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Democratic socialists just dominated New York — and are coming for 2028
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Democratic socialists just dominated New York — and are coming for 2028

Politico · Jun 24, 2026, 8:45 AM · Also reported by 4 other sources

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

Democratic socialists just caused a political earthquake. Now they're coming for 2028. Fresh off sweeping victories across New York City that showcased the growing power of the anti-establishment progressive left inside the Democratic Party, Democratic Socialists of America leaders, eager to capitalize on their momentum, are already plotting their next act: making sure one of their own is on the presidential primary debate stage, whether the party wants them or not. "What DSA represents is a real contrast to Democrats who have run the last couple of elections on fear," DSA national co-chair Megan Romer said. "You can't run on that. You have to offer an alternative. And it's really important that we be involved in that conversation in 2028. It's important that we have somebody saying sensible things." Their search process is already underway. This summer, DSA is dispatching surveys to all 250 of its chapters, asking members to weigh who they want to back and why, and return their findings to national leadership by Sept. 15, details the group first shared with POLITICO. DSA expects to receive a stack of 20-page to 40-page dossiers from chapters coast to coast weighing in on who should carry the democratic socialist banner into 2028. The organization plans to hold national discussions, including with leaders like New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who is 84 and not expected to run in 2028, with a formal vote expected at the group's 2027 convention next year — though leaders say they could move faster if the primary timeline demands it. "We're going to be talking about millions of hours knocking doors for 2028 — so when we decide to really run somebody, people have to feel like they had a say,” Romer said. Mamdani-backed candidates swept three closely watched New York congressional primaries Tuesday, with Claire Valdez, Brad Lander and Darializa Avila Chevalier all defeating more establishment-aligned rivals — including two incumbents. It was

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