The Campaign That Wasn't
The several Antonio Delgados
There is no easier task in my vocation than writing a postmortem. Politics is kind to the coroner. The dead cannot object, the living have no incentive to, and the afterlife of failure tends to flatten into a smooth, always obvious story. Though the dust has settled, there remains much to discuss.
Delgado’s campaign, on face, came in a long tradition of left-wing challenges to the sitting governor. It began in 2014 with Zephyr Teachout’s challenge to Andrew Cuomo, continued in 2018 with Cynthia Nixon’s, then after Cuomo was driven from office in disgrace, in Jumaane Williams’ 2022 campaign. By then, the art seemed to reach its apex: a citywide elected who, four years earlier, had nearly dethroned Hochul in the lieutenant governor’s primary and now faced her again after her accidental ascent to the governorship. Yet on primary day, that lineage reached its electoral nadir.
The theory behind these campaigns was never only that the challenger would become governor. They operated on a savvier premise: in the Left’s telling, that a Democratic governor in New York, sedated by money, incumbency, and the pompous fatalism inherent in Albany politics, could only be forced left by a challenge that made their continued rule look fraught. These campaigns need not win outright to matter. They were to pulse-check the Left and force concessions in the state budget: progressive taxation, increased social spending, or whatever else could be pried from an executive who only negotiated with the Left after being reminded of its existence.
From the beginning, Delgado was an unusual inheritor of this history. A Rhodes Scholar turned socially conscious rapper turned corporate lawyer turned centrist Hudson Valley congressman turned lieutenant to the very governor he now sought to unseat: a pol whose biography is a story of political compromises made several times over.
Hochul had chosen Delgado in the chaos after Brian Benjamin’s indictment, installing the congressman as both lieutenant governor and running mate five weeks before the primary after an eleventh-hour change in state law cleared the way to remove Benjamin from the ballot. The appointment was meant to steady the ticket. Instead, it immediately dropped him into a knife fight over the role of the office itself. Ana María Archila, his main opponent, had been endorsed by the Working Families Party and a long list of high-profile progressive elected officials. “In order to be an independent lieutenant governor, you have to earn that role through an election, not an appointment,” she said after Delgado’s selection. Delgado scrambled to organize events downstate, then won his first statewide campaign as the very thing a left challenge had been directed against.
Three years later, Delgado would ask the same political ecosystem to understand him as the left challenge itself.
Delgado, as it turns out, was not satisfied by the procedure and ribbon-cutting typical of Albany’s number two. The lieutenant governorship is an office designed for ritualized agreement: stand behind the governor, praise the governor, wait for the governor, and occasionally speak from a new infrastructure project with sufficient enthusiasm for the governor. Delgado however began to behave like a man testing the limits of his own chosen irrelevance.
Two weeks after President Biden’s disastrous debate performance, Delgado called on him to withdraw, ahead of Hochul. After Eric Adams’ charges were dismissed, he called on him to resign, again ahead of Hochul. After Zohran Mamdani’s victory in the Democratic primary for mayor, he endorsed him, and well— you get the point. These were not small breaks. Each time, Delgado seemed to be framing an implicit contrast. As the rift became more public, he announced he would not run again as her running mate, and Albany quietly changed state law to get rid of lieutenant governor primaries altogether.
On June 2, 2025, Antonio Delgado announced his challenge to Kathy Hochul. The question, then, was which Antonio Delgado was asking to inherit the left challenge tradition?
There was the Delgado of New York’s 19th, the upstate Rhodes Scholar with a rap CD and a Harvard Law degree, the 2018 wave frontliner whose political appeal depended on mobilizing liberals and weekenders without dissuading townies. That Delgado had real virtues. He was ambitious, obviously talented in rhetoric and tact alike, and he flipped a red seat blue. He was also, unmistakably, a politician of that world. This is the Delgado who in 2019 was keynote speaker at an Education Reform Now event in Boston while representing a district with zero charter schools.
Then there was the Delgado hand-picked in 2022: certainly not the Left’s candidate, but the governor’s chosen answer to the Left’s candidate. This Delgado existed to stabilize, to reassure, to make a ticket momentarily marred by scandal look competent and holistic. His later private ambitions and public disagreements aside, his statewide ascendance was wholly institutional.
Then there was the Delgado of the rift, the one marked depending on who you ask by bravery or ego. This was the most compelling Delgado the campaign had, but this Delgado was defined by negation. He was against Hochul’s caution, ahead of her on Biden and Adams and Mamdani. That made him undoubtedly independent; it did not yet make him ideological.
Finally, there was the Delgado that actually ran, perhaps the most confounding iteration of all. This Delgado announced clad in a logo that was WFP orange-and-purple and attempted to cultivate movement lettres de noblesse in the post-Mamdani age through endorsements and the pick of Buffalo DSA’s own India Walton as running mate. This Delgado was least settled, and most important of all.
The campaign asked voters to treat these Delgados as cumulative. In practice, they felt contradictory— a string of unresolved identities painted over each other.
It is too simplistic to characterize it all as cynical triangulation. The campaign’s problem was not that Delgado had changed. Politicians change. Voters, donors, and Alphabet Left organizations are all perfectly capable of accepting a conversion narrative if conveyed with enough force. The problem was that Delgado’s campaign never quite decided whether it was asking voters to believe in Delgado the left-populist convert, Delgado the risk-taking dissenter, or Delgado the more competent technocrat. Each theory of the case pointed a different direction.
A campaign can survive a complicated biography. It cannot survive a complicated ask.
Asked in City & State whether figures like WFP Co-executive Director Jasmine Gripper believed he could replicate Zohran Mamdani’s success, he did not exactly say yes and did not exactly say no. He described the now-Mayor’s campaign as a “proof of concept,” that voters had an appetite to move past politics as usual. On paper, this was a perfectly alright answer. But “proof of concept” is a very revealing phrase because it treats Mamdani’s victory as a one-to-one transferrable model. It implies a formula where if the inputs are copied— affordability rhetoric, a register of conviction, transformative policies— the volunteers will come.
This was precisely Delgado’s problem. Mamdani’s campaign has been flattened among the pundit class into a “proof of concept” for left-populist messaging in the United States. It was more specific than that; it was proof of Zohran Mamdani as the conduit for those politics: his biography, his affect, his organizing base, his years of ideological continuity, his ability to make affordability sound lived in and morally righteous rather than like consultant drivel. Delgado could repeat these terms. He could say concentrated wealth, affordability, corporate PACs, the establishment. He could even mean them. But he could not make the ask simple. Mamdani asked voters to believe that the politics and the person had always pointed in the same direction. Delgado asked them to believe that all his prior directions had somehow been pointing here.
In a speech in Schenectady shortly after announcing his campaign, Delgado reached for the grammar of movement politics. “I want to be clear: I am not just doing this; it’s not just me, it’s we,” he said. The echo of Bernie is unmistakable, and hardly accidental. “Not me. Us.” worked because Sanders’ “us” was not reducible to his campaign. It invoked something larger: the patchwork of existing forces that his campaign sought to unify, organize, and give electoral expression to. Delgado’s “we” never quite achieved that separation. It was self-referential to the campaign, pointed back towards a candidate asking to be understood as a vessel before it was clear what, exactly, he was a vessel for.
The campaign that followed was busy enough. Delgado held town halls around the state. He collected endorsements from scattered progressive 501(c)(4)s. He retweeted NYC-DSA a lot. He raised grassroots donations in a campaign finance landscape where, for the first time, a gubernatorial race could be plausibly shaped by public matching funds. He made the requisite arguments about affordability, taxing the rich, and corporate power. In February, he attempted the clearest version of his left-populist turn by selecting India Walton, the former Buffalo mayoral nominee and DSA member, as his running mate. Within a week, he would drop out.
Politics can at times move fast. On February 4, Delgado announced Walton. The next day, Mamdani endorsed Hochul. Two days later, the Working Families Party declined to endorse either Delgado or Hochul, preserving their ballot access through placeholder candidates rather than affirming Delgado’s insurgency. In three days, the campaign’s theory of consolidation proved untenable. The DSA running mate did not assure Mayor Mamdani’s alignment. The driving force of all three previous left challenges did not adopt his as their own. But why?
Hochul’s vulnerability has always been obvious in the abstract and slippery in practice. She is a western New Yorker in a state whose population is concentrated downstate. She inherited the governorship in scandal’s aftermath and survived a closer-than-comfortable general election. Her approval rating hovers near-even. Her political style is better suited to budget negotiations than a mass rally. She can look, from a distance, like exactly the kind of incumbent who invites a credible primary challenger.
Yet that is exactly the trap. There is a difference between an incumbent whose coalition is lukewarm and an incumbent whose coalition has actually come apart. Cuomo made for an incredible foil for the Left. Hochul is competent enough, standing up to Trump enough, and institutionally embedded enough to stave potential revolt. She has rendered herself acceptable to enough of organized labor, the donor class, and the legislature to remain firmly in place. When Letitia James announced her run for governor in 2021, she was seen in many plugged-in circles as the favorite. Facing lagging polls long before the primary, she opted to stay on as Attorney General.
A left challenge to Andrew Cuomo could define itself cleanly against arrogance, austerity, and the unapologetically visible machinery of domination. A left challenger to Kathy Hochul has a less cinematic task: to argue that moderate governance, relatively invisible to the median voter, is a crisis in and of itself.
Antonio Delgado failed to convince voters of that argument. But the failure was also that of a political form whose moment may have passed.
The left challenge to the governor emerged in the context of an Albany where the Left had little power. A primary was a crude but useful instrument: a way to make the governor recognize forces that could otherwise be ignored. That made sense under Cuomo, whose governing style depended on isolating and humiliating all things to his left.
Today, Hochul knows that she governs a different state. She knows because she must negotiate with legislators who owe their seats to the movement ecosystem. She knows because the politics of affordability now run through institutions the Left can consistently influence. She knows because the Mayor of New York City is no longer a Park Sloper or a corrupt embarrassment, but Zohran Mamdani, whose administration requires her constant engagement and whose coalition cannot be dismissed as a theatrical protest.
In that context, a campaign like Delgado’s risks feeling out of time. The Left no longer needs to ask whether Hochul can be pressured from the left. She can. It now should ask whether a primary challenge is still the most effective way to apply that pressure, or whether it has become a nostalgic reenactment of a period where the Left’s exclusion made the politics cleaner and more satisfying.
The core question has gone from how do we make the governor listen? to what should we do when the governor must listen, but does not have to obey?
Today’s is less romantic to ruminate on. It will not be resolved by a heroic tribune standing athwart1 Albany for the fourth time in a row. But it is the question that follows from success. The Left cannot keep acting as if it has no power because the power it has won is not total.
Antonio Delgado will leave office on January 1. I suspect we have not seen the last of him.
A regrettable family inheritance.


