Jeffries Losing Support, Dozens of Dems Won’t Commit To Backing Him

Dozens of Democratic candidates running for U.S. House seats nationwide told Axios they either would not support House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) for party leader or were not prepared to commit to voting for him.

The responses suggest growing unease within some parts of the Democratic Party about its current leadership as the 2026 election cycle approaches, the outlet reported this week.

Since assuming the role of Democratic leader in 2022, Hakeem Jeffries has maintained unanimous support within his caucus. That unity, however, may be tested in the next Congress amid rising frustration from grassroots activists, particularly on the party’s left flank.

While Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) has drawn much of the criticism from progressive circles this year, Jeffries is increasingly becoming a focal point of dissatisfaction as well, Axios noted.

Axios contacted nearly every Democrat running for a U.S. House seat considered potentially winnable for the party in 2026, receiving responses from 113 candidates through phone interviews or written statements.

Of those surveyed, 20 said they would not vote for Hakeem Jeffries as speaker or minority leader, while another five indicated they were likely to oppose him. Fifty-seven candidates declined to commit to supporting Jeffries, describing it as too early to decide or citing concerns over ideology, strategy, messaging, or leadership style.

Only 24 respondents said they would definitely back Jeffries, and seven more said they were likely to do so, the outlet said.

However, his office pushed back on the narrative that he’s lost support.

“Leader Jeffries is focused on battling Donald Trump, ending the Republican shutdown of the federal government and addressing the crushing GOP health care crisis,” Jeffries spokesperson Justin Chermol told Axios.

Many of the Democrats expressing skepticism toward Hakeem Jeffries are political outsiders or long-shot candidates, while several front-runners in key battleground races declined to respond to Axios’ inquiries. Still, a number of Jeffries’ critics and noncommittal candidates have credible paths to winning seats in Congress.

Among them are Daniel Biss and Kat Abughazaleh, two leading contenders in the Democratic primary to replace retiring Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.), both of whom stopped short of pledging to support Jeffries.

Other prominent challengers — including Luke Bronin, Donavan McKinney, Mai Vang, Saikat Chakrabarti, and Patrick Roath — have also withheld their support. Each is running well-funded campaigns aimed at unseating long-serving Democratic incumbents.

Heath Howard, a New Hampshire state representative running for an open U.S. House seat, told Axios regarding the Democratic leader: “I think we need to have a new type of leadership that’s … going to fight back significantly harder against the Trump administration.”

Abughazaleh, meanwhile, told Axios she will support a leader who is “taking actual action against this administration” and that the left should use “our leverage to demand progressive change.”

“We’ve got to see improvement, without question,” Amanda Edwards, who was a member of the Houston city council and is now running in a Texas special election, told the outlet.

Harry Jarin, a firefighter mounting a primary challenge to former House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.), told Axios: “The anger of the base right now is not being matched by Democratic leadership … and that is going to have to change one way or another.”

A recurring theme among candidates who declined to back Jeffries was his refusal to endorse socialist New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani — a decision that has also become a source of frustration among left-wing members of Congress.

“His refusal to endorse Zohran makes me nervous that, if I were to become the nominee in my race, he and the party would not support me,” noted Jacob Lawrence, who is set to challenged Rep. Chuck Edwards (R-N.C.).

Chakrabarti, when asked whether he would support for Jeffries, quipped: “What is it that Hakeem said about endorsing Zohran? ‘I’ll have conversations with him and see where it goes.’”

Related Posts

A Surprise Call After Divorce Changed Everything in a Hospital Room

I never expected to hear Ethan’s voice again. Yet there I was, lying in a quiet hospital room, my newborn daughter sleeping peacefully beside me, when my…

The Airline’s Bold Response After a Mother Defended Her Son’s Behavior Toward a Young Black Passenger

The trouble began shortly after takeoff when Amara, a 22-year-old student heading home to Chicago, felt a series of sharp kicks against the back of her seat….

My Neighbor Refused to Pay My 73-Year-Old Mother for Babysitting, Saying She Was ‘Just Sitting at Home Anyway’ – So I Stepped In

I always thought my mother’s quiet routines were invisible to the world. She’s 73 and still wakes up every morning at six, just like she did when…

At my daughter’s baby shower, my in-law proudly prepared her a special “family recipe” milk.

The room was frozen in shock, the air thick with tension and disbelief. Emily’s eyes were wide with horror as she took in Barnaby’s convulsing form on…

“Sir, You Can’t Bring Animals in Here!” — The ER Fell Silent As a Bloodied Military Dog Walked In Carrying a Dying Child, What We Found on Her Wrist Changed Everything

I had worked as an emergency physician at Saint Raphael Medical Center in Milwaukee for almost eight years—long enough to think I’d reached my limit for shock,…

Humble Potato, Hidden Power

It starts with a crack. Steam rises like a secret finally spoken, and for a second, the world shrinks to a single plate. No garnish, no spectacle—just…