Democratic Mayor Who Lost His Primary To A Socialist Is On Track To Win The Election As A Write-In
'You can't ever count a Buffalonian out'
Despite a litany of endorsements from a number of high-profile progressive lawmakers — including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) — socialist candidate India Walton appears to have been defeated in her bid for Buffalo mayor.
Longtime Democratic Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown declared victory Tuesday night over the upstart socialist candidate, as early returns appeared to show the incumbent outpacing Walton by a sizable margin.
Walton, a community activist and former nurse, made national headlines only months earlier when she took down Brown in a shocking victory in the Democratic primary race for mayor.
In response to the primary loss, Brown launched one of the most ambitious write-in campaigns in recent memory. It seems to have been successful.
As of Wednesday morning, the vote tally showed write-ins garnering 59% of the vote to Walton's 41% with an estimated 68% of the vote reported, according to the New York Times election tracker.
Though it can't be officially confirmed that those write-ins are for Brown, it is the obvious expectation that a large majority of them contain Brown's name, Buffalo News reported.
Should his victory be confirmed in the coming days, Brown will have made history by becoming the only mayor to be elected to five terms in Buffalo. Had Walton won, she would have become the first socialist mayor of a major U.S. city.
If nothing else, Walton's defeat is a sign that progressive socialist politics are still not especially palatable to American voters — even to those from a heavily Democratic area. The city of Buffalo consistently votes Democratic, though the surrounding towns and villages that make up Erie County often vote Republican.
Brown made Walton's radical politics a central point of his write-in campaign, calling the election a referendum on socialist politics. He repeated the refrain again on Tuesday.
"Today's election was not just a referendum on the City of Buffalo. It was a referendum on the future of our democracy," he told supporters during his victory speech.
Walton, once considered the presumptive mayor, had big plans to overhaul the city's politics and policing.
According to Mother Jones, in her first 100 days, she planned "to sign a tenant's bill of rights that would install a tenant advocate and institute rent control. She wants to remove police from responding to most mental health calls. She plans to declare Buffalo a sanctuary city."
In a speech to supporters Tuesday night, Walton declined to concede but acknowledged the numbers weren't in her favor.
India B. Walton — a self-identified socialist and community activist who was practically unknown just months ago — claimed victory in Tuesday's Democratic mayoral primary in Buffalo, New York, the Buffalo News reported.
Walton shocked four-term incumbent Byron W. Brown in what the paper said many called "the most historic upset in the city's political history."
When reporters on Tuesday asked Walton if she considers herself a socialist, the News said she replied, "Oh, absolutely. The entire intent of this campaign is to draw down power and resources to the ground level and into the hands of the people."
Walton added to supporters at a victory gathering, "We set out not only to change Buffalo but to change the way progressive politics are run. ... Today is only the beginning. This is about building the infrastructure to challenge every damn seat. I'm talking about committee seats, school board, Common Council. All we are doing in this moment is claiming what is rightfully ours," the paper said.
Mother Jones noted that Walton, a former nurse, "looks to Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) as a role model."
Bush, as readers of TheBlaze already know, is a radical leftist who wants reparations, supports defunding police, praised a Black Lives Matter activist who called for the death of cops, and recently accused Israel of "ethnic cleansing" and acting as an "apartheid" state.
More from Mother Jones on Walton's plans:
In her first 100 days, Walton has promised to sign a tenant's bill of rights that would install a tenant advocate and institute rent control. She wants to remove police from responding to most mental health calls. She plans to declare Buffalo a sanctuary city. She would be the first woman to be Buffalo's mayor. While there are other radical mayors in the United States, Walton would be the only socialist mayor in a major city.
The Buffalo News said Walton, 38, was leading Brown by a big margin late Tuesday; Brown didn't immediately concede, however, noting he's waiting for absentee ballots to come in.
Walton's volunteers made 19,000 calls Monday night and contacted "every Democratic primary voter in Buffalo with a phone number in the voter file," campaign spokesman Seamus Gallivan told the paper.
India Walton poised to become next mayor of Buffaloyoutu.be