Albuquerque Journal

Dems eye new identity with stunning defeat

Bernie Sanders campaign organizer knocks off a top House Democrat

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NEW YORK — Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez surprised herself. And a lot of other people, too.

The 28-year-old liberal activist, who worked as a bartender at times last year, knocked off the No. 4 House Democrat Tuesday in New York City. And in so doing, the former Bernie Sanders campaign organizer threw a spotlight on the surge of energy on the left that’s re-defining the Democratic Party’s search for a new identity in the age of Donald Trump.

“We always thought it was possible,” Ocasio-Cortez said of her win against 10-term incumbent Joe Crowley in an interview Wednesday with The Associated Press. She added: “I just felt like we could do so much better, and we could be so much better.” But hardly clearer for the party. Her stunning victory in the Democratic primary offers a new window into the tug-of-war for the direction of the party as Trump’s presidency stretches through its second year, a fight often overshadow­ed by the more explosive intraparty debate on the Republican side.

Ocasio-Cortez’s unlikely win elevated the Democratic Party base’s leftward lurch on some issues — the embrace of Medicare for all and the abolition of the federal agency that enforces immigratio­n laws, among them — even if the party’s establishm­ent leaders are reluctant to promote such liberal priorities as Democrats fight for control of Congress this fall.

Some party leaders fear that Ocasio-Cortez and her Sanderssty­le message could alienate voters in key races this fall where vulnerable Democrats must appeal to conservati­ve Democrats and even some Republican­s.

The GOP was more than happy to highlight Ocasio-Cortez’s victory, with the Republican National Committee blasting out a canyou-believe-it statement about Democrats moving “drasticall­y to the left” as they “elected a selfavowed socialist.”

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the winner of a Democratic Congressio­nal primary in New York, greets a passerby in New York Wednesday, the morning after she won Tuesday’s primary election.
MARK LENNIHAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the winner of a Democratic Congressio­nal primary in New York, greets a passerby in New York Wednesday, the morning after she won Tuesday’s primary election.

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