2020
ELECTIONS
Progressive challenger Cori Bush beats Rep. Lacy
Clay in primary
Bush had the support of Bernie Sanders and other
liberal activists.
By ALLY
MUTNICK
08/05/2020
12:22 AM EDT
Updated:
08/05/2020 01:02 AM EDT
Liberal
challenger Cori Bush defeated Rep. Lacy Clay (D-Mo.) in a primary for his St.
Louis-based House seat on Tuesday — a huge win for the left and a seismic loss
for the Congressional Black Caucus, which has tried to snuff out challenges
from younger candidates.
Bush’s
victory came two years after her first challenge to Clay, which the incumbent
won by 20 percentage points. But this cycle, Bush’s campaign was better funded
and had more outside help from a wide array of surrogates including Sen. Bernie
Sanders (I-Vt.) and the Justice Democrats, the group that helped elect Rep. Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.).
She led
Clay by more than 4,600 votes when The Associated Press called the race late
Tuesday night.
For the
left, the outcome is proof that they could translate the momentum from their
wins earlier this month in the New York primaries into a victory in the
heartland of the country. But it will also further intensify the feud between
liberals and CBC leaders, who have forcefully decried challenges against their
members.
The Black
Caucus had successfully defended two other incumbents from progressive
opponents earlier this year: Reps. Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio) and Yvette Clarke
(D-N.Y.). CBC members rallied around Clay, hoping to use this primary as
another chance to ward off future challenges.
But Bush,
who participated in the 2014 protests in Ferguson, Mo., after the police
shooting of an unarmed black man, made her activism the centerpiece of her 2020
campaign.
"We've
been called radicals, terrorists. We've been dismissed as an impossible fringe
movement," she said during a victory speech Tuesday night. "But now
we are a multi-racial, multi-ethnic, multi-generational, multi-faith mass
movement united in demanding change, in demanding accountability, in demanding
that our police, our government, our country recognize that Black lives do
indeed matter."
Clay is the
seventh incumbent to fall in the 2020 cycle — and the second one on Tuesday
after Rep. Steve Watkins (R-Kan.) got trounced by his GOP challenger. Bush's
win represents the end of an era; The Clay family has held Missouri's 1st
District since 1969. Clay was first elected in 2000, succeeding his father,
former Rep. Bill Clay (D-Mo.), a co-founder of the Black Caucus.
Bush rode a
wave of progressive enthusiasm generated by wins in the New York primaries
where Jamaal Bowman, a middle-school principal backed by Justice Democrats,
ousted House Foreign Affairs Chairman Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.), and two other
progressives won open seats in the city and its suburbs.
Bowman
endorsed Bush, who said in a pre-primary interview that she saw a surge in
donations and volunteer interest after those wins that helped her in the final
weeks.
“Cori is
the fifth challenger backed by Justice Democrats to unseat an incumbent. She
organized a movement through pepper spray and rioting police in the streets of
Ferguson,” said Alex Rojas, group’s executive director in a statement. “Her
tenacity and unbreakable pursuit of justice is desperately needed in Congress
today.”
Clay took
the threat seriously, dropping negative mailers and running a TV ad that
excoriated Bush for taking a $22,000 salary from her campaign in the second
quarter. And he outraised Bush $744,000 to her $570,000, by mid-July.
But the
incumbent was outspent on TV by Bush and her allies by at least $250,000.
Justice Democrats and a new group, Fight Corporate Monopolies, aired TV ads on
her behalf.
And Bush
had also seen her profile rise since she first ran in 2018. She served as a
surrogate for Sanders’ 2020 campaign and was featured in the Netflix
documentary “Bringing Down the House” with now-Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez —
both of which raised her name ID. Sanders himself fundraised for her and joined
livestream events with her campaign.
Ocasio-Cortez
is a personal friend of Bush who endorsed and campaigned with her in St. Louis
in 2018. But Ocasio-Cortez, who serves on a committee with Clay, declined to
endorse Bush this time, a sign of the fraught politics surrounding challenges
of sitting incumbents.
Bush’s win
comes at the end of the 2020 primary season, but it is sure to rattle the Black
Caucus leaders ahead of the 2022 cycle, when House races will be run under
redistricted congressional lines.
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