The Mercury News

Dem heavyweigh­t Crowley falls in N.Y.

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NEW YORK >> As Donald Trump’s party came together, a 28-year-old liberal activist ousted top House Democrat Joe Crowley in the president’s hometown Tuesday night, a stunning defeat that suddenly forced Democrats to confront their own internal divisions.

Crowley, the No. 4 House Democrat and until Tuesday considered a possible candidate to replace Nancy Pelosi as leader, lost the first competitiv­e primary he had faced in more than a decade to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a former aide to the late Massachuse­tts Sen. Ted Kennedy. Crowley’s loss, the first defeat of the primary season for a Democratic incumbent. echoed across the political world, sending the unmistakab­le message that lingering divisions between the Democratic Party’s pragmatic and more liberal wings may be widening in the early years of the Trump presidency.

“Perhaps he should have been nicer, and more respectful, to his President!” Trump tweeted, oddly taking credit for a victory by a candidate more liberal than Crowley.

All in all, Trump had reason to celebrate Tuesday night as all three of his endorsed candidates survived primary challenges that could have embarrasse­d him and the party.

Those included former Republican presidenti­al nominee Mitt Romney, who once branded Trump “a fraud” but has changed his tune in the past two years.

None of the day’s contests mattered more to Trump than the one in South Carolina. Gov. Henry McMaster, one of the president’s earliest and strongest supporters who survived an unusually tough challenge from a political newcomer, selfmade Republican millionair­e John Warren.

Yet Crowley’s loss suggests that Democrats must overcome intraparty divisions if they hope to take control of Congress and key governors’ offices nationwide.

In New York, Ocasio-Cortez ran as a workingcla­ss daughter of an immigrant, casting Crowley as elitist out of touch with the community.

“These results are also a shot across the bow of the Democratic establishm­ent in Washington: a young, diverse, and boldly progressiv­e Resistance Movement isn’t waiting to be anointed by the powers that be,” said Matt Blizek, of MoveOn, which backed Crowley’s challenger.

Elsewhere in New York City, convicted felon Michael Grimm lost his political comeback attempt, which was more good news for Trump.

Grimm had held the seat until 2015, when he pleaded guilty to knowingly hiring immigrants who were in the country illegally to work at his Manhattan restaurant and cooking the books to hide income and evade taxes.

Given his political baggage, a Grimm victory would have jeopardize­d the seat in this fall’s general election.

More than 2,000 miles away in deep-red Utah, former Massachuse­tts Gov. Romney defeated little-known state Rep. Mike Kennedy, who questioned Romney’s conservati­ve credential­s and ability to work well with the president.

Romney, too, was endorsed by Trump despite his aggressive criticism of Trump before his election.

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