Ex Rep Mondaire Jones Launches Comeback Bid for New York House Seat

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Ex-Rep. Mondaire Jones Launches Comeback Bid for New York House Seat.
Former Rep. Mondaire Jones on Wednesday began his bid to reclaim the Hudson Valley congressional seat that he left in December after redistricting derailed his reelection plans.

Jones, a 36-year-old Democrat who lives in the Westchester County village of Sleepy Hollow, was set to file federal paperwork to formally open his campaign for New York's 17th Congressional District, now represented by Republican Rep. Mike Lawler of Rockland County.

Jones, a Rockland native and attorney who had been working as a CNN political commentator after leaving Congress, is the third Democrat to enter the 2024 race for the Democratic-leaning district. Westchester residents Liz Whitmer Gereghty and MaryAnn Carr also have declared their candidacies for the 17th District seat.
In an interview, Jones said he looked forward to promoting his record from his two years in Congress and showcasing his "broad support" with the district's voters. He said he had "great respect" for his Democratic rivals in the race, but noted that only he has legislative experience to show.

"That voting record is one of pragmatism," Jones said. "It is one of defending democracy and freedoms, creating jobs and cutting costs.”

Gereghty campaign:First Democrat seeking to challenge GOP Rep. Mike Lawler in 2024 is Westchester resident Liz Gereghty

Jones, who grew up in Spring Valley and graduated from Harvard Law School, won the seat in 2020 after first beating seven other Democrats in a primary for what was then a safely Democratic seat. They were vying to succeed Nita Lowey, the Democrat who retired that year after 32 years in office.

What happened in the 2022 race?
The redrawing of New York's House districts last year scrambled Jones' plans for a second term. After fellow Democratic Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney chose to run in the reshaped 17th District, Jones opted out of a primary against Maloney or Rep. Jamaal Bowman of Yonkers and ran instead for an open seat in New York City, coming in third in another crowded primary.

Lawler, then a GOP political consultant and first-term assemblyman, went on to edge out Maloney in November by 1,820 votes in a upset, one of the nation's closest House races.

Exit interview:Mondaire Jones leaving office: What congressman blames for departure, what comes next

Redistricting had made the 17th District more competitive but left a significant Democratic edge: President Joe Biden beat Donald Trump there by 10 percentage points in 2020. That has made the seat a top priority for both parties in 2024, one of a handful in New York that could help determine the next House majority.

“This is a district that Joe Biden won by 10 points," Jones said. "If we are not restoring Democratic leadership to this district, then we are not taking back the House of Representatives.”

Who else plans to run next year?
The first Democrat in the race this year was Whitmer Gereghty, a mother of three and f
Transcript
00:00 Ex-Republican Mondaire Jones launches comeback bid for New York House seat.
00:05 Former Republican Mondaire Jones announced on Wednesday morning he will run for his old
00:09 House seat in New York's 17th District, entering what is expected to be a heated fray as Democratic
00:15 candidates vie to unseat the Republican currently occupying the spot.
00:19 "I've never been Washington's choice," Jones said in a campaign launch video that
00:23 emphasized the "personal" nature of his bid. "It's because I stand up to corruption.
00:29 I battle with Republicans trying to overthrow our democracy and ban abortion, even as I
00:33 push my party to fight harder for working people. I'm running to finish the work I
00:38 began."
00:39 The 36-year-old lawyer became one of the first two openly gay black men in Congress when
00:44 he won his seat in 2020, but opted not to run for re-election after a chaotic redistricting
00:49 placed him in the same election as former Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, then the head of
00:54 the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.
00:57 Maloney went on to narrowly lose the race to Rep. Michael Lawler, R., who currently
01:03 represents the 17th District. Jones instead ran in New York's 10th District, but did
01:08 advance beyond the primary.

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