
Socialist primary win in New York prompts Harris to court progressive mayor
Former Vice President Kamala Harris held private talks with New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani after a democratic socialist candidate defeated a long-time incumbent, exposing party divisions.
Darializa Avila Chevalier, a 32-year-old democratic socialist, defeated five-term Representative Adriano Espaillat in New York’s 13th congressional district primary on 23 June 2026. Within days, former Vice President Kamala Harris initiated a private telephone call with New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who had endorsed Chevalier, and held closed-door meetings with other progressive figures, according to US media reports. The outreach signals an effort by Harris to repair ties with the party’s left flank ahead of a possible 2028 presidential run.
Former Obama speechwriter Jon Favreau, speaking on a podcast, described Chevalier as “the most left-wing candidate to ever win a Democratic primary in our lifetimes” and said her victory reflected the growing organisational strength of groups like Justice Democrats and the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA). His co-host Dan Pfeiffer warned that the party’s traditional infrastructure was being outmatched by progressive organisations that are “more creative, more strategic, more aggressive.” Viewed from Washington, these remarks capture a widening rift between the party’s centrist establishment and an ascendant left wing.
Chevalier, a public defender investigator and doctoral student, built her campaign on housing costs, universal healthcare, and opposition to US policy on Israel. She attended an anti-Israel protest on 8 October 2023, the day after Hamas’s attack, and has not apologised, a point Favreau highlighted as a liability. Her victory was propelled by Mamdani’s political machine: she had served as his organising lead in the same district, where Mamdani defeated former Governor Andrew Cuomo by nearly 60 to 40 per cent. DSA members voted 82 per cent to endorse her, and Justice Democrats backed her early, according to New York political outlets.
The mayor’s responsiveness to left-wing pressure was illustrated days earlier when he reversed a proposal to increase the New York Police Department’s authorised headcount. In a statement, Mamdani said he and the police commissioner had “identified ways to keep the NYPD headcount at the originally authorised 35,000.” The NYC-DSA and allied groups had publicly demanded the reversal, calling for investment in community safety programmes instead. The episode, noted by conservative commentators, demonstrates the influence progressive organisations now wield over the city’s executive.
Harris has also met with Uncommitted Movement co-founder Abbas Alawieh and Democratic National Committee member James Zogby, both vocal pro-Palestinian activists, according to Axios. Alawieh said he reiterated his position that “American tax dollars should never be used to target civilians.” However, Palestinian-American strategist Rania Batrice expressed scepticism, asking, “Why should we trust her now?” Republican National Committee chair Joe Gruters, in a statement to Fox News, characterised the outreach as evidence that Democrats are beholden to “radical leftists.” The dossier remains open: Harris has publicly said she is “thinking about” a 2028 run, and her engagement with the party’s left suggests an early effort to consolidate a base that withheld full support in 2024.
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In the provided materials, the Atlantic bloc contains no articles related to the socialist victory in the New York primary.
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