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Centrist Democrats are freaking out about progressives’ winning streak
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Centrist Democrats are freaking out about progressives’ winning streak

Politico · Jun 25, 2026, 9:40 AM

Why this matters: political developments that affect policy direction and public trust.

Moderate Democrats are sounding the alarm after massive losses in New York's primaries. They fear they’re on the verge of losing the party’s ideological civil war — and hurting its electoral chances. Leftist candidates swept a trio of deep-blue House seats in New York City, a seismic victory that toppled two incumbents, including the powerful chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. And after a string of progressive battleground wins in earlier primaries, moderates are making it very clear that the left’s winning streak is potentially just starting. The far left is eyeing even bigger targets in key battleground primaries that will determine control of Congress as well as governorships in crucial swing states. Most immediately, moderates fear that a progressive primary sweep could imperil the party’s hopes of beating Republicans this fall. They also have a more fundamental fear: that progressives are becoming more mainstream as they keep winning — reshaping the Democratic Party. “Centrist Democrats, normie Democrats, need to realize we’re the insurgents, and they're the new establishment,” said Liam Kerr, a co-founder of the moderate-aligned WelcomePAC. “It's a long term structural problem more than it is any one particular win.” Progressives have romped through Democrats’ spring primaries, notching a series of wins across both safe and competitive districts and upending House and Senate Democrats’ battleplans. Left flank candidates Randy Villegas and Matt Dunlap trounced the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee’s preferred picks in a pair of battlegrounds in California and Maine. And populist insurgent Graham Platner pushed out Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s handpicked recruit in Maine, Gov. Janet Mills, before voting even began — only to see his poll numbers slip amidst a series of personal scandals. With New York in the rearview, upcoming races in Colorado, Michigan and Wisconsin will test whether the insurgent left can continue its hot streak. “

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