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The Intercept Briefing

Democrats Swept Tuesday Night’s Election. Now What?

The Intercept Briefing

The Intercept

News, News Commentary, Politics

4.76.4K Ratings

🗓️ 6 November 2025

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On Tuesday, voters in Virginia, New York City, New Jersey, Texas, California, and Mississippi overwhelmingly supported Democratic candidates and ballot initiatives.

In New York, despite facing racist opposition from both Republicans and much of the Democratic establishment, Zohran Mamdani sailed to victory. The new mayor-elect won over 50 percent of the vote in a three-way race. 

And in Virginia, Governor-elect Abigail Spanberger won with an even greater margin over her opponent, Winsome Earle-Sears, whose campaign weaponized transphobia in a vain attempt to defeat Spanberger.

In California, as of Wednesday, nearly two-thirds of the vote favored redrawing the congressional map to counter Republican gerrymandering in Texas.

The Intercept Briefing spoke with Amanda Litman, co-founder and president of the PAC Run for Something, and Maurice Mitchell, national director of the Working Families Party, to discuss what lessons Democrats and progressives should take heading into the midterm elections. 

Mitchell pointed to Mamdani’s and other Democrats' success last night at driving home a positive economic message for working-class voters as an important roadmap for next year.

“There’s elements of [Mamdani’s] victory that are very particular to New York, that are very particular to him, but the politics and the conditions that are a part of the victory are happening all across the country,” said Mitchell. “It's clear that this was a wave election. And inside of that wave are a number of independent, progressive-minded folks who didn't wait their turn, who are willing to fight for working people.” 

Similarly, Litman argued that Democrats need to embrace a big tent that includes progressive voices. "You need candidates who know what they believe, who know how to communicate, who love the place they're running, and who can articulate why voters should want them to win,” she said.

Litman continued, “Does every candidate need to have the exact same ideological profile? No. But also, the person who's running and winning a seat on the Iowa City Council is probably not a good fit for the New York City Council, and vice versa. And that's OK. To be a party that can win everywhere, which is what we need to be in order to stop authoritarianism and stop what the Republican Party has done, we need to have a big tent.” 

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Intercept Briefing. I'm Jessica Washington. On Tuesday, voters in New York City, Virginia, New Jersey, Texas, California, and Mississippi cast their ballots in an early test of where the public stands ahead of a midterm election that could fundamentally reshape the political landscape.

0:22.2

The New York City mayoral election in particular has captured national attention,

0:26.5

with both Republicans and established Democrats largely painting Zoroamandani as dangerous

0:32.6

and weaponizing his Muslim identity to gin up post-9-11 levels of Islamophobia.

0:38.8

But Zoroamandani is now the mayor-elect, capturing more than 50% of votes and a three-way race

0:45.7

as of Wednesday. In Virginia, governor-elect Abigail Spanberger won by even greater margins.

0:52.4

And in California, voters overwhelmingly passed a proposition to

0:56.7

redistrict the state in favor of giving Democrats more congressional seats and counter Republican

1:02.2

state's gerrymandering efforts. Now, as Democrats' eye trying to reclaim Congress in the midterms,

1:08.2

they'll have to figure out which strategies to take from this election

1:10.9

and which ones belong in the political trashy. Joining me now to discuss are Amanda Littman,

1:16.3

co-founder and president of Progressive Pack, run for something, and Maurice Mitchell,

1:20.9

national director of the Working Families Party. Amanda and Maurice, welcome to the show.

1:25.2

Good morning. Good to be with you. Amanda, I'll start with you.

1:29.0

The million dollar question. Did the results of Tuesday's election tell us anything about where the

1:34.2

Democratic Party is headed, or at least where it should be headed? I think it told us lots of things

1:39.4

about where the Democratic Party should be headed, which is that it needs to be heading in lots of

1:43.1

different directions.

1:49.8

Run for something had 222 candidates on the ballot yesterday. We're still waiting for results in about a hundred of them or so, but we've already had 94 wins, including red to blue flips in all kinds of

1:57.1

places. The thing that I think we saw with our run for something candidates, with the New York

2:00.9

City mayoral, with the New Jersey and Texas and California and Virginia is that Democrats or voters,

2:08.5

rather, are pissed at Trump. They don't like this economy. And they want candidates who can speak to

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