How Hakeem Jeffries Is in Big Trouble Politically After the Primaries - đ The Liberty Daily

(ZeroHedge)âTuesday night in New York City was no routine Democratic primary. Instead, it turned into a referendum on the Democratic Party itself, and the party lost.
Three socialist-backed candidates, backed by New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, won their races. The Democratic establishment got slaughtered, and the man left holding the wreckage is House Minority Leader Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY).
ADVERTISEMENTEvery candidate Jeffries backed went down. That alone would be a bad night. What made it worse was the scene at the victory party for socialist-backed winner Claire Valdez, where the crowd erupted in boos when Jeffriesâs image appeared on screen, then broke into a chant: âYouâre next,â a clear sign that his leadership position wonât protect him from being a target of the Democratic Socialists of America Party.
The Republican National Congressional Committee read the room and sent Jeffries flowers and a condolence card. âThree losses in one night is tough,â NRCC spokesman Mike Marinella said. âWe wanted so-called âLeaderâ Jeffries to know our thoughts are with him, his candidates, and whatever remains of his influence in the Democrat Party.â When the opposition party is sending you sympathy arrangements, youâve had a historically bad evening.
NEW: The @NRCC has delivered flowers and a condolences card to House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) DC office after the House candidates he endorsed lost to Mamdani-backed socialists in NY last night.
NRCC statement to @FoxNews:
"Three losses in one night is tough. We⌠pic.twitter.com/tBhVrRZYzH
â Bill Melugin (@BillMelugin_) June 24, 2026
The casualties werenât minor figures. Rep. Adriano Espaillat (D-N.Y.), a long-term incumbent who chaired the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, lost his seat. So did Rep. Dan Goldman (D-N.Y.), who built his national profile as lead counsel for House Democrats during Donald Trumpâs first impeachment. Goldman is no moderate, and was arguably a hero of the left for years, yet voters in his own district just showed him the door because Mamdani wanted someone else.
What Tuesday revealed is something the Democratic establishment has been reluctant to admit: its own primary voters have turned against it. These arenât Republicans crossing over to cause chaos. These are Democrat voters who want to torch the house from the inside, and are using the Democratic Party infrastructure to do it.
Former DNC chairman Jaime Harrison saw it clearly enough to say something about it. âI say this with no ill will or animosity: if you hate the Democratic Party, then please donât run for our nomination,â Harrison wrote on X Tuesday night. âDonât use our resources. Donât rely on our volunteers. Donât use our infrastructure. Donât ask Democrats to invest their time, money, and energy in your campaign. Focus on building the party you actually support. Political parties arenât perfect, but theyâre built by millions of people who knock doors, make calls, organize meetings, and fight for the values they believe in. If you donât believe in the party, then donât ask its members to carry you across the finish line.â
I say this with no ill will or animosity: if you hate the Democratic Party, then please donât run for our nomination.
Donât use our resources. Donât rely on our volunteers. Donât use our infrastructure. Donât ask Democrats to invest their time, money, and energy in yourâŚ
â Jaime Harrison (@harrisonjaime) June 23, 2026
Harrison is right about whatâs happening, even if his party built the conditions that made it inevitable. The Democratic Socialists of America have figured out a remarkably efficient strategy of running as insurgent candidates in Democratic Party primaries. Theyâre parasites running on a host they intend to replace. And right now, theyâve got Jeffries in their crosshairs.
Jeffries survived Tuesdayâs primaries because nobody ran against him. But the DSA has now demonstrated it can knock off a caucus chairman and a nationally known impeachment lawyer in a single night. An emboldened socialist movement likely wonât let Jeffries coast through the next cycle without a primary challenge. The âYouâre nextâ chant wasnât an empty slogan, but a promise.
The broader implications extend well past New York. Socialist candidates winning primaries in deep blue districts may feel like a local story, but the pull it exerts on the national party is real. Every time the Democrats lurch further left to appease their activist base, they surrender more ground with the centrist voters they need to appeal to nationally to win elections. The American electorate outside deep blue cities like New York City is not particularly receptive to socialism, and Republicans will spend the next two years making sure voters in swing districts understand exactly what the Democratic Party now stands for.
Jeffries entered Tuesday as the leader of House Democrats and the presumptive future Speaker. He exited it as a man his own base wants to bury. Thatâs a hard thing to recover from, and the people who want him gone are just getting started.