Ocasio-Cortez stumps, fundraises across the nation
Is it possible to leverage 17,000 votes into a national political movement? Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is trying.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a Democratic congressional candidate from New York, is trying to leverage the 17,000 votes that gave her a primary win in New York into a national movement. (Jaime Green/The Wichita Eagle via AP, File)
Is it possible to leverage 17,000 votes into a national political movement? Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is trying.
The 28-year-old liberal activist, who was nearly unknown outside of Queens and the Bronx until a surprise June victory over a 10-term incumbent in New York’s Democratic congressional primary, has been crisscrossing the country in recent weeks to stump for fellow progressives.
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She’s been raising campaign cash in sold-out theaters, rubbing shoulders with leaders in the party’s liberal wing and building an audience of 788,000 Twitter followers.
“When I won, they said, `Stay home.’ They said, `Keep it in the Bronx,”’ she told a crowd at a progressive Democratic conference in New Orleans Saturday, “But we know better than that.”
Tuesday’s congressional primaries, though, showed that it may be hard for Ocasio-Cortez to help other left-leaning candidates replicate her upset over U.S. Rep. Joseph Crowley, a fellow Democrat.
Four underdog candidates whom she stumped for in recent weeks lost in Democratic primaries in Michigan, Kansas and Missouri.
They included Cori Bush, an activist and pastor who had been hoping to unseat nine-term U.S. Rep. William Lacy Clay, of St. Louis, and Dr. Abdul El-Sayed, Detroit’s former health director, who lost in Michigan’s gubernatorial primary to Gretchen Whitmer.
Bush said her campaign got a shot of energy and a flood of new donations after Ocasio-Cortez lent her star power.
“It changed our race,” she said. But it didn’t translate into victory.
Three progressive candidates who had gotten Ocasio-Cortez’s support did win Tuesday, including former Michigan state representative Rashida Tlaib, who won a six-candidate primary and will run unopposed in the general election.
She will in all likelihood become the first Muslim woman elected to Congress. Like Ocasio-Cortez, Tlaib is a member of the Democratic Socialists of America.
In Kansas, congressional candidate James Thompson cruised to victory in the Democratic primary after getting visits from Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Bernie Sanders on the campaign trail. In November, Thompson will face U.S. Rep. Ron Estes, the Republican congressman who beat him last year in a special election after receiving the backing of President Donald Trump.
On Thursday, Ocasio-Cortez flies to Hawaii to campaign for Kaniela Ing, another Democratic Socialist trying to beat the odds against several establishment candidates in a crowded Democratic primary. He has trailed in recent polls.
At an event in New York on Tuesday, Ocasio-Cortez said she would press on with efforts to support candidates who might push the party further left.
“What we need to realize is our struggles are linked,” she told supporters. “They don’t want us to realize how powerful we really are.”
Most of the candidates she has traveled to support are backed by a political action committee called Justice Democrats, which was started by organizers of Bernie Sanders’ 2016 presidential campaign. Five of the 12 candidates backed by the Justice Democrats won their primaries on Tuesday.
Ocasio-Cortez took advantage of some unique circumstances to beat Crowley, one of the top House Democrats.
Fewer than 30,000 people voted in the primary, which received little mainstream media attention. Many voters who backed her said they did so partly because they respected her hustle. She campaigned relentlessly in the district, while Crowley spent more time in Washington. His absence opened him to Ocasio-Cortez’s attacks calling him an absentee leader.
Now, she is spending time out of state herself.
“I spent the last nine days, I know it seems like an eternity, but just nine days I was out traveling the country,” Ocasio told supporters at an event in New York this week.
Her campaign spokesman, Corbin Trent, said her interstate travels to bolster other liberals are “for the distinct purpose of benefitting people in her district.”
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