This Progressive Group Was Declared Dead Last Year. It Racked Up Wins on Tuesday.
Briefly

This Progressive Group Was Declared Dead Last Year. It Racked Up Wins on Tuesday.
"Tuesday was a banner day for progressive prosecutors. Philadelphia's Larry Krasner was elected to a third term, defeating Patrick Dugan. Krasner had already bested Dugan by 30 points in May's Democratic primary. Dugan secured the Republican nomination as a write-in candidate, rendering the general election a rematch of the primary. But Krasner's victory was even more resounding the second time around-he beat Dugan by nearly 50 points."
"Krasner was not the only progressive prosecutor to win reelection this week. Stephanie Morales, of Portsmouth, Virginia, also secured a third term, receiving more than twice as many votes as either of her two challengers. In New York, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg was elected to a second term. He won more than 70 percent of the vote, beating two challengers."
"These results stand in stark contrast to a narrative that circulated last fall. In 2024, two high-profile progressive incumbents, Los Angeles' George Gascon and Portland's Mike Schmidt, lost to more-moderate challengers. News accounts of these elections proclaimed that the losses were a " significant setback" for the progressive prosecutor movement, evidence that the push is " under siege," and even signaled its end."
Progressive prosecutors won multiple decisive election victories across the country, including Larry Krasner's commanding third-term win in Philadelphia and Stephanie Morales's third term in Portsmouth, Virginia. Manhattan's Alvin Bragg secured a second term with over 70 percent of the vote, and Brooklyn's Eric Gonzalez faced no challengers for reelection. These outcomes contrast with high-profile 2024 losses by George Gascon and Mike Schmidt and the 2022 recall of Chesa Boudin. Postpandemic crime concerns had been credited with a backlash against reform, but recent electoral results undermine the notion of a widespread collapse of the progressive prosecutor movement.
Read at Slate Magazine
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