New: Rana Abdelhamid, a progressive activist and founder of a women's self-defense group, is challenging Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) from the left. huffpost.com/entry/rana-abd… via @HuffPostPol
Abdelhamid, an Astoria, Queens, native, told me that the pandemic exposed inequities she's experienced her whole life.
“It’s time for ... a representative who will fight for all of us ― not just certain groups or certain neighborhoods.”
Abdelhamid had to move six times as a kid due to rising rents and her dad had to give up on a deli he owned for the same reason. Her mother was hospitalized with COVID.
She wants to focus on housing. "It’s an issue that impacts gender justice, racial justice, climate justice."
Abdelhamid founded a women's self-defense group after experiencing an Islamophobic attack.
She supports "defunding" the police, ie, reducing funding and spending it on "community infrastructure."
Maloney was a classic 1990s, early 00s Democrat with plenty of right-leaning votes, but she's also a member of @USProgressives and co-sponsor of Medicare for All and the Green New Deal.
What the new NY-12 will look like is a key variable. If Astoria gets cut out and more of Manhattan put in, that could help Maloney.
Last two cycles, Suraj Patel fought Maloney to within a handful of points.
But the suspicion with which the movement left greeted him deprived him of a unified anti-Maloney bloc.
Now Abdelhamid says his time has passed.
Cutting-room floor: Abdelhamid, a former @amnestyusa board member and daughter of Egyptian immigrants, believes the U.S. should make human rights a bigger factor in how it delivers aid, including to Egypt and Israel.
She doesn't support BDS.
Final point: Abdelhamid's full-time job is in marketing for Google.
Scoop: Democratic Reps. Jimmy Gomez (Calif.) and Veronica Escobar (Texas) used a DCCC-sponsored call with donors to seek help fending off progressive challengers. huffpost.com/entry/house-de… via @HuffPostPol
This was a call for Frontline members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus.
Reps. Mike Levin, Charles Gonzalez and Antonio Delgado fit that description.
But thanks to California's top-two, nonpartisan primary system, Gomez came within 6 points of losing to a left-wing lawyer, David Kim, in the general: nytimes.com/interactive/20…
New for @HuffPost: How New York progressives raised taxes on the rich to up public school funding, provide emergency rental assistance, and give unemployment benefits to undocumented immigrants.
This story is a sequel to my January piece looking at the comparatively conservative fiscal policy of blue states in contrast with their leaders' rhetoric.
How much has Cuomo been forced to change his tune since first taking office in 2011?
Back then, he compared his insistence on letting a millionaire's tax expire, despite the tax's popularity, to his father's principled opposition to the death penalty: nytimes.com/2011/10/18/nyr…
Yes, @EricLevitz, looking at the source material now, it was a debate over whether the Brooklyn Commons, a private venue, should host an anti-semite. Nathan makes all the maximalist free-speech arguments I still believe in ...
... The public square now consists largely of private spaces, so even if constitutional, encouraging professed open fora to pick and choose is harmful; who gives authority to censors; nothing to be feared from bad ideas; good speech defeats bad. currentaffairs.org/2016/09/let-th…
Nathan's free to change his opinions. But there's a lack of self-awareness in going from lamenting his firing from The Guardian -- and mobilizing colleagues against it -- to poo-pooing Substack's openness ... without acknowledging the parallels to Brooklyn Commons.
.@ninaturner has raised $2.2 million since announcing in mid-December, including $1.55 M since Jan. 1.
Cash on hand: Over $1 million
Average contribution is $28.
Turner's main opponent @ShontelMBrown announced a total $500k haul on March 24. In the final week of the month, Brown says her total since announcing her run grew to $680k.
But Brown is more keen to emphasize local proportion of donors, claiming 55% are from northeast Ohio.
Turner says she has 400 donors from Ohio. It's unclear what her total number of donors is. Her total contributions are nearly 78k.
Turner has also burned through more than $1M.
FWIW, Brown has held a *greater share* of her cash. Her campaign says she has over $500k on hand.
New: Former Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) is running for a second term against three Black candidates.
I did a deep dive on his record as governor on questions of racial justice, civil rights, civil liberties and criminal justice reform: huffpost.com/entry/terry-mc…
News: @ACLUVA's @changeservant says that after McAuliffe vetoed a bill limiting mass surveillance, “He looked me in the eye and said, ‘Claire, you just need to know, I’m always going to side with the police.’”
McAuliffe denies it. (They're at odds over blame for C'ville in '17.)
Are Dem gains so tenuous they need a guy who's shown he can win? Or do they want to make history -- first Black woman Gov in the country -- with someone more progressive?
For all those noting that the Twitter handle is nonexistent, here's evidence that it used to be Kelly's.
Facts on Tennessee's 5th:
--Nashville and suburbs
--It went 60-37% for Biden
--Last primary challenge to Cooper got 40%
--Black pop. = 24% of district. Total Black, Latino, Asian = 37%.
--Cooper uncontested in '20 general, but primary challenger got 40%.