Retiring U.S. Reps. Nydia Velázquez (left) and Jerry Nadler.
File Images by Lloyd Mittchel
A altering of the guard is underway inside New York Metropolis’s predominantly Democratic congressional delegation, with a number of members both retiring or going through major challenges in 2026.
U.S. Rep. Nydia Velázquez, whose district covers components of north Brooklyn and western Queens, turned the second longtime incumbent within the New York Metropolis delegation to announce she is not going to be in search of reelection subsequent 12 months on Thursday night time. Each Velázquez and U.S. Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-Manhattan), who made the identical announcement in September, cited the necessity to go the torch onto a brand new technology of occasion leaders.
On the similar time, no fewer than 4 different incumbents — Home Minority Chief Hakeem Jeffries (D-Brooklyn), and Reps. Adriano Espaillat (D-Manhattan/Bronx), Dan Goldman (D-Manhattan/Brooklyn), and Ritchie Torres (D-Bronx) — are going through major challenges from their left.
The obvious shakeup comes shortly after democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani defeated the Democratic Social gathering institution decide, former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, in each the occasion’s major and the overall election. Although institution Democrats largely coalesced round Mamdani for the overall election, it has not quelled the insurgency from the left — and from the younger and stressed of New York politics.
It additionally speaks to the broader inner combat that Democrats have been engaged in nationally for greater than a 12 months, since President Donald Trump defeated former Vice President Kamala Harris within the 2024 presidential election.
Angst over the result of that election, and dissatisfaction with how Democratic congressional leaders reminiscent of Jeffries and US Sen. Chuck Schumer have responded to Trump’s agenda at instances, have fueled that combat over the occasion’s future, with each the 2026 midterms and the 2028 presidential race high of thoughts.
Youth motion amongst NYC Democrats
Age isn’t only a quantity; additionally it is an element within the present sea change, in accordance with progressive political strategist Camille Rivera.
She pointed to New York’s Congressional delegation skewing older and the truth that its members have cultivated a gaggle of youthful pols who can proceed their work. The retiring Nadler is 74; Velazquez is 72. Each have been in Congress for greater than 30 years.
“We have a lot of Congressional leaders and electeds that are older and are taking into consideration when it’s time for them to move on,” Rivera instructed New York News. “Many of them feel like they have created a good bench, in particular in Democratic strongholds that no matter what, the district will be represented well.”
Rivera pointed particularly to the pols that Velázquez has mentored. That group consists of Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso in addition to Metropolis Council Members Jennifer Gutiérrez (D-Brooklyn) and Lincoln Restler (D-Brooklyn).
Whereas it’s nonetheless unclear who will run for Velázquez’s seat, a few of those that are reportedly contemplating it embody Reynoso, Gutiérrez, and state Sen. Julia Salazar (D-Brooklyn).
The wild and crowded twelfth District race
Nadler has equally mentored youthful lawmakers and is backing one protégé who’s in search of to switch him: Higher West Aspect Meeting Member Micah Lasher. Moreover, lots of the different candidates who’ve already launched campaigns for Nadler’s seat are both millennials or a part of Gen Z.
No fewer than 10 candidates are vying to switch Nadler, together with Meeting Member Alex Bores; Metropolis Council Member Erik Bottcher; Jack Schlossberg, grandson of President John F. Kennedy; and Cameron Kasky, a podcaster and co-founder of the March for Our Lives PAC shaped within the wake of a mass taking pictures at a highschool Parkland, FL in 2018.
Basil Smikle, a former head of the state Democratic Social gathering and a professor at Columbia College, posited that Velázquez’s and Nadler’s retirements are half of a bigger recognition by the Democratic coalition that it’s altering.
“With that comes a recognition by some electeds that maybe it’s their turn with this younger generation, sort of pushing up,” Smikle mentioned. “And the larger important point that the party itself needs to find a way to not only capture the enthusiasm and the momentum from these young voters, but have more electeds that represent their interests and are reflective of their communities.”
The taxing toll of the Trump period
John Mollenkopf, a political scientist and director of CUNY’s Heart for City Analysis, speculated that another excuse why Velázquez and Nadler could also be seeking to step apart now’s that being a longtime incumbent Democrat in Congress has rarely been more durable.
He pointed to the issue of serving within the Democratic minority beneath Republican President Donald Trump, who has sought to erode lots of the coverage wins they’ve notched through the years.
“Why would you want to persist in a job where all your past efforts have been stymied and the future doesn’t look immediately promising, especially when you’re in your 70s?” Mollenkopf mentioned.
In the case of the brand new wave of major challenges towards incumbents, Mollenkopf mentioned these are “healthy” for Democracy.
Nonetheless, he famous that Jeffries and Espaillat are more likely to overcome their youthful left-leaning challengers: Brooklyn Metropolis Council Member Chi Ossé and Harlem organizer Darializa Avila Chevalier, respectively.
“It’s hard to imagine that a political science graduate student from Columbia is going to knock off one of the more impressively rising, certainly the most important, Dominican-origin politicians in New York City and down in Washington,” Mollenkopf mentioned of Avila Chevalier’s probabilities towards Espaillat.
“But it’ll lead to a healthy debate around what the Democratic Party establishment is or isn’t doing for their constituencies,” he added.




