire" . Politico . Retrieved January 5, 2026 .
^ a b
Reisman, Nick; Sommerfeldt, Chris; Beeferman, Jason; Fernandez, Madison (May 18, 2026). "One big labor party" . Politico . Retrieved June 19, 2026 .
^
Rod, Marc (March 30, 2026). "Lagging in polling and fundraising, Lawler challenger hardens anti-Israel stance" . Jewish Insider . Retrieved May 24, 2026 .
^
Altimari, Daniela (October 15, 2025). "Latino Victory Fund backs 4 new House Democratic candidates" . Roll Call . Retrieved October 15, 2025 .
^
"Effie Phillips-Staley for Congress in NY-17" . Our Revolution . May 14, 2026. Retrieved May 15, 2026 .
^
Coltin, Jeff [@JCColtin] (June 22, 2026). "Cait Conley: 33%, Beth Davidson: 19%, Effie Phillips-Staley: 14%, Undecided: 29%, Per PPP poll in NY-17 from Conley-endorsing Majority Democrats, @KaitlynnLisa reports" (Tweet ). Retrieved June 22, 2026 – via X (formerly Twitter) .
^
Sommerfeldt, Chris; Fernandez, Madison; Reisman, Nick; Beeferman, Jason (June 17, 2026). "The crypto-powered content farm boosting Bores" . Politico . Retrieved June 18, 2026 . A poll of 574 likely Democratic primary voters conducted by Tavern Research this week found Conley leading Davidson 34 percent to 23 percent, with 28 percent of voters still undecided. The poll had a margin of error of 5 percentage points.
^
"New Polling in NY-17" (PDF) . Global Strategy Group . May 26, 2026. Retrieved May 28, 2026 .
^
Thakker, Prem (May 5, 2026). "New Poll Shows Pro-Palestine Democrat Rising in Mike Lawler's District" . Zeteo . Retrieved May 5, 2026 .
^
"Re: Findings from Recent Polling in NY-17" . Impact Research. March 16, 2026. Retrieved March 20, 2026 – via Politico .
^
Nir, David; Singer, Jeff (February 13, 2026). "Morning Digest: For the first time ever, New Mexico Republicans won't field a Senate candidate" . The Downballot. Retrieved February 13, 2026 .
^
"EMILYs List Endorses Cait Conley for Election in New York's 17th Congressional District" . emilyslist.org . June 24, 2026. Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^
"End Citizens United Endorses 19 No Corporate PAC Incumbents for 2026 Midterms" . End Citizens United. February 4, 2026. Retrieved February 10, 2026 .
^ a b
"2026 Election United States House - New York 18th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Kirby, Paul (April 11, 2026). "Election 2026:candidate will challenge Ryan for 18th Congressional District seat" . Daily Freeman . Retrieved April 12, 2026 .
^
Mishanec, Nora (April 13, 2026). "GOP congressional candidate withdraws after residency complaint" . Times Union . Retrieved May 30, 2026 .
^
Ngo, Emily (February 2, 2026). "Suozzi, Gillen and Riley have a midterm $tash" . Politico . Retrieved February 10, 2026 .
^ a b
"2026 Election United States House - New York 19th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Parsnow, Luke (October 6, 2025). "State Sen. Peter Oberacker running for Congress in NY-19" . Spectrum News 1 . Retrieved October 6, 2025 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1926467" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved November 21, 2025 .
^
Nir, David (October 7, 2025). "Morning Digest: A third congressman the GOP wanted to stay put is now running statewide" . The Downballot . Retrieved October 8, 2025 .
^ a b
Fandos, Nicholas (February 13, 2026). "Trump Official Will Leave Top Transit Post — for a State Assembly Seat" . The New York Times . Retrieved February 16, 2026 .
^ a b
"Trump, Johnson Endorse Oberacker for Congress" . All Otsego . February 5, 2026. Retrieved February 5, 2026 .
^
King, Jesse (October 7, 2025). "NYS Senator Oberacker launches bid to unseat Riley in NY-19" . WAMC. Retrieved February 5, 2026 .
^
Robayo, Patricio (October 10, 2025). "Oberacker makes campaign announcement in Sullivan" . Sullivan County Democrat. Retrieved February 5, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1851312" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved September 28, 2025 .
^
"Paul Tonko" .
^ a b
"2026 Election United States House - New York 20th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Ward, Courtney (January 20, 2026). "Ralph Ambrosio to challenge Tonko for Congressional seat" . WTEN . Retrieved January 20, 2026 .
^
Nezaj, Benny (November 24, 2025). "Sticker Mule CEO Anthony Constantino launches bid for NY-21 seat" . WNYT . Retrieved November 24, 2025 .
^
Clark, Dan (November 20, 2025). "Smullen becomes first Republican to launch run to succeed Stefanik in Congress" . Times Union . Retrieved November 21, 2025 .
^ a b c d e
Lisa, Kate (November 7, 2025). "Who could replace Elise Stefanik in NY-21?" . Spectrum News 1 Central New York . Retrieved November 9, 2025 .
^
Lawton, Jimmy (November 14, 2025). "Canton's Parker will not seek 21st Congressional seat" . North Country Now. Retrieved November 17, 2025 .
^
Jacobs, Ben (December 19, 2025). "Stefanik Quits Governor's Race, Will Not Run for Reelection" . Intelligencer . Retrieved December 19, 2025 .
^
Parsnow, Luke. "N.Y. Assembly GOP leader endorses Robert Smullen in NY-21 race" . Spectrum Local News . Retrieved February 9, 2026 .
^ a b
"Smullen gets New York GOP endorsement for NY-21 as Constantino pledges purge" . Watertown Daily Times . March 24, 2026. Retrieved April 22, 2026 – via Yahoo News.
^ a b
"State Republican Party chair backs Robert Smullen in NY-21 race" . Spectrum Local News . Retrieved April 22, 2026 .
^
"Smullen picks up two more endorsements in NY21" . Gazette News Group . January 25, 2026. Retrieved February 9, 2026 .
^
Parsnow, Luke. "State Conservative Party endorses Robert Smullen in NY-21 race" . Spectrum Local News . Retrieved February 11, 2026 .
^
McAdam, Todd R. (January 20, 2026). "Warren County Conservatives endorse Robert Smullen" . Gazette News Group . Retrieved February 9, 2026 .
^
Parsnow, Luke (April 21, 2026). "Trump endorses Anthony Constantino in NY-21 race, bucking GOP party elders' choice" . Retrieved April 21, 2026 .
^ a b c
"President Trump Endorses Constantino" . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^
"Trump bucks New York Republicans in race to replace Rep. Elise Stefanik" . Retrieved April 21, 2026 .
^
"Trump bucks New York Republicans in race to replace Rep. Elise Stefanik" . Retrieved April 21, 2026 .
^
1-on-1 with Elise Stefanik on NY governor's race, NYC & Mamdani, Trump & more . News 12 . November 24, 2025. Retrieved November 27, 2025 – via YouTube. I am not ... making an endorsement, I think the voters will make that decision in the primary
^ a b
"2026 Election United States House - New York 21st" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^ a b
McLaughlin, John; Larkin, Brian (April 17, 2026). "NY CD 21 – Republican Primary Survey Summary" . McLaughlin & Associates . Retrieved April 22, 2026 – via Politico .
^
Ngo, Emily (February 13, 2026). "Could Stefanik's successor be a sticker czar?" . Politico . Retrieved March 2, 2026 .
^
Moore, John (April 3, 2025). "Gendebien has $3M war chest to run for Congress next year" . WWNY-TV . Retrieved April 4, 2025 . Gendebien says he's still running in the regular election in 2026
^
Marbone, Aaron (December 3, 2025). "Lake Placid restaurant owner announces candidacy for NY-21" . Adirondack Daily Enterprise . Retrieved December 4, 2025 .
^
Cavanaugh, Sean (November 25, 2025). "Race for New York's 21st Congressional District heats up as candidates emerge" . Albany: WRGB . Retrieved November 25, 2025 . On the Democratic side, Blake Gendebien, Dylan Hewitt, and Maylon Haller have entered the race.
^
"Democrat Dylan Hewitt, citing rigged system, ends North Country House bid" . Times Union . March 27, 2026. Retrieved March 27, 2026 .
^
"New York Democrats are looking beyond the battleground districts" . Retrieved April 19, 2026 .
^
Berry, Cara. "A look at who is running for the NY-21 seat" . USA Today . Retrieved December 5, 2025 .
^
Coltin, Jeff; Beeferman, Jason; Reisman, Nick; Ngo, Emily (December 16, 2025). "Stefanik reckons with her right" . Politico . Retrieved December 19, 2025 .
^
Gault, Alex (February 18, 2026). "Dylan Hewitt gets Working Families party endorsement for NY-21 race" . Watertown Daily Times . Retrieved February 18, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1860753" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved November 1, 2025 .
^
"Christopher Schmidt running as Independent for NY-21" . WTEN . Albany. February 19, 2026. Archived from the original on February 26, 2026. Retrieved April 7, 2026 .
^
Beeferman, Jason (June 25, 2026). "A district that went +20 for Trump now in play for Democrats" . POLITICO . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^
"John Mannion" .
^ a b c
"2026 Election United States House - New York 22nd" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Yarrow, Grace (February 24, 2026). "Former top USDA official eyes New York congressional run" . Politico . Retrieved February 24, 2026 .
^
Benninger, Matthew (February 13, 2026). "Combat veteran David Hollenbeck announces candidacy for NY-22 Congressional Race" . WSTM-TV . Retrieved February 16, 2026 .
^
Weiner, Mark (January 9, 2026). "John Lemondes drops bid to unseat John Mannion in Central New York race for Congress" . The Post-Standard . Syracuse. Retrieved January 10, 2026 .
^
Manore, Alexis (August 25, 2025). "Salka drops out of NY-22 race, leaving Lemondes as sole Republican candidate" . Daily Sentinel . Rome. Retrieved August 25, 2025 .
^
Weiner, Mark (August 11, 2025). "Republican recruit passes on bid for Congress. Who will GOP find to oppose John Mannion?" . The Post-Standard . Syracuse. Retrieved August 11, 2025 .
^
"Lawler rips Mannion while endorsing Buller for Congress" . The Auburn Citizen . May 5, 2026. Retrieved May 15, 2026 .
^
"Tenney endorses Buller" . Baldwinsville Messenger . May 12, 2026. Retrieved May 12, 2026 .
^
Karbstein, Sophie (March 6, 2026). "Independent Congressional Candidate Will Staton Eyes NY-22 Seat" . The Colgate Maroon-News . Retrieved March 28, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1851989" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved September 28, 2025 .
^
Larson, Greg (October 25, 2025). "Langworthy Receives Trump's Endorsement for Re-Election in 2026" . Chautauqua Today . Retrieved January 24, 2026 .
^ a b
"2026 Election United States House - New York 23rd" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Williams, Deidre (July 10, 2025). "Two Democrats are challenging Langworthy, Tenney for Congress" . The Buffalo News . Retrieved July 10, 2025 .
^
Watson, Stephen T. (April 14, 2025). "Don't call him 'perennial candidate': Kenmore lawyer eyes next race vs. Rep. Langworthy" . The Buffalo News . Retrieved April 14, 2025 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1848462" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved September 28, 2025 .
^
"Maggie's List Announces First Round of U.S. House Endorsements" . Maggies List. Retrieved June 13, 2025 .
^ a b c
"2026 Election United States House - New York 24th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Zremski, Jeremy (July 18, 2025). "Laid-off federal worker becomes second candidate to challenge Claudia Tenney" . The Buffalo News . Retrieved July 29, 2025 .
^
Gault, Alex (July 3, 2025). "Tenney gets first challenger for Congress in 2026 — Democrat Kastenbaum of WNY" . Watertown Daily Times . Retrieved July 4, 2025 .
^
Dawson, Evan; Mack, Megan (July 7, 2025). "Steven Holden announces another Congressional run as Democrats look to midterms" . WXXI . Retrieved September 12, 2025 .
^
Sturtz, Ken (November 8, 2025). "Democrat Steven Holden drops out of congressional race in 24th District" . Palladium Times . Retrieved January 13, 2026 .
^
Howard B. Owens (November 11, 2025). "Caledonia farmer announces independent run for NY-24" . The Batavian . Retrieved January 13, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1950006" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved February 23, 2026 .
^
Day, Lucas (March 22, 2026). "Auburn Attorney Launches Independent Bid in NY-24 Race" . Finger Lakes Daily News . Retrieved March 28, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1950581" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved February 26, 2026 .
^
Ericson, Paul (June 23, 2026). "Morelle coasts to victory in Democratic primary" . Rochester Beacon . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^ a b c
Schermerhorn, Jacob (March 12, 2026). "A race shaped by the moment" . Rochester Beacon . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^
Wright, Wendy (June 9, 2026). "Democratic candidates for New York's 25th Congressional District seat speak out" . Spectrum Local News . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1854838" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved October 6, 2025 .
^
"Sherita Traywick to challenge Joe Morelle in N.Y.'s 25th district" . Spectrum News . January 20, 2026. Retrieved January 22, 2026 .
^
"Ex-Brighton Town Board member to primary Joe Morelle" . WHAM-TV . February 12, 2026. Retrieved February 12, 2026 .
^ a b c
"2026 Election United States House - New York 25th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Moule, Jeremy (February 12, 2026). "Republicans back county legislator from Gates for congressional seat" . WXXI News . Retrieved March 28, 2026 .
^
"FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1945591" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved February 9, 2026 .
^
"2026 Election United States House - New York 26th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved June 22, 2026 .
^
Spectrum News Staff (April 12, 2026). "Dennis Hannon announces campaign for NY-26" . NY1 . Retrieved June 25, 2026 .
External links
Official campaign websites for 1st district candidates
Official campaign websites for 2nd district candidates
Official campaign websites for 3rd district candidates
Official campaign websites for 4th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 5th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 6th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 7th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 8th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 9th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 10th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 11th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 12th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 13th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 14th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 15th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 16th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 17th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 18th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 19th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 20th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 21st district candidates
Official campaign websites for 22nd district candidates
Official campaign websites for 23rd district candidates
Official campaign websites for 24th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 25th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 26th district candidates
(2025 ← ) 2026 United States elections (→ 2027 )
U.S.
Senate
Alabama
Alaska
Arkansas
Colorado
Delaware
Florida (special)
Georgia
Idaho
Illinois
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Montana
Nebraska
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
North Carolina
Ohio (special)
Oklahoma
Oregon
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Virginia
West Virginia
Wyoming
U.S.
House (election
ratings )
Alabama
Alaska
American Samoa
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Guam
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Northern Mariana Islands
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
U.S. Virgin Islands
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Governors
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Florida
Georgia
Guam
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Iowa
Kansas
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Mexico
New York
Northern Mariana Islands
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
U.S. Virgin Islands
Vermont
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Lieutenant
governors
Alabama
Arkansas
California
Georgia
Idaho
Nevada
Oklahoma
Rhode Island
Texas
Vermont
Attorneys
general
Alabama
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Guam
Idaho
Illinois
Iowa
Kansas
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Nebraska
Nevada
New Mexico
New York
North Dakota
Northern Mariana Islands
Ohio
Oklahoma
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Texas
Vermont
Wisconsin
Secretaries
of state
Alabama
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Georgia
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Nebraska
Nevada
New Mexico
North Dakota
Ohio
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Vermont
Wisconsin
Wyoming
State
treasurers
Alabama
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Massachusetts
Nebraska
Nevada
New Mexico
Ohio
Oklahoma
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Texas
Vermont
Wisconsin
Wyoming
State
auditors
Alabama
Arkansas
California
Connecticut
Delaware
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Maryland
Massachusetts
Minnesota
Missouri
Nebraska
Nevada
New Mexico
New York
Ohio
Oklahoma
South Carolina
South Dakota
Vermont
Wyoming
Judicial
Alabama
Supreme Court
Appellate courts
Alaska
Arkansas
Georgia
Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
Louisiana
Michigan
Minnesota
Montana
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Tennessee
Texas
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Other
statewide
elections
Alabama
Agriculture Commissioner
Board of Education
Public Service Commission
Arizona
Corporation Commission
Superintendent of Public Instruction
Arkansas
California
Board of Equalization
Insurance Commissioner
State Superintendent
Colorado
Board of Education
Board of Regents
Florida
Georgia
Agriculture Commissioner
Insurance Commissioner
Labor Commissioner
Public Service Commission
Superintendent
Hawaii
Office of Hawaiian Affairs
Idaho
Iowa
Louisiana
Public Service Commission
Michigan
Board of Education
MSU Board of Trustees
UM Board of Regents
WSU Board of Governors
Montana
Public Service Commission
Nebraska
Board of Education
NU Board of Regents
Public Service Commission
New Mexico
Nevada
Oklahoma
Oregon
South Carolina
Agriculture Commissioner
Superintendent of Education
Texas
Agriculture Commissioner
Board of Education
Land Commissioner
Railroad Commissioner
Utah
State
legislatures
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Territorial
legislatures
American Samoa
Guam
Northern Mariana Islands
US Virgin Islands
Tribal
Mayors
Arlington, TX
Boca Raton, FL
Chandler, AZ
Chula Vista, CA
Flint, MI
Henderson, NV
Irving, TX
Lexington, KY
Long Beach, CA
Los Angeles, CA
Louisville, KY
Lubbock, TX
Newark, NJ
North Las Vegas, NV
Oakland, CA
Oklahoma City, OK
Orange County, FL
Pensacola, FL
Reno, NV
Salem, OR
Shelby County, TN
Shreveport, LA
Sioux Falls, SD
St. Petersburg, FL
Tallahassee, FL
Washington, D.C.
Waukesha, WI
Municipal
Anchorage, AK
Los Angeles, CA
San Diego, CA
San Francisco, CA
San Jose, CA
Portland, OR
Washington, D.C.
Wyoming
County
Alameda County, CA
Anne Arundel County, MD
Baldwin County, AL
Baltimore County, MD
Bexar County, TX
Cobb County, GA
Collin County, TX
Cook County, IL
Dallas County, TX
DeKalb County, GA
Douglas County, NE
El Paso County, CO
Fort Bend County, TX
Frederick County, MD
Fulton County, GA
Gwinnett County, GA
Harford County, MD
Harris County, TX
Board of Commissioners
Judge
Hawaii County, HI
Hennepin County, MN
Honolulu City and County, HI
Howard County, MD
Jefferson County, AL
Kauaʻi County, HI
King County, WA
Lancaster County, NE
Los Angeles County, CA
Maui County, HI
Mobile County, AL
Montgomery County, MD
Orange County, FL
Prince George's County, MD
Salt Lake County, UT
Santa Clara County, CA
Board of Supervisors
District Attorney
Spokane County, WA
St. Charles County, MO
St. Louis County, MO
Tarrant County, TX
Wake County, NC
Wicomico County, MD
By state
Alabama
Alaska
American Samoa
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Guam
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Northern Mariana Islands
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
U.S. Virgin Islands
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Ballot
measures
Alabama
Amendment 1
Amendment 2
Lieutenant Governor Vacany Amendment
California
Hawaii
Kansas
Citizenship Voting Requirement Amendment
Supreme Court Elections Amendment
Kentucky
Louisiana
Massachusetts
Missouri
Nevada
North Dakota
South Dakota
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Redistricting Amendment
Abortion Rights Amendment
Repeal Same-Sex Marriage Ban Amendment
Voting Rights Restoration Amendment
Electoral calendar