The group behind Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s stunning 2018 victory in New York is wanting west for its subsequent battle.
Justice Democrats — the influential left-wing PAC identified for serving to Ocasio-Cortez and different progressives oust Democratic incumbents — is backing a major problem to Democrat Rep. Jimmy Gomez, a four-term congressman representing a staunchly Democratic Los Angeles district.
The group endorsed Angela Gonzales-Torres on Thursday, characterizing the 30-year-old Highland Park resident as a fighter prepared to tackle not simply the Trump administration, but in addition company pursuits within the Democratic institution. The group additionally cited the hundreds of thousands of {dollars} that the American Israel Public Affairs Committee spent in help of Gomez final cycle.
The highly effective pro-Israel foyer’s standing amongst Democrats has grow to be a flash level amid broader internecine battle within the Democratic Get together over Israel’s unrelenting struggle in Gaza.
Justice Democrats-backed candidates have been loud and early advocates for a ceasefire in Gaza, whereas AIPAC — which backs each Democrats and Republicans— unleashed a torrent of spending in Democratic primaries to focus on candidates who’d been vocal critics of Israel. AIPAC performed a consequential function in unseating two Justice Democrats-backed progressive incumbent members of Congress in 2024.
With Justice Democrats coming into the fray, the battle for California’s thirty fourth District might very effectively grow to be a proxy struggle between AIPAC and the activist left flank of the Democratic Get together, which characterizes the struggle in Gaza as a genocide and AIPAC’s affect within the social gathering as existentially poisonous.
Gonzales-Torres, a neighborhood activist and former president of the Historic Highland Park Neighborhood Council, mentioned her worldview and advocacy have been formed by her childhood within the district, dealing with housing insecurity and being raised by a single mom after her father was deported to Mexico. She criticized Gomez — who can also be the kid of working-class Latino immigrants — as now not being rooted locally and accused him of being beholden to the skin particular curiosity teams who’ve closely backed his earlier campaigns.
Gomez, a former state legislator and union organizer, was first elected in a particular election in 2017 and reelected to a full time period in 2018. He represents a majority-Latino city district that stretches from Koreatown by way of Pico Union to Highland Park, Eagle Rock and East L.A. California’s thirty fourth District is overwhelmingly composed of renters and contains a number of the most densely populated working-class neighborhoods within the nation, in addition to a number of the most quickly gentrifying sections of Los Angeles.
Gomez efficiently fended off challenges from David Kim, a progressive Democrat concentrating on him from the left, in 2020, 2022 and 2024. Kim has endorsed Gonzales-Torres and doesn’t plan to run for a fourth time.
“I feel that Angelenos need to see change. And what we’re seeing is our present Congress member accepting $2.3 million from AIPAC, then failing to co-sponsor the one invoice calling for a ceasefire,” Gonzales-Torres mentioned, referencing a decision launched in October 2023 that was supported by practically 20 Democrats. “And what we’re seeing is Jimmy Gomez taking, you realize, $500,000 from crypto lobbies, then voting to additional Trump’s corrupt crypto agenda.”
Gomez is much from a hard-line pro-Israel voice in Congress, having referred to as for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s resignation, pushed for humanitarian support to Gaza and backed a ceasefire within the struggle. However Kim, the opponent AIPAC helped him fend off in earlier cycles, was a lot additional left on these points.
Gonzales-Torres presently works as an educational counselor at a Pasadena Metropolis Faculty program supporting previously incarcerated college students and likewise serves as program director for a everlasting reasonably priced housing undertaking in Altadena, and beforehand interned in Mayor Karen Bass’ administration, she mentioned. She can also be a member of the Metro Public Security Advisory Committee.
“I’m working for Congress as a result of I do know what it felt love to do my homework on the dashboard of a automotive that I lived in right here in Highland Park,” she mentioned. “And we’ve got unhoused LAUSD college students now, and I feel that 20 years later, to see issues actually haven’t gotten that significantly better is unacceptable. These of us closest to that ache needs to be closest to those positions of energy, so we are able to see actual change.”
Justice Democrats rose to prominence after Ocasio-Cortez’s 2018 upset ouster of then-Rep. Joe Crowley. The then-28-year-old activist shocked the political institution when she unseated the fourth-ranked Democrat within the Home to symbolize a New York district that features elements of the Bronx and Queens. Her victory was a shot within the arm for a nascent activist left.
Justice Democrats backed different rebel members of “the Squad,” equivalent to Reps. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, and have ceaselessly focused average Democratic incumbents from the left. Their aggressive techniques and dedication to reshaping the social gathering have led to comparisons to the conservative tea social gathering motion.
With 10 staff, they continue to be a comparatively lean operation. However they’ve reworked over the past half-dozen years from a little-known grassroots group to a potent drive in nationwide politics, with 9 present Justice Democrats-affiliated members in Congress and the ability to tug discourse left even in races the place they’ve misplaced.
That they had a bruising 12 months in 2024, and located themselves in an unlikely place: defending their very own incumbents from challengers in search of to oust them. Two Justice Democrats-backed incumbents, Jamaal Bowman and Cori Bush, have been unseated final 12 months, with AIPAC pouring cash into each races.
However after a cycle on the defensive, the group is concentrating on incumbents once more in favor of working-class progressives who will shake up the established order. Gonzales-Torres is their second endorsement of the 2026 cycle, and Gomez is the primary California Democratic incumbent they’ve focused following their rise to prominence in 2018.
“We’re going to leverage our community and small-dollar donors to boost cash for her and do no matter we are able to to assist Angie beat Jimmy Gomez,” mentioned Justice Democrats spokesperson Usamah Andrabi.
Rep. Jimmy Gomez at a information convention in Los Angeles in 2021.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Instances)
However Gomez is hardly a average: The Eagle Rock resident has extra in frequent with the Justice Democrats slate than most of the members they’ve beforehand tried to unseat.
At 50, he’s too outdated to be categorized as a millennial, however nonetheless far youthful than the septuagenarians and sexagenarians ousted by a few of Justice Democrats’ present and former candidates. Neither is he a white incumbent representing a district that’s now majority-minority, as was the case with representatives ousted by different members of the slate.
Gomez helps the Inexperienced New Deal and Medicare for all. He nonetheless had scholar loans when he was sworn into Congress and went viral a couple of years in the past for baby-wearing his toddler son on the Home flooring throughout a Home speaker battle.
He was a featured speaker when Vermont’s Sen. Bernie Sanders introduced his “Preventing Oligarchy” tour to downtown Los Angeles. Ocasio-Cortez endorsed Gomez in 2024 and he beforehand partnered with Pressley and Bush to battle to increase the federal eviction moratorium through the COVID-19 pandemic.
However, Andrabi argued, the Democratic Get together’s base was clamoring for change, significantly in districts like Gomez’s, the place the query isn’t if a Democrat can be elected, however fairly what sort of Democrat constituents need to see representing them.
“We will have all these fights and excuses about what a swing-state Democrat ought to appear to be and what a purple front-liner ought to appear to be, however we should not have any kind of excuses in a deep blue district,” Andrabi mentioned.
Gonzales-Torres is one among six candidates, together with Gomez, who’ve filed paperwork with the Federal Election Fee within the thirty fourth District. The district would stay unchanged if Gov. Gavin Newsom’s redistricting poll measure passes in November.