- The Washington Times - Saturday, June 27, 2026

Socialist candidate Darializa Avila Chevalier is celebrating her Democratic primary victory over a New York congressional incumbent with a media cleanup tour of past comments that Democrats have denounced.

Ms. Avila Chevalier said in a series of postprimary interviews that she regrets her past social media posts calling former President Joseph R. Biden a “rapist” and cursing former Vice President Kamala Harris. As the likely next representative of New York’s 13th Congressional District, she said, she wants to build relationships and coalitions for her far-left policy ideas.

“I do regret my tweets,” she said on MS NOW. “That’s something that I think has brought a lot of division, and that’s something I regret, because as an organizer, my goal is always to unify our community and deliver for our community.”



Democratic strategist James Carville, the architect of Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential victory, said Ms. Avila Chevalier is not really a Democrat and should not be brought into the party fold in Washington.

“They should not seat her in the caucus,” he told NewsNation. “Her views are totally against anything that Democrats have. We believe in pluralism; she doesn’t believe in interracial dating.”

That was a reference to a post from her deactivated account on X, suggesting that White people should not be in interracial relationships.

Ms. Avila Chevalier said that although people are holding her accountable for comments made long before she decided to run for political office, it is rare for elected officials to be held accountable for decisions made in office.

“That was part of why I decided to run, because I felt that abandonment from establishment politics that looks at my community as though it is merely statistics and not people who are worth fighting for, and not the policies that will actually better their lives,” she said.

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Ms. Avila Chevalier summarized her political vision in her first postprimary interview with the left-wing news program “Democracy Now!”

“We are fighting for housing for all, to make sure that we abolish ICE and to have our tax dollars come back home to invest in our babies here and not in bombs abroad,” Ms. Avila Chevalier said.

Although those priorities align with the broader Democratic Party views, Ms. Avila Chevalier has taken positions that are further to the left, such as opposing the deportation of all illegal immigrants, including criminals. She previously called for the abolition of the police and prisons.

Ms. Avila Chevalier, 32, defeated five-term Rep. Adriano Espaillat, the Congressional Hispanic Caucus chairman, in an upper Manhattan district that includes parts of the Bronx.

She worked on New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s 2025 mayoral campaign. She was one of three congressional challengers endorsed by Mr. Mamdani in last week’s primaries who won over establishment-backed candidates.

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Ms. Avila Chevalier told NBC that her victory shows voters “are more interested in a politics of hope” that provides a vision of what the party is fighting for, rather than just what it is against. She said she is not responding to President Trump and other Republicans calling her a communist.

Mr. Trump intensified his criticism of socialists such as Ms. Avila Chevalier on Friday at the Faith & Freedom Coalition’s annual “Road to Majority” event at the Washington Hilton.

He said advances in protecting religion in America would be at risk if Democrats win in November and that the Democratic opposition is tipping into “godless” communism.

“They’re communists. They’re not social democrats,” Mr. Trump said. “They want to destroy the traditional way of American life.”

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New York City Council member Vickie Paladino, a Republican, said Ms. Avila Chevalier’s anti-American activism makes her ineligible to be sworn into her House seat.

At Columbia University, Ms. Avila Chevalier was a member of Students for Justice in Palestine and helped found an apartheid divestment movement group that sought to pressure the university to break ties with Israel. The group on social media called for “Death to America” in Farsi.

Ms. Avila Chevalier has questioned Israel’s right to exist. She attended a pro-Palestinian rally the day after Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, terrorist rampage in Israel that killed more than 1,200 people, mostly civilians, including more than 370 young men and women at the Nova music festival.

“The reason I was there — was at that rally, is because I have been advocating for Palestinian human rights and dignity for most of my adult life,” she told MS NOW. “And knowing that historically, what we have seen is that whenever there is an incident that happens in the region, there is an outsized reaction, one that costs thousands more people their lives. And that was what I was there to stand against.”

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Ms. Avila Chevalier studied abroad in the West Bank in 2014. Within a day of arriving back in the U.S., Israel began bombing the Gaza Strip in a 50-day war in which more than 1,400 Palestinian civilians were killed.

“I remember being home and scrolling through the faces and names of the people who had been killed and feeling completely powerless to do anything about it,” she said of experiences that informed her political beliefs.

Ms. Avila Chevalier cannot be blocked from taking a seat in Congress, but Democrats could refuse to give her any committee assignments or other privileges of membership in their party caucus. That appears unlikely.

“Voters have that ability to make those decisions in Democratic primaries. And we’ll work with whoever they send,” said House Democratic Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar of California.

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Ms. Avila Chevalier declined to say whether she would support House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York for speaker if control of the chamber flips in November.

She said she will use her experience as an organizer to build coalitions in Congress to pass left-wing policies, such as “Medicare for All” and free college.

“It’s about knowing when you’re outnumbered and out-resourced and still having an outsized impact and using strategy and relationship building and trust building to actually deliver for folks,” Ms. Avila Chevalier said.

Jeff Mordock contributed to this report.

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