News & Politics

Live blog: 2026 primary day in New York

A nice and humid referendum on the power of the left and the clout of Mayor Zohran Mamdani.

Mayor Zohran Mamdani joined NY-13 congressional candidate Darializa Avila Chevalier early Tuesday morning at her poll site in Harlem.

Mayor Zohran Mamdani joined NY-13 congressional candidate Darializa Avila Chevalier early Tuesday morning at her poll site in Harlem. Rebecca C. Lewis

Voters are weird. They do things like vote for Donald Trump, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Zohran Mamdani. They fixate on the endorsement of one City Council member. Or they go from being completely committed to Mamdani in the summer of 2025 to not even realizing there’s an election in 2026. All this to say, their behavior is hard to predict. But all across New York, they’re the ones deciding races today, before the polls close at 9 p.m. So join us as we track and react to the candidates and voters on this steamy 2026 primary election day. 

8:30 a.m. - Park Slopers evaluate their Congress member

Polls favor Lander, but Goldman voters are still hopeful
Holly Pretsky/City & State NY

Former Mike Bloomberg press secretary Jennifer Falk greeted voters outside William Alexander Middle School in Park Slope. She was handing out lit for Rep. Dan Goldman, who she said was more equipped than Brad Lander to handle federal policy. A voter approached her and said “tell Dan to kick Brad’s butt,” and called Lander a “self-hating Jew.” Leaving the poll site was Lawson Shadburn, who said he voted for Lander in part because “I’m a concerned Jew who’s very worried about how U.S. policy towards Israel and Israel's behavior is not good for Israel or for Jews.” – Holly Pretsky

8:15 a.m. - Brooklyn Dems get an early start

Crown Heights, Brooklyn

The streets of Crown Heights were pretty quiet this morning – perhaps in part due to the misty, gloomy weather – but the Brooklyn Dems are already out in full force. Across the street from a poll site on Nostrand Avenue and Prospect Place, a canvasser who signed up knowing she’d get paid for her efforts handed out palm cards encouraging residents to “vote for real Democrats.” The slate included all incumbents: Rep. Yvette Clarke, Assembly Member Brian Cunningham, State Committee Members Michelle Tégé and Anthony Beckford, plus Brooklyn Dems leader Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn’s pick for civil court judge, Michelle DeSouza

The Brooklyn Dems have been pushing hard to reelect their sitting district leaders here in Assembly District 43, sending out numerous mailers, handing out flyers and even sending text blasts in recent weeks. It comes as Bichotte Hermelyn looks to defend her chairship – and the Democratic machine – from reformers like the New Kings Democrats. There are 10 contested DL races across the borough, and the outcomes could determine who leads the party.   – Sophie Krichevsky

7:30 a.m. - Mamdani votes with DAC

The mayor started the day in East Harlem with the DSA-backed challenger
Rebecca C. Lewis/City & State

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani briefly joined Darializa Avila Chevalier in East Harlem before she cast her vote in her race against Rep. Adriano Espaillat

“As a Black woman, as a Dominican woman, as a daughter of immigrants, it is my honor to have run a campaign that centers working people, and it is my privilege to be able to vote today,” Avila Chevalier told reporters. She has faced racist attacks in recent days questioning her Dominican ethnicity and her place in the Dominican diaspora.

Avila Chevalier is one of a slate of congressional candidates that Mamdani has endorsed that has put him at odds with other members of Democratic Party leadership, as well as with incumbents. The races are viewed broadly as a test of the mayor’s influence after a historic victory last year, as well as the power of DSA, which has endorsed Avila Chevalier, as well Claire Valdez, for Congress.

“I think what we have here is an opportunity to elect partners to help fulfill our affordability agenda,” Mamdani said when asked whether he felt he had a lot on the line today. “I’ve spoken to New Yorkers time and time again about my focus being the transformation of the nation’s most expensive city into one that we can afford, and we can only achieve that if we have partners in Washington. And in Darializa, in Claire, in Brad (Lander), I see those partners.”

Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso, a fellow progressive running against the DSA-backed Valdez, has said he is committed to being a partner to the mayor as well. But Mamdani reiterated Valdez’s loyalty in the organizing space when asked if he thought Reynoso wouldn’t be a partner.

“I think what we look at is, someone in Claire Valdez, is a track record, is someone who has been there time and time again,” Mamdani told reporters. “I stand here today as the mayor. However, when I launched that campaign, there was only one elected official at my launch, and that was Claire Valdez, and that was because she knew it was a fight for working people.” 

Mamdani met up with Valdez afterwards, per her X post.Rebecca C. Lewis

6 a.m. – Top congressional races

Open seats and bold insurgent challenges

This year’s congressional races are not just about a changing of the guard. They’re also a test of whether there will be significant coattails following New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s historic victory. Will his endorsement win elections? And will the Democratic Socialists of America – and its army of energized organizers, volunteers and followers – turn out again in strong numbers? Here are the 2026 NYC congressional races to watch.

6 a.m. – Polls open

Which state legislative races we’re watching.

There’s sure to be a changing of the guard in Albany come January, but less certain is exactly what that will look like. Many of these races are in New York City, but there are plenty throughout the state too. While some races pit establishment Democrats against the left, others pit the left against the far left. And affordability will continue to be a major theme across the board. Here are the 2026 state legislative primary races to watch.