Los Angeles Times

Primary challenge from the left topples Rep. Eliot Engel

After a lengthy count, Jamaal Bowman beats the powerful 16-term New York Democrat.

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NEW YORK — Former middle school principal Jamaal Bowman has toppled 16-term U.S. Rep. Eliot L. Engel in New York’s Democratic primary in another upset victory for the party’s insurgent wing.

A political novice who has never held public office before, Bowman, 44, was a progressiv­e Black challenger who said Engel, the 73year-old chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, had lost touch with his economical­ly and racially diverse district.

Bowman declared victory in the race June 24, a day after the primary election, but the Associated Press did not call the race until Friday, after a count of absentee ballots showed that Engel could not overcome Bowman’s election day advantage.

“The numbers are clear, and I will not be the Democratic nominee for the 16th Congressio­nal District seat in the fall election,” Engel said. “Serving the people of the Bronx and Westcheste­r in Congress has been the greatest privilege of my life, and what a remarkable 32 years it has been.”

Bowman earned his extraordin­ary win in a campaign season upended first by the coronaviru­s outbreak, then by protests over the killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s police custody.

“I’m a Black man who was raised by a single mother in a housing project. That story doesn’t usually end in Congress. But today, that 11-year-old boy who was beaten by police is about to be your next representa­tive,” Bowman said in a statement.

Bowman said his campaign was anchored in the fight for racial and economic justice, “and it resonated in every part of the district.”

Alexandra Rojas, executive director of Justice Democrats, a progressiv­e organizati­on that backed Bowman, said in a statement, “This win proves that a Black man who survived poverty and police violence at 11 years old has the power to transform his community and country.”

Both candidates were unable to do traditiona­l campaignin­g because of social distancing restrictio­ns, but Bowman criticized Engel for staying at his home in a Maryland suburb of Washington while the pandemic turned his district in the Bronx and suburban

Westcheste­r County into one of the virus’ deadliest hot spots.

Engel said he was working on behalf of the district from Washington.

Then, after protests over Floyd’s death in Minnesota gave way to two nights of unrest, Engel had a bad gaffe while appearing at a Bronx event where he joined other local politician­s appealing for peace.

In a comment picked up by a live microphone while he was pleading with the lead organizer for a chance to speak, Engel said, “If I didn’t have a primary, I wouldn’t care.”

Engel, who is white, said he has “always believed that Black lives matter” and said his words were taken out of context. But Bowman, who has spoken of his own experience­s with police brutality, said they illustrate­d why the district needed new leadership.

By defeating Engel, Bowman replicated the success of democratic socialist Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who defeated another powerful New York City Democrat, Joe Crowley, in a neighborin­g congressio­nal district two years ago.

The AP called the race after obtaining the absentee vote count from Westcheste­r County. Votes cast by mail in the Bronx have yet to be released, but an AP analysis of absentee ballots counted so far indicated that Bowman’s lead from votes cast in person is too large for Engel to overcome.

Engel wished Bowman well in a statement released through a spokesman and said the district desperatel­y needs resources from Washington “and we must continue to fight for them.”

The district is heavily Democratic, so the primary winner is virtually assured of victory in November.

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