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Another 2026 Progressive Coalition Winner

By Scott Steward

North Carolina District 4 candidates, Nida Allam holding a slim lead (on the left) and Valerie Fourshee incumbent (on the right)

We have seen it in New Jersey and Texas, and now we will see it in North Carolina. The next bellwether primary election takes place on March 3rd; the damage of being a progressive except for Palestine (and progressive except for single-payer and except for rubber-stamping appropriations bills) may end the career of incumbent Valerie Foushee in North Carolina’s 4th Congressional District. Fourshee was a latecomer to the 2022 election, using AIPAC and Cryptocurrency donations of $2 million, knocking out the local favorite by 4,000 votes. 

Nida Allam, former Vice Chair of the North Carolina Democratic Party and current Durham County Commissioner, returns with more experience and a small donation campaign budget that exceeds Fourshee’s this time around.  She promises “to build a brighter future for the Research Triangle, where our democracy works for all of us, and everyone has access to a living wage, affordable healthcare, a great public education, and a livable planet.”

Unlike Allam, who rejects corporate PAC money, Foushee has historically accepted donations from pharmaceutical and health product interests and from defense contractors such as Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman. In 2024 and 2025, she has cast votes that align more with an establishment-centrist position than with that of a fighter. 

Foushee supports expanding the Affordable Care Act (ACA), she has not championed Medicare for All. Foushee voted for the Israel Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, which provided over $26 billion in aid (all of which has been distributed), using the excuse that the Act included $1 billion in aid for Gaza (of which only a fraction has been distributed*). 

The race between Allam and Fourshee brings into focus the important transition from incremental hand-wringing Democratic leadership and the energy of the next generation.  Should Allam win, it will further momentum for the coalition of 6 organizations dedicated to departing from big-money politics, a coalition willing to tax bloated excess in our society so that we can afford healthcare, education, and housing.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Bernie Sanders Fighting Oligarchy Tour 2025

The 2026 Progressive Coalition: These independent organizations are collaborating under a shared strategy to challenge “establishment” moderate Democratic incumbents.

  • Justice Democrats: Backing candidates like AOC and Cori Bush.
  • Working Families Party (WFP): A multiracial party that focuses on building working-class power.
  • Sunrise Movement: A youth-led climate organization that demands a “Green New Deal” litmus test for candidates.
  • Our Revolution: A Bernie Sanders legacy campaign that focuses on grassroots organizing and local PAC coordination.
  • People’s Alliance PAC: Provides the local “ground game” for these national groups.
  • Leaders We Deserve: A newer PAC aimed at electing young progressives.

Allam is a leader and part of the leadership we all deserve. If we can expect anything other than capitulation and deadly compromise, we in California District 4 might also want to consider an alternative to the “centrist” in office. Mike Thompson has been given room to vote against the Big Beautiful Bill that funds ICE, but this “no” vote on an appropriations bill is not his usual position. He voted no this time, in large part, because he has a primary challenger and doing less would be political suicide, but his stance on funding the military and Israel is largely unchanged (credit to Thompson for signing HR 3565, No Funding of Offensive Weapons for Israel, back in July of 2025).

Thompson has had 27 years to be more aggressive about health care costs, education, and housing, while a few in the Democratic donor class have become astronomically wealthy.

What Thompson and his peers have been aggressive about is taking a considerable amount of money from the defense industry, pharmaceutical companies, corporate real estate, and, for California Incumbent Democrats, particularly, money from AI companies that want PG&E to charge us as much as the for-profit monopoly can, while devastating California’s homegrown renewable energy industry and sucking up our water and electricity on the cheap. 

We want a way forward, and the first step we can take is to stop expecting old leadership to change. We need new leadership that is ready to work to improve our lives.

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Comments

6 responses to “Another 2026 Progressive Coalition Winner”

  1. I have seen a number of Davis progressives supporting Eric Jones (linked in Scott’s article as an alternative to Mike Thompson), but honestly, I don’t get it. He’s young, yes. New, yes. Not Mike Thompson, yes. Beyond that, when I look at the platform outlined on his website, I see a lot of nice generalizations, but nothing that gets me particularly excited about him as a progressive. To give just one example, he talks about expanding Medicare, but I don’t see him supporting Medicare for All. Ok, another example: “Crack down on PG&E’s high prices and monopoly abuses.” How facilitating municipalities taking over their own energy systems, a la SMUD?

    So, I’m supposed to jettison a known, reliable quantity (Mike Thompson) for an unknown who has never held political office, someone who we really don’t know how they are going to vote, and whose website can’t even commit to fully progressive ideas? I must be missing something. Maybe he is telling people things in person, but frankly, I’ve been told things by politicians before and had them not follow through. And that includes stated platforms, much less promises at political events!

  2. Scott

    Good points, ones that call for a considered response. I will reply with a researched article on the record of Mike Thompson. I am leaving the conclusion of the merits of challenger Eric Jones to the reader. I am taking the time to point out that there is a challenger and reasons to challenge the incumbent.

    1. You can if you want, but honestly, that’s not of interest to me. I know a fair bit about Mike Thompson already, and his record is public. I don’t like everything about him, but as you know, some of the things that you don’t like about him are things that I’m OK with.

      I don’t think you get someone to vote for X over Y just by pointing out Y’s flaws. You need to say why X is the better choice. And if you can’t say what it is that X (Eric) brings to the table, then I’m not going to risk going out of the fat and into the fire by voting for him. And I suspect I am not the only one who feels that way.

  3. Scott

    Goingback to the article. The main point is Nida Allam’s campaign as a progressive who stands for building “a brighter future for the Research Triangle, where our democracy works for all of us, and everyone has access to a living wage, affordable healthcare, a great public education, and a livable planet.”

    Her campaign represents what many primary challengers do, and the 6 organizations backing her are uniting to support her and about a dozen other campaigns. If you don’t agree with fighting for a living wage, affordable healthcare, education, and a livable planet, I guess this is not good news.

    The last part of the article draws attention to the local CA-4 primary race and the fact that, during the tenure of legacy Democratic “leadership like Thompson,” most of us are worse off.

    As for Eric Jones’ attributes, he is not beholden to corporate PACs, PGE, Defense Contractors, and Big Pharma. He and his family have had to work their way out of poverty, and he knows what it’s like to need help. He is a practical example of how the system can work. And he is alarmed that the programs that saved his family are being denied to families today. https://www.ericjones.us/#affordability

    I do think it matters a whole lot that Mike Thompson has stood for the status quo: approving military spending (the National Defense Authorization Act) year after year. He voted yes on Res 114 authorizing the use of armed forces against Iraq in 2002. Twenty years and 20 trillion later, he voted to repeal the 2002 vote. Twenty years, and now nearly 30 years late – we are under the heel of tyranny because of what? You have to question how we got here.

    Many in Davis have been sheltered from the “disposable people” economic polices that big D leaders have co-engineered. Both parties have actively eliminated progressive tax policies and demonized social programs for the last 40 years. It is unconscionable to have such gross concentrations of wealth and the worst health care of any industrial nation in the world, to name one, obviously, and needlessly broken part of our governance.

    Eric Jones has faced the brokenness firsthand, and he has enough integrity to see it and fight for change – with everything he’s got. If you look at his campaign and can’t see that it will be an improvement over the status quo, then ok, you gave it a fair shot.

    It’s our responsibility to consider making a break with the past, and Eric Jones might not be everyone’s favorite in Davis, but his independence and resolve do speak to his District, which now includes Roseville, Lincoln, and Marysville, and no longer includes large parts of Santa Rosa, Petaluma, and Rohnert Park.

    1. To be clear, I would probably be happy to have someone who is more progressive than Mike Thompson. I am just not (yet) convinced that Eric Jones is that person, and nothing you’ve said here moves that needle for me.

    2. Alan C. Miller

      SS say, “Many in Davis have been sheltered from the “disposable people” economic polices that big D leaders have co-engineered.”

      Mommy, daddy, look at me
      I went to school and I got a degree
      All my friends call it “the big D”
      I went to school and I got the big D
      I got the big D
      I got the big D
      I got the big D
      I went to school and I got the big D

      — “Chaise Longue”, Wet Leg

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