Justice Democrats

Justice Democrats (JD) is an American progressive political action committee and caucus[4][5][1] founded on January 23, 2017, by two leaders of Bernie Sanders's 2016 presidential campaign, Saikat Chakrabarti and Zack Exley, as well as political commentators Kyle Kulinski and Cenk Uygur of The Young Turks.[6] The organization formed as a result of the 2016 United States presidential election[7][8] and aspires "to elect a new type of Democratic majority in Congress" that will "create a thriving economy and democracy that works for the people, not big money interests".[6] The group advocates for campaign finance reform (reducing the role of money in politics) and endorses only candidates who pledge to refuse donations from corporate PACs and lobbyists.

Justice Democrats
AbbreviationJD
FormationJanuary 23, 2017; 7 years ago (2017-01-23)
FoundersSaikat Chakrabarti
Zack Exley
Kyle Kulinski
Cenk Uygur
TypePolitical action committee, caucus[1]
Registration no.C00630665
HeadquartersKnoxville, Tennessee, U.S.
Key people
Saikat Chakrabarti
Zack Exley
Tara Reilly[2]
Alexandra Rojas, Executive Director
AffiliationsBrand New Congress
National Nurses United
Former affiliation:
The Young Turks
Revenue (2017)
$1.46 million
Disbursements$1.32 million[3]
WebsiteJusticeDemocrats.com
Justice Democrats
Founded2017
Ideology
Members in the House of Representatives
12 / 435
[Note 1]

Kulinski and Uygur are no longer part of the group, later criticizing it for falling short in cultivating a unified cohort of legislators able to champion priority bills.[9] Alexandra Rojas became the organization's executive director in May 2018.[10]

During the 2018 elections, Justice Democrats ran 79 progressive candidates against Democrats, Republicans and Independents in local, state, and federal elections.[11] The seven Justice Democrats candidates who won their electoral congressional races in 2018 were Raúl Grijalva, Pramila Jayapal, Ro Khanna, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Ayanna Pressley, and Rashida Tlaib.

The group endorsed considerably fewer candidates in 2020 than in 2018, a move its communications director defended as a strategy to focus its resources on the most promising candidates.[12][13] Jamaal Bowman, Cori Bush, and Marie Newman were elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 2020.

In 2022, Greg Casar and Summer Lee were elected to the House, while Newman lost her reelection in the Democratic primary after facing an investigation by the House Ethics Committee.[14] In 2024, Delia Ramirez was endorsed by and joined Justice Democrats.[15]

History

After the 2016 presidential election resulted in a victory for Donald Trump, many progressives pointed to the perceived loyalty of politicians to large donors as a major contributing factor to Hillary Clinton's loss to Trump. These critics contend that a campaign finance model similar to that of Bernie Sanders, whose 2016 presidential campaign was funded by small individual donations, will increase public trust in politicians through increased accountability to their constituents.[citation needed]

On January 23, 2017, Cenk Uygur and Kyle Kulinski founded Justice Democrats with ten others, including former staffers from the Sanders campaign such as its Director of Organizing Technology, Saikat Chakrabarti, and MoveOn.org fundraiser Zack Exley.[16][17][18] According to the organization, it seeks to create a left-wing populist movement to support alternative Democratic candidates beginning with the 2018 midterm elections, in order to either defeat the incumbent Democrats or make them more accountable to their constituents. It requires its candidates to take a pledge to refuse financial contributions from billionaires and corporations.[7] In addition, it hoped to rebuild the Democratic Party on a national level and defeat Trump in the 2020 presidential election.

The Democrats used to represent something wonderful – voters. We want you to represent just us, not your donors... [and stand for] justice for the people

— Cenk Uygur explaining the name of the group[6][19]

On March 20, 2017, Justice Democrats reported that they had received 8,300 nominations and raised $1 million (~$1.22 million in 2023).[20] Also in March 2017, it teamed up with Brand New Congress, a PAC established by former Sanders campaign supporters, to further their goals.[18] By November 1, 2017, they had merged with fellow progressive group AllOfUs.[21][22]

On May 9, 2017, Representative Ro Khanna of California's 17th congressional district announced that he had become a Justice Democrat, the first sitting member of Congress to join the organization.[23][6] Over the following year, Raúl Grijalva of Arizona's 3rd congressional district and Pramila Jayapal of Washington's 7th congressional district also joined, bringing the number of sitting representatives in Justice Democrats to three.[24] Khanna and Jayapal were first elected to the House in 2016 while Grijalva has been an incumbent since 2002.[citation needed]

During the 2018 elections, Justice Democrats ran 79 progressive candidates against Democrats, Republicans and Independents in local, state, and federal elections.[11] 26 of them advanced past the primary stage. All Justice Democrat candidates running for office were endorsed by The Young Turks, who provided them with a media platform on their interview show Rebel HQ.[25] The seven Justice Democrats candidates who won their electoral congressional races in 2018 were Ayanna Pressley, Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and the three sitting members. All seven won districts already held by Democrats.[citation needed]

In 2020, Justice Democrat Marie Newman defeated incumbent Representative Dan Lipinski in the 2020 primary for Illinois's 3rd congressional district.[26] Jamaal Bowman defeated incumbent Representative Eliot Engel in New York's 16th congressional district's primary. Bowman was also endorsed by Justice Democrats. Another Justice Democrat-endorsed candidate won in Missouri's 1st congressional district, when Cori Bush defeated Representative Lacy Clay.[citation needed]

Summer for Progress

In July 2017, several progressive organizations, including Our Revolution, Democratic Socialists of America, National Nurses United, Working Families Party, and Brand New Congress, announced a push to encourage House Democrats to sign on to a #PeoplesPlatform, which meant supporting "eight bills currently in the House of Representatives that will address the concerns of everyday Americans".[27] These eight bills and the topics they address are:

  1. Medicare for All: H.R. 676, the Medicare For All Act[28]
  2. Free College Tuition: H.R. 1880, the College for All Act of 2017[29]
  3. Worker Rights: H.R. 15, the Raise the Wage Act[30]
  4. Women's Rights: H.R. 771, the Equal Access to Abortion Coverage in Health Insurance (EACH Woman) Act of 2017[31]
  5. Voting Rights: H.R. 2840, the Automatic Voter Registration Act[32]
  6. Environmental Justice: H.R. 4114, the Environmental Justice Act of 2017[33]
  7. Criminal Justice and Immigrant Rights: H.R. 3227, the Justice Is Not for Sale Act of 2017[34]
  8. Taxing Wall Street: H.R. 1144, the Inclusive Prosperity Act[35]

Uygur's resignation

On December 22, 2017, it was announced that Uygur had resigned from the organization, after the revelation of previously deleted but archived controversial blog posts he had written.[36] The next day, Kulinski announced that he had stepped down from the organization as he disagreed with staff members who pressed for Uygur's dismissal. He said his decision came as a result of a personal dilemma as he saw the posts in question upon rereading them as satirical. Kulinski noted that the decision to ask for Uygur's resignation came from Justice Democrat staff, not the candidates, and asked his supporters to continue backing the organization's candidates.[37]

In mid-November 2019, Uygur filed to run for Congress in California's 25th district, a seat recently vacated by the resignation of Katie Hill.[38][39][40] Uygur stated he would not run as a member of the Justice Democrats.

Ideology and political issues

A central priority of Justice Democrats is to effectively eliminate the role of money and conflicts of interests in politics. As such, any candidate running with Justice Democrats must pledge to refuse donations from corporate PACs and lobbyists.[41] Declining money from corporate PACs and supporting Medicare for All have both been described as litmus tests for the organization.[42] Justice Democrats supports publicly funded elections, banning Super PACs, and banning private donations to politicians and campaigns. It also advocates for the reinstatement of provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and a ban on gerrymandering for partisan gain. Several members have voiced support for a constitutional amendment to remove money from American politics.[43]

To accompany its launch, Kulinski and Uygur published the following set of progressive founding principles for the coalition.[44] Adjustments have been made since 2017, resulting in a slightly different platform appearing on the Justice Democrats webpage at a given time.[45]

Members

Justice Democrats in the 118th United States Congress

All Congressional Justice Democrats members are House of Representatives members from the Democratic Party. As of the 118th Congress, there are 12 declared Justice Democrats, all of whom are House members.[47]

United States House of Representatives

Current (12)

NameStateDistrictTenure
Raúl Grijalva  ArizonaAZ–7, AZ–3since 2003[n 1]
Ro Khanna  CaliforniaCA–17since 2017
Pramila Jayapal  WashingtonWA–7since 2017[n 2]
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez  New YorkNY-14since 2019
Ilhan Omar  MinnesotaMN–5since 2019
Ayanna Pressley  MassachusettsMA–7since 2019
Rashida Tlaib  MichiganMI-13, MI-12since 2019
Jamaal Bowman  New YorkNY-16since 2021
Cori Bush  MissouriMO-1since 2021
Greg Casar  TexasTX–35since 2023
Summer Lee  PennsylvaniaPA–12since 2023
Delia Ramirez  IllinoisIL–3since 2023[n 3]

Former (1)

NameStateDistrictTenure
Marie Newman  IllinoisIL–32021–2023

[47]

Announcements

Political activity

2018

Justice Democrats officially endorsed 79 candidates in the 2018 election cycle, seven of whom won general elections (three were incumbents).[50] The four first-time officeholders in the U.S. House make up "The Squad".

Governor

CandidateStateOfficePrimary datePrimary result%General result%
Ben Jealous MarylandGovernor of MarylandJune 26, 2018Won39.8%Lost43.5%
Abdul El-Sayed MichiganGovernor of MichiganAugust 7, 2018Lost30.2%Did not qualifyN/A
Cynthia Nixon New YorkGovernor of New YorkSeptember 13, 2018Lost34.4%Withdrew[n 4]N/A
Matt Brown Rhode IslandGovernor of Rhode IslandSeptember 12, 2018Lost34.3%Did not qualifyN/A
Christine Hallquist VermontGovernor of VermontAugust 14, 2018Won48.4%Lost40.4%

Lieutenant governor

CandidateStateOfficePrimary datePrimary result%General result%
Aaron Regunberg Rhode IslandLieutenant Governor of Rhode IslandSeptember 12, 2018Lost49.2%Did not qualifyN/A

U.S. Senate

CandidateStateOfficePrimary datePrimary result%General result%
Deedra Abboud ArizonaU.S. Senator from ArizonaAugust 28, 2018Lost19.5%Did not qualifyN/A
Alison Hartson CaliforniaU.S. Senator from CaliforniaJune 5, 2018Lost2.1%Did not qualifyN/A
Kerri Evelyn Harris DelawareU.S. Senator from DelawareSeptember 6, 2018Lost35.4%Did not qualifyN/A
Paula Jean Swearengin West VirginiaU.S. Senator from West VirginiaMay 8, 2018Lost30.3%Did not qualifyN/A

U.S. House

CandidateStateOfficePrimary datePrimary result%General result%
Mary Matiella ArizonaArizona's 2nd congressional districtAugust 28, 2018Lost9.1%Did not qualifyN/A
Raúl Grijalva (inc.) ArizonaArizona's 3rd congressional districtAugust 28, 2018Won[n 5]100%Won63.39%
Brianna Westbrook ArizonaArizona's 8th congressional districtFebruary 27, 2018[n 6]Lost40.4%Did not qualifyN/A
August 28, 2018Withdrew[n 7]N/ADid not qualifyN/A
Audrey Denney California[n 8]California's 1st congressional districtJune 5, 2018Advanced17.5%Lost43.2%
Roza Calderon California[n 8]California's 4th congressional districtJune 5, 2018Lost6.2%Did not qualifyN/A
Dotty Nygard California[n 8]California's 10th congressional districtJune 5, 2018Withdrew0.9%Did not qualifyN/A
Ro Khanna (inc.) California[n 8]California's 17th congressional districtJune 5, 2018Advanced59.1%Won73.2%
Bryan Caforio California[n 8]California's 25th congressional districtJune 5, 2018Lost18.3%Did not qualifyN/A
Laura Oatman California[n 8]California's 48th congressional districtJune 5, 2018Withdrew1.4%Did not qualifyN/A
Doug Applegate California[n 8]California's 49th congressional districtJune 5, 2018Lost13.2%Did not qualifyN/A
Ammar Campa-Najjar California[n 8]California's 50th congressional districtJune 5, 2018Advanced16.3%Lost48.3%
Saira Rao ColoradoColorado's 1st congressional districtJune 26, 2018Lost29.1%Did not qualifyN/A
Stephany Rose Spaulding ColoradoColorado's 5th congressional districtJune 26, 2018Won[n 5]100%Lost39.3%
Chardo Richardson FloridaFlorida's 7th congressional districtAugust 28, 2018Lost13.8%Did not qualifyN/A
Sanjay Patel FloridaFlorida's 8th congressional districtAugust 28, 2018Won[n 5]100%Lost39.5%
Pam Keith FloridaFlorida's 18th congressional districtAugust 28, 2018Lost39.7%Did not qualifyN/A
Michael Hepburn FloridaFlorida's 27th congressional districtAugust 28, 2018Lost6.1%Did not qualifyN/A
Lisa Ring GeorgiaGeorgia's 1st congressional districtMay 22, 2018Won67.6%Lost42.2%
Kaniela Ing HawaiiHawaii's 1st congressional districtAugust 11, 2018Lost6.4%Did not qualifyN/A
Marie Newman IllinoisIllinois's 3rd congressional districtMarch 20, 2018Lost48.8%Did not qualifyN/A
Sameena Mustafa IllinoisIllinois's 5th congressional districtAugust 11, 2018Lost23.9%Did not qualifyN/A
Anthony Clark IllinoisIllinois's 7th congressional districtMarch 20, 2018Lost26.1%Did not qualifyN/A
David Gill IllinoisIllinois's 13th congressional districtMarch 20, 2018Lost14.4%Did not qualifyN/A
Dan Canon IndianaIndiana's 9th congressional districtMay 8, 2018Lost30.7%Did not qualifyN/A
Courtney Rowe IowaIowa's 1st congressional districtJune 5, 2018Lost7.5%Did not qualifyN/A
Pete D'Allesandro IowaIowa's 3rd congressional districtMay 8, 2018Lost15.6%Did not qualifyN/A
Brent Welder KansasKansas's 3rd congressional districtAugust 7, 2018Lost33.9%Did not qualifyN/A
James Thompson KansasKansas's 4th congressional districtAugust 7, 2018Won65.3%Lost40.2%
Roger Manno MarylandMaryland's 6th congressional districtJune 26, 2018Lost10.2%Did not qualifyN/A
Juana Matias MassachusettsMassachusetts's 3rd congressional districtSeptember 4, 2018Lost15.2%Did not qualifyN/A
Ayanna Pressley MassachusettsMassachusetts's 7th congressional districtSeptember 4, 2018Won58.6%Won98.2%[n 5]
Matt Morgan MichiganMichigan's 1st congressional districtAugust 7, 2018Won[n 5][n 9]100%Lost43.7%
Rob Davidson MichiganMichigan's 2nd congressional districtAugust 7, 2018Won[n 5]100%Lost43.0%
David Benac MichiganMichigan's 6th congressional districtAugust 7, 2018Lost21.3%Did not qualifyN/A
Fayrouz Saad MichiganMichigan's 11th congressional districtAugust 7, 2018Lost19.4%Did not qualifyN/A
Rashida Tlaib MichiganMichigan's 13th congressional districtAugust 7, 2018[n 10]Lost35.9%Did not qualifyN/A
August 7, 2018Won31.2%Won84.6%
Ilhan Omar MinnesotaMinnesota's 5th congressional districtAugust 14, 2018Won48.4%Won78.2%
Cori Bush MissouriMissouri's 1st congressional districtAugust 7, 2018Lost36.9%Did not qualifyN/A
Jamie Schoolcraft MissouriMissouri's 7th congressional districtAugust 7, 2018Won40.6%Lost30.0%
John Heenan MontanaMontana's at-large congressional districtJune 5, 2018Lost31.7%Did not qualifyN/A
Kara H. Eastman NebraskaNebraska's 2nd congressional districtMay 15, 2018Won51.4%Lost49.0%
Amy Vilela NevadaNevada's 4th congressional districtJune 12, 2018Lost9.2%Did not qualifyN/A
Tanzie Youngblood New JerseyNew Jersey's 2nd congressional districtJune 5, 2018Lost19.2%Did not qualifyN/A
Peter Jacob New JerseyNew Jersey's 7th congressional districtJune 5, 2018Lost19.1%Did not qualifyN/A
Antoinette Sedillo Lopez New MexicoNew Mexico's 1st congressional districtJune 5, 2018Lost20.6%Did not qualifyN/A
Michael DeVito New YorkNew York's 11th congressional districtJune 26, 2018Lost19.0%Did not qualifyN/A
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez New YorkNew York's 14th congressional districtJune 26, 2018Won57.5%Won78.2%
Jeff Beals New YorkNew York's 19th congressional districtJune 26, 2018Lost13.2%Did not qualifyN/A
Patrick Nelson New YorkNew York's 21st congressional districtJune 26, 2018Lost9.2%Did not qualifyN/A
Ian Golden New YorkNew York's 23rd congressional districtJune 26, 2018Lost13.5%Did not qualifyN/A
Jenny Marshall North CarolinaNorth Carolina's 5th congressional districtMay 8, 2018Lost45.6%Did not qualifyN/A
John Russell OhioOhio's 12th congressional districtMay 8, 2018[n 11]Lost16.7%Did not qualifyN/A
May 8, 2018Lost16.3%Did not qualifyN/A
Greg Edwards PennsylvaniaPennsylvania's 7th congressional districtMay 15, 2018Lost25.6%Did not qualifyN/A
Jess King PennsylvaniaPennsylvania's 11th congressional districtMay 15, 2018Won[n 5]100%Lost41.4%
J. Darnell Jones Texas[n 12]Texas's 2nd congressional districtMarch 6, 2018
First round
Lost22.1%Did not qualifyN/A
Lorie Burch Texas[n 12]Texas's 3rd congressional districtMarch 6, 2018
First round
Advanced49.6%RunoffN/A
May 22, 2018
Runoff
Won75.0%Lost44.2%
Laura Moser Texas[n 12]Texas's 7th congressional districtMarch 6, 2018
First round
Advanced24.4%RunoffN/A
May 22, 2018
Runoff
Lost32.1%Did not qualifyN/A
Vanessa Adia Texas[n 12]Texas's 12th congressional districtMarch 6, 2018Won[n 5]100%Lost33.9%
Adrienne Bell Texas[n 12]Texas's 14th congressional districtMarch 6, 2018Won79.8%Lost39.2%
Derrick Crowe Texas[n 12]Texas's 21st congressional districtMarch 6, 2018
First round
Lost23.1%Did not qualifyN/A
Mary Wilson Texas[n 12]Texas's 21st congressional districtMarch 6, 2018
First round
Advanced30.9%RunoffN/A
May 22, 2018
Runoff
Lost42.1%Did not qualifyN/A
Rick Treviño Texas[n 12]Texas's 23rd congressional districtMarch 6, 2018
First round
Advanced17.5%RunoffN/A
March 6, 2018
Runoff
Lost33.2%Did not qualifyN/A
Linsey Fagan Texas[n 12]Texas's 26th congressional districtMarch 6, 2018Won52.7%Lost39.0%
Darlene McDonald UtahUtah's 4th congressional districtJune 26, 2018Eliminated[n 13]N/ADid not qualifyN/A
Dorothy Gasque Washington[n 8]Washington's 3rd congressional districtAugust 7, 2018Lost4.9%Did not qualifyN/A
Pramila Jayapal (inc.) Washington[n 8]Washington's 7th congressional districtAugust 7, 2018Advanced82.7%Won83.4%
Sarah Smith Washington[n 8]Washington's 9th congressional districtAugust 7, 2018Advanced26.9%Lost32.1%
Randy Bryce WisconsinWisconsin's 1st congressional districtAugust 14, 2018Won59.6%Lost42.3%

2020

Justice Democrats endorsed 17 candidates in the Democratic primaries for president, Senate and House. Twelve House candidates made it to the general election (7 incumbents, 5 newcomers). All the incumbents and three newcomers won.

U.S. President

CandidateOfficePrimariesPrimary result%General result%
Bernie SandersPresident of the United States2020 Democratic Party presidential primariesWithdrew27%Did not qualifyN/A

U.S. Senate

CandidateStateOfficePrimary datePrimary result%General result%
Betsy Sweet MaineU.S. Senator from MaineJuly 14, 2020Lost23.2%Did not qualifyN/A

U.S. House

CandidateStateOfficePrimary datePrimary result%General result%
Raúl Grijalva (inc.) ArizonaArizona's 3rd congressional districtAugust 4, 2020Won[n 5]100%Won64.6%
Ro Khanna (inc.) California[n 8]California's 17th congressional districtMarch 3, 2020Advanced65.3%Won71.3%
Georgette Gómez California[n 8]California's 53rd congressional districtMarch 3, 2020Advanced20%Lost40.5%
Marie Newman IllinoisIllinois's 3rd congressional districtMarch 17, 2020Won47.3%Won56.4%
Alex Morse MassachusettsMassachusetts's 1st congressional districtSeptember 1, 2020Lost41.2%Did not qualifyN/A
Ayanna Pressley (inc.) MassachusettsMassachusetts's 7th congressional districtSeptember 1, 2020Won[n 5]100%Won86.6%
Rashida Tlaib (inc.) MichiganMichigan's 13th congressional districtAugust 4, 2020Won66.3%Won78.1%
Ilhan Omar (inc.) MinnesotaMinnesota's 5th congressional districtAugust 11, 2020Won57.4%Won64.5%
Cori Bush MissouriMissouri's 1st congressional districtAugust 4, 2020Won48.6%Won78.9%
Kara Eastman NebraskaNebraska's 2nd congressional districtMay 12, 2020Won61.8%Lost46.2%
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (inc.) New YorkNew York's 14th congressional districtJune 23, 2020Won72.6%Won71.6%
Jamaal Bowman New YorkNew York's 16th congressional districtJune 23, 2020Won55.5%Won84.0%
Morgan Harper OhioOhio's 3rd congressional districtApril 28, 2020Lost31.7%Did not qualifyN/A
Jessica Cisneros Texas[n 12]Texas's 28th congressional districtMarch 3, 2020Lost48.2%Did not qualifyN/A
Pramila Jayapal (inc.) Washington[n 8]Washington's 7th congressional districtAugust 4, 2020Advanced80.3%Won83.0%

2021

U.S. House

CandidateStateOfficePrimary datePrimary result%General result%
Nina Turner OhioOhio's 11th congressional districtAugust 3, 2021[n 14]Lost44.5%Did not qualifyN/A

2022

Justice Democrats endorsed 10 incumbents and 6 newcomers. All but one incumbent won, as did two newcomers.

U.S. House

CandidateStateOfficePrimary datePrimary result%General result%
Raúl Grijalva (inc.) ArizonaArizona's 7th congressional district[n 15]August 2, 2022Won[n 5]100%Won64.5%
Ro Khanna (inc.) California[n 8]California's 17th congressional districtJune 7, 2022Advanced66.0%Won70.9%
Marie Newman (inc.) IllinoisIllinois's 6th congressional district[n 16]June 28, 2022Lost29.2%Did not qualifyN/A
Kina Collins IllinoisIllinois's 7th congressional districtJune 28, 2022[53]Lost45.7%Did not qualifyN/A
Ayanna Pressley (inc.) MassachusettsMassachusetts's 7th congressional districtSeptember 6, 2022Won[n 5]100%Won84.5%
Rashida Tlaib (inc.) MichiganMichigan's 12th congressional district[n 17]August 2, 2022Won63.8%Won70.8%
Ilhan Omar (inc.) MinnesotaMinnesota's 5th congressional districtAugust 9, 2022Won50.3%Won74.3%
Cori Bush (inc.) MissouriMissouri's 1st congressional districtAugust 2, 2022Won69.5%Won72.8%
Rana Abdelhamid New YorkNew York's 12th congressional districtAugust 23, 2022[54]WithdrewN/ADid not qualifyN/A
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (inc.) New YorkNew York's 14th congressional districtAugust 23, 2022Won[n 5]100%Won67.2%
Jamaal Bowman (inc.) New YorkNew York's 16th congressional districtAugust 23, 2022Won57.1%Won60.2%
Summer Lee PennsylvaniaPennsylvania's 12th congressional district[n 18]May 17, 2022[55]Won41.9%Won55.9%
Odessa Kelly TennesseeTennessee's 7th congressional district[n 19]August 4, 2022[56]Won[n 5]100%Lost38.1%
Jessica Cisneros Texas[n 12]Texas's 28th congressional districtMarch 1, 2022[57]
First round
Advanced46.8%RunoffN/A
May 24, 2022
Runoff
Lost49.7%Did not qualifyN/A
Greg Casar Texas[n 12]Texas's 35th congressional districtMarch 1, 2022Won61.2%Won72.6%
Pramila Jayapal (inc.) Washington[n 8]Washington's 7th congressional districtAugust 2, 2022Advanced84.2%Won85.4%

2024

Justice Democrats has endorsed 12 incumbents.

U.S. House

CandidateStateOfficePrimary datePrimary result%General result%
Raúl Grijalva (inc.) ArizonaArizona's 7th congressional districtAugust 6, 2024PendingPendingPendingPending
Ro Khanna (inc.) California[n 8]California's 17th congressional districtMarch 5, 2024Advanced62.9%PendingPending
Delia Ramirez (inc.) IllinoisIllinois's 3rd congressional districtMarch 19, 2024Won[n 5]100%PendingPending
Ayanna Pressley (inc.) MassachusettsMassachusetts's 7th congressional districtSeptember 3, 2024PendingPendingPendingPending
Rashida Tlaib (inc.) MichiganMichigan's 12th congressional districtAugust 6, 2024PendingPendingPendingPending
Ilhan Omar (inc.) MinnesotaMinnesota's 5th congressional districtAugust 13, 2024PendingPendingPendingPending
Cori Bush (inc.) MissouriMissouri's 1st congressional districtAugust 6, 2024PendingPendingPendingPending
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (inc.) New YorkNew York's 14th congressional districtJune 25, 2024Won82.1%PendingPending
Jamaal Bowman (inc.) New YorkNew York's 16th congressional districtJune 25, 2024Lost41.4%Did not qualifyN/A
Summer Lee (inc.) PennsylvaniaPennsylvania's 12th congressional districtApril 23, 2024Won60.6%PendingPending
Greg Casar (inc.) Texas[n 12]Texas's 35th congressional districtMarch 5, 2024Won[n 5]100%PendingPending
Pramila Jayapal (inc.) Washington[n 8]Washington's 7th congressional districtAugust 6, 2024PendingPendingPendingPending

Notes

See also

References