Tools
Change country:

The New York Race That Could Tip the House

On a rainy Saturday late last month, Mondaire Jones was doing his best to convince a crowd of supporters that his campaign was going great. “We’ve got so much momentum in this race,” Jones said. “It has been an incredible week.”

It was a tough sell—not only for the dozens of Democrats listening to Jones in Bedford, New York, but also for the many others who have spent millions of dollars to help him defeat a first-term Republican, Representative Mike Lawler, and win back a district he gave up two years ago. The suburbs surrounding New York City have become a central battleground in the fight for Congress, and Jones’s race against Lawler is among the most competitive in the country—one that could determine which party controls the House next year.

Democrats need a net gain of four seats to win the majority, and New York has four of the country’s most vulnerable Republicans, who are all newly representing districts that Joe Biden carried easily in 2020. Yet the traditionally blue bastion is proving to be rough terrain for Democratic candidates, who must distance themselves from the deeply unpopular Governor Kathy Hochul and New York City’s recently indicted mayor, Eric Adams.

[Read: Don’t assume that Eric Adams is going anywhere]

Jones’s curious claim to momentum was based on a poll his campaign released that had him trailing Lawler by four points—not exactly a strong showing in a district that has 80,000 more Democrats than Republicans. As for his incredible week: It began with him apologizing to Hochul for telling a reporter that he didn’t want his state’s governor to be “some, like, little bitch.” Jones said he was not referring to Hochul and told me that his comments were “taken out of context.” (Jones’s prospects did brighten the following week, when it was Lawler’s turn to apologize after The New York Times uncovered photos of the Republican wearing blackface in college as part of a Michael Jackson Halloween costume.)

Democrats are hoping that the enthusiasm Kamala Harris’s campaign has generated will help them reverse the gains Republicans made in New York in 2022. Hochul’s victory that year was so underwhelming—she won by fewer than seven points, a margin that her predecessor, Andrew Cuomo, doubled, tripled, and quadrupled in his three elections—that former Speaker Nancy Pelosi blamed her performance for costing Democrats the House.

Pelosi’s successor as Democratic leader, Representative Hakeem Jeffries of Brooklyn, has prioritized the purple districts in his home state as he seeks to become the nation’s first Black speaker. But Democrats’ prospects in New York aren’t looking much better than they did two years ago. Hochul’s approval ratings have sunk to new lows, and the federal corruption charges against Adams—who runs the city where many of Jones’s would-be constituents work—won’t help. Polls show Harris beating Donald Trump by fewer than 15 points statewide; in 2020, Biden won by 23.

Lawler has hammered Jones on the same issues that helped get him elected two years ago—the high cost of living and the influx of migrants straining local government resources—while appealing to the district’s large Jewish community by championing Israel and criticizing pro-Palestinian campus protesters. He’s supporting Trump for president while vowing to stand up to him—at least more than most Republicans have. (He’s refused, for example, to parrot the former president’s 2020 election lies.) “I’m not going to be bullied by anybody,” Lawler told me.

Key to the Democrats’ strategy against Lawler—as with many Republicans—is abortion. Party strategists believe that after the overturning of Roe v. Wade in 2022, GOP candidates fared better in blue states such as New York and California because voters there did not see a legitimate threat to abortion rights. Hoping to spur greater turnout, state Democrats have placed a measure on the ballot this year that would further enshrine abortion rights into New York law, and they’re warning that victories by Lawler and other swing-district Republicans could empower the GOP to enact a national ban. “I think people see the threat. They’re taking it much more seriously,” says Jann Mirchandani, the local Democratic chair in Yorktown, a closely divided town in New York’s Hudson Valley. But she wasn’t sure if Lawler could be beaten. “It’s going to be tight.”

Jones’s first stint in Congress was cut short, in part, by an electoral game of musical chairs. Because New York’s population growth had flatlined, the state lost a seat in 2022, two years after his election. In response, a newly vulnerable senior Democrat, Representative Sean Patrick Maloney, decided to run in Jones’s district, so the freshman moved to Brooklyn in hopes of holding on to office there. He didn’t make it out of the primary, and then a few months later, Lawler beat Maloney by only about 1,800 votes.

To try to reclaim the seat he once held, Jones is shedding some of his past progressivism. He’s renounced his support for defunding the police and no longer champions Medicare for All or the Green New Deal. His biggest break with the left came in June, when he endorsed George Latimer, the primary opponent of Jones’s former colleague, Representative Jamaal Bowman, a member of the left-wing “Squad,” because of Bowman’s criticism of Israel after October 7. In retaliation, the progressives’ campaign PAC rescinded its endorsement of Jones. When I asked him whether he would try to rejoin the Congressional Progressive Caucus if he won in November—he was a member of the group during his first go-round in the House—he said he didn’t know. But he told me he was planning to join the more moderate and business-friendly New Democrat Coalition. Do you still identify as a progressive? I asked. “I am a pragmatic, pro-Israel progressive.”

[Read: Why Jamaal Bowman lost]

Jones’s rift with the left has hurt him in other ways as well. Lawler and Jones are the only candidates actively campaigning in their district, but they won’t be the only people on the November ballot. A relative unknown named Anthony Frascone stunned Democrats by beating out Jones for the nomination of the left-leaning Working Families Party after earning just 287 votes.

Democrats say they were the victims of a dirty trick by the GOP, pointing to two seeming coincidences. Frascone, a former registered Republican, has ties to powerful conservatives in the district, including his longtime lawyer, who serves as a county chair. And, as Gothamist reported, nearly 200 voters registered with the party in conservative Rockland County just days before the deadline. Few residents are eligible to vote in the WFP primary, which typically rubber-stamps the Democratic candidate. So when Frascone got on the ballot at the last minute, the Jones campaign didn’t have many supporters it could even attempt to turn out.

If it was a ploy by Republicans, it worked brilliantly. In a close race, Frascone might siphon enough votes from Jones for Lawler to win. “The combination of the surprise primary and us having a very public fracture with Mondaire created a perfect storm,” Ana María Archila, a co-director of the New York Working Families Party, told me.

Now the WFP has the awkward task of telling supporters not to vote for its nominee. Meanwhile, state Democrats are suing to get Frascone off the ballot, and the Jones campaign is devoting time and money to ensuring that a ghost candidate won’t cost his party a crucial House seat. A poll released yesterday by Emerson College found Lawler ahead of Jones, 45–44, with Frascone taking three percent of the vote, suggesting that he could play the role of spoiler.

Lawler told me he had nothing to do with Frascone’s candidacy. “He has no ties to me,” he said. “If Mondaire couldn’t win a Working Families Party primary with 500 voters, that’s on him.”

Democrats appear to be in a stronger position in other New York swing districts. Representative Brandon Williams, a first-term Republican, is seen as a slight underdog to retain his seat around Syracuse after Democrats redrew his district in 2022. In a Long Island district that Biden carried by double digits, the Democrat Laura Gillen’s campaign got a boost when The New York Times reported that her opponent, Representative Anthony D’Esposito, had given congressional jobs to both his lover and the daughter of the woman he was cheating on. Farther upstate, in New York’s Nineteenth District, which is currently the most expensive House race in the country, an early-September poll by a Republican-leaning firm found that the GOP incumbent, Representative Marc Molinaro, was three points behind his Democratic challenger, with a larger group of voters undecided.

Elsewhere on Long Island, Representative Tom Suozzi is favored to win again after his special-election victory in February, when he flipped a GOP-held seat by talking tough on the border and assailing Republicans for blocking a bipartisan immigration bill at Trump’s behest—a message that Democrats from Harris on down are adopting this fall.

But Suozzi also benefited from his being the only race on the ballot; Democrats bused in canvassers from across the New York metropolitan area to knock on doors for his campaign, and he won by nearly eight points. Now the same organizations that powered Suozzi’s win are trying to convince party activists and volunteers that their local elections are just as important as the one for the White House. “One of those races gets more attention than the other, but it turns out that Kamala Harris is going to need a Democratic Congress,” Jones told the supporters gathered at the event I attended in Bedford.

[Read: What Tom Suozzi’s win means for Democrats]

I met two Democrats there who said they would vote for Jones but not canvass for him. One of them, Joe Simonetti, said he was still “deeply, deeply, deeply disappointed” by Jones’s effort to unseat a Black progressive in Bowman. “I just can’t get out there with full-throated support,” Simonetti, a retired social worker, said. Roger Savitt, a 70-year-old retiree and former Republican, told me that he was hoping to get on a bus to Pennsylvania to volunteer for Harris for a day. Why not knock on doors for Jones too? I asked. Savitt had nothing against Jones, he said, but “I have a less strong view of the congressional race.”

Indeed, part of Jones’s dilemma is that some Democrats in the district have a grudging admiration for Lawler. “Lawler’s done a halfway-decent job,” Rocco Pozzi, a Democratic commissioner in Westchester County, told me. “But we need to get the majority back.” A former political consultant, Lawler is visible both in the community and on cable news, where he tries to position himself as a reasonable voice amid the warring factions in Congress. “You have seen him on Morning Joe, where he never gets asked tough questions,” Jones complained to the Bedford crowd at one point.

As their party embraced Trump, moderate Republicans in blue states have occasionally found a receptive audience among Democrats looking to reward politicians willing to criticize their own party. In Vermont, the Republican Phil Scott has for years been among the nation’s most popular governors. Massachusetts twice elected the moderate Republican Charlie Baker as governor, and in Maine, Senator Susan Collins won reelection in 2020 even as Biden easily carried the state.

Lawler is eyeing that same path to statewide office in New York; if he wins reelection, he told me, he might run for governor against Hochul in 2026. “It’s certainly something I’ll look at,” Lawler said.

Yet despite his image, Lawler is more conservative than the Republicans who have demonstrated cross-party appeal in nearby Democratic strongholds. Although he has vowed to vote against a national abortion ban, he opposes the procedure except in cases of rape or incest and told me he would not vote with Democrats to restore Roe v. Wade. Lawler also said he’d vote against the bipartisan immigration bill that Harris has promised to pass if elected.

Those positions offer openings for Jones, who needs the Democrats that still dominate the district to recognize the importance of his race to the national balance of power. Lawler isn’t making it easy for him. A couple days after Jones’s rally in Bedford, I saw Lawler speak a few miles northwest in Yorktown at a commemoration of the October 7 attacks. The event wasn’t partisan, and Lawler spoke for only a few minutes, but attendees in the largely Jewish audience came away impressed.

Nancy Anton, a 68-year-old retired teacher and artist, said she had “definitely” been planning to vote for Jones before she came, but now she was leaning the other way. She supports Harris for president and wants Jeffries to be speaker, she told me, but she might vote for Lawler anyway. “I’m hoping in these other districts the Democrats win so we retake the House,” Anton said. I asked her if she’d have any regrets come November if a Lawler victory allowed Republicans to retain the majority. “Oh yes,” she replied. “That’s a terrifying thought.”


Read full article on: theatlantic.com
Se suman más estrellas al escenario de los Premios Billboard de la Música Latina 2024
Estas celebridades también estarán cantando en la ceremonia musical que se celebrará en Miami
latimes.com
Sylvester Stallone’s daughter has scary experience with stranger in New York
Sylvester Stallone's daughter, Sistine, detailed a recent experience she had in New York when a strange man chased her through the streets while yelling profanities at her.
foxnews.com
'No guns for illegal aliens' bill rolled out by House GOP lawmaker
A new House GOP bill would ban the sale of firearms to people in the U.S. illegally even if they have a government ID.
foxnews.com
This Vietnamese shaking beef offers something extra
Former “Top Chef” contestant Nini Nguyen showcases her love of Vietnamese culture in her debut cookbook, “Dac Biet.”
washingtonpost.com
Is streaming really a 'terrible business?' It depends whom you ask
Anyone can see how disruptive streaming has been for TV distributors. But it's a different story for other players like Netflix, even as the industry faces continued challenges.
latimes.com
Dodgers Dugout: A great game, then an embarrassing game. Who's ready for Game 3?
Game 1 was everything you hoped for. Game 2 was everything you feared. What's going to happen in Game 3?
latimes.com
Lisa Marie Presley Kept Her Dead Son’s Body in House For Two Months
Bryan Steffy/Getty ImagesThe only daughter of legendary singer Elvis Presley was so devastated by the loss of her own child that she kept her son’s body in her house for two whole months after he died.The explosive revelation was reported by Page Six ahead of the publication of Lisa Marie Presley’s forthcoming memoir, From Here to the Great Unknown–which she was writing at the time of her death at age 54 last year, and which has since been finished by her daughter, Riley Keough.Presley apparently writes in the book that she declined to bury her singer-songwriter son Benjamin Keough for so long after his tragic death by suicide in 2020 partly because she was so heartbroken, and partly because she couldn’t decide whether to inter him in Hawaii or alongside his grandfather at the famous Graceland estate in Memphis.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
‘Unsettling’ video emerges in Dodgers’ dugout feud with Manny Machado
There's no love lost between Padres star Manny Machado and the Los Angeles Dodgers.
nypost.com
Taylor Swift jokes about ‘photobombing’ herself next to Eras Tour poster in Chiefs suite
The "Cruel Summer" singer was previously seen eagerly taking photos in front of her poster in Travis Kelce's VIP box at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo.
nypost.com
When does October Prime Day end? Shop now before Amazon’s 48-hour sale ends
Happy Amazon Prime Day to all who celebrate!
nypost.com
Flaming Lips member Steven Drozd’s daughter, 16, is missing: ‘We don’t know what to do’
Charlotte "Bowie" Drozd was last seen near the Space Needle in Seattle on October 5.
nypost.com
Shop Apple AirPods Pro At The Lowest Price Ever on October Prime Day
The deal is exclusively for Prime members. 
nypost.com
A look inside Elvis Presley's black box
Riley Keough gives Oprah Winfrey a close-up view of Elvis Presley's "most personal things" during an interview at Graceland in Memphis.
cbsnews.com
Best Prime Day luggage deals on brands we love: Samsonite, Travelpro, more
Say "bon voyage" because these deals are too good to pass up.
nypost.com
American Airlines passenger in first class finds bedbug climbing up leg during flight: ‘Nightmare fuel’
"Nightmare fuel," one commenter wrote. "I always check but it's hard to catch on an airplane."
nypost.com
False Project 2025 claims about Trump become fodder for sham congressional hearing
DETROIT — False claims that Donald Trump supports Project 2025 are common among Michigan Democrats. Even the state’s attorney general repeated the lie on the campaign trail in hopes of convincing voters the former president backs the deeply unpopular policy tome a conservative think tank developed. But the erroneous talking point got even louder last...
nypost.com
Walter Cronkite will be turning in his grave at this cowardly CBS attack on good journalism
‘Journalism,’ said legendary CBS News anchorman Walter Cronkite, ‘is what we need to make democracy work. In seeking truth, you have to get both sides of a story.’
nypost.com
UCLA investigating reports of 2 students drugged at parties near campus
The two incidents reportedly occurred at parties near campus on Gayley Avenue between Thursday and Saturday, police said.
latimes.com
All the best styles from the American Music Awards 50th Anniversary Special
The American Music Awards celebrated its 50th anniversary with a star-studded red carpet and plenty of powerhouse performances. Actress-turned-songstress Kate Hudson was minty fresh in a silk fringed Fendi Couture gown. Jordyn Woods was dressed in a draped silver Balmain mini paired with icy eyeshadow, metallic pumps and a bedazzled tiger clutch from Judith Leiber....
nypost.com
Hailey Bieber sends cryptic message with Justin photo after Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ arrest
The model shared a 2017 photo of the "Peaches" crooner flipping the bird at paparazzi in Queensland, Australia.
nypost.com
Mass evacuation underway in Tampa ahead of Hurricane Milton
Tampa residents evacuating ahead of Hurricane Milton caused major gridlock. The mayor of Tampa, a city that’s in the crosshairs of the massive storm, issued a grave warning to Florida residents who don’t heed calls to evacuate ahead of Milton. “If you choose to stay … you are going to die,” Mayor Jane Castor bluntly...
nypost.com
NYC Deputy Mayor Sheena Wright resigns in latest high-profile departure from the Eric Adams administration
Adams had already quietly issued an executive order late Thursday saying that if his embattled first deputy mayor couldn’t perform her job, her governmental powers would go to another top staffer.
nypost.com
Will Arizona go blue again? If it does, some will blame California
Hundreds of thousands of Californians have moved to the battleground state in recent years. Will that have an effect in November?
latimes.com
Small D.C. theater companies have a challenge: Finding theaters
The stalwart Source Theater is up for sale, shining a spotlight on the issues many under-the-radar companies face in post-pandemic Washington.
washingtonpost.com
Mama grizzly bear chases hunter up a tree in Montana
Multiple bear attacks have been reported in Montana in recent months.
cbsnews.com
Millions of eggs asked to be thrown away as FDA upgrades recall status to most serious category
Officials are continuing to warn consumers about an ongoing egg recall that has now been upgraded to Class I, meaning that the eggs may cause "serious adverse health consequences or death."
nypost.com
How Hurricane Helene Could Impact the 2024 Election in North Carolina
Experts worry Hurricane Helene could reduce voter turnout, disrupt ballot delivery, or hamper accurate polling in North Carolina.
time.com
The reason why McDonald’s straws are so wide revealed
People often talk about McDonald's McFlurry straw-like spoon, but their regular straws have a strategy behind them, too.
nypost.com
Early deals for holiday shopping
Major retailers are offering early deals for your holiday shopping, even before Halloween arrives. Consumers are expected to spend more than $240 billion online this holiday season, which is up 8% from last year. CBS News' Nancy Chen breaks down the bargains you can find at places like Amazon, Target and Walmart+.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Taylor Swift just wore these glitter freckles to the Chiefs game — and they’re only $16 on Amazon
She can still make the whole place shimmer.
1 h
nypost.com
Michael Jackson told Lisa Marie Presley he was ‘still a virgin’ at 35 when they started dating
"I had thought that maybe we wouldn't do anything until we got married, but he said, 'I'm not waiting!'" Presley wrote in "From Here to the Great Unknown."
1 h
nypost.com
Amazon Prime Big Deal Days: Here are some of the biggest discounts on sale now
From electronics to fashion trends, home appliances to health and beauty – these are 25 of the biggest discounts on Amazon right now.
1 h
foxnews.com
Paranoid Putin demolishes beloved $1B summer mansion due to fears of drone strike: photos
The Bocharov Ruchey residence in Sochi appeared to have been demolished in February or March.
1 h
nypost.com
‘WWHL’: Why Did Steven Spielberg Tell Ariana DeBose To Close Her Mouth While Filming ‘West Side Story’?
DeBose remembered the most intimidating note she got from Spielberg.
1 h
nypost.com
Trump Gets Unhinged, Even for Him, Over Kamala Harris ‘60 Minutes’ Interview
Scott Olson/GettyDonald Trump—who agreed to an interview with the CBS newsmagazine show 60 Minutes before backing out—has gone on the warpath at Kamala Harris for her performance on the show.“The Interview on 60 Minutes with Comrade Kamala Harris is considered by many of those who reviewed it, the WORST Interview they have ever seen,” he wrote, in a Tuesday morning post on Truth Social. “She literally had no idea what she was talking about, and it was an embarrassment to our Country that a Major Party Candidate would be so completely inept.”Harris, who has been criticized for keeping a light media schedule mostly contained to friendly interviewers, took a grilling on the program about the Biden administration's border policies, her economic platform, and allegations that she has changed her positions on issues.Read more at The Daily Beast.
1 h
thedailybeast.com
‘Morning Joe’ Questions Whether Trump Even Wants to Win Anymore
MSNBCIs Donald Trump even trying to win this election anymore?That’s the question Joe Scarborough asked on Tuesday’s Morning Joe, with the MSNBC host baffled by Trump canceling a 60 Minutes interview and turning down the chance to do another debate against Vice President Kamala Harris. “Donald Trump is the one who skipped the 60 Minutes interview, first time in 50 years a candidate has done that, and he’s the one who refused to do a debate even on Fox News–even on Fox News!” a bewildered Scarborough said on the show. Read more at The Daily Beast.
1 h
thedailybeast.com
Ron DeSantis says Harris has 'no role' in Hurricane response: 'I don't have time for political games'
Gov. Ron DeSantis responded to VP Kamala Harris' accusation of political gamesmanship on Monday and said the VP had "no role" in the hurricane preparedness process.
1 h
foxnews.com
Tim Walz reveals bizarre name Kamala Harris is listed under on his phone: ‘All I could think of’
“They told me to come up with something and that was all I could think of," Walz said, shrugging.
1 h
nypost.com
'October 7' play at UCLA Fowler Museum marks anniversary of Hamas attack with survivor stories
The West Coast premiere of the play, drawn from interviews with survivors, draws heightened security as protests move across UCLA's campus.
1 h
latimes.com
Boiling Point: Jane Fonda's anti-nuclear arguments don't make sense
Climate change is a hard problem. Unfortunately, solar panels and wind turbines won't be enough.
1 h
latimes.com
Fox News Power Rankings: The biggest surprises come after October
1 h
foxnews.com
Original ‘Survivor’ Winner Richard Hatch Reveals Show ‘Devastated My Life’
Art Streiber/E! EntertainmentA naked gay man changed American culture as we know it. That’s not cheeky (heh), but very real: Twenty-four years ago, Richard Hatch was the first winner of Survivor. The CBS competition series birthed the reality TV craze with its blockbuster premiere season in 2000, seizing the zeitgeist, turning its Average Joe (and Joanne) contestants into the biggest celebrities of the summer, and bushwhacking the path for countless reality series and stars to follow.Hatch was 39 when he outwitted, outplayed, and outlasted 15 castaways to become Survivor’s first million-dollar winner. He was the kind of TV presence Americans hadn’t seen before. He was openly gay, unapologetically—and often hilariously—cantankerous, and boasted a giddily mischievous mastery of reality TV gameplay long before there was a model to follow.Read more at The Daily Beast.
1 h
thedailybeast.com
Over 5,700 American children had trans surgery between 2019 and 2023, medical group claims: ‘Treated like guinea pigs’
A new analysis finds more than 5,000 transgender American kids were operated on.
1 h
nypost.com
What is babesiosis? The potentially deadly disease is on the rise
Rates of babesiosis, a potentially fatal tick-borne disease sometimes referred to as "American malaria," increased an average of 9% a year in the US between 2015 and 2022, a new study finds.
1 h
nypost.com
Stars and stylists swear by these nipple covers — and they’re on sale for October Prime Day
When it comes to getting red carpet-ready, stars — and their stylists — stick with what works.
1 h
nypost.com
Holiday creep starts even earlier this year, with shorter selling window
The traditional holiday shopping period between Thanksgiving and Christmas is almost one week shorter this year.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Time to cut fantasy football bait with D’Andre Swift — he’s the problem
Yeah, now we got problems, and I don’t think we can solve them.
1 h
nypost.com
Are hurricanes getting worse? Here’s what you need to know
Climate change hasn't increased the total number of hurricanes hitting the U.S., but it is making dangerous storms more common.
1 h
npr.org