Congress
Democratic Rep. Pat Ryan launches PAC to boost ‘patriotic’ candidates
ALBANY, New York — Democratic Rep. Pat Ryan wants to build a bench of patriot-leaders — and is planning to raise millions of dollars to do it.
The two-term House lawmaker is launching a political action committee today to elect candidates with public service backgrounds, including those with experience in the military, teaching or as first responders. The new group, called Patriot PAC, has the goal of raising more than $2 million for candidates this election cycle.
If successful, the project would help a national Democratic Party struggling to build back support among voters following Republican President Donald Trump’s return and a disastrous 2024 election cycle in which the GOP took total control of the federal government. Ryan wants Democrats to be seen as “the patriotic party, the party of service.”
“The Republican Party cannot make a claim on it anymore,” he said in an interview. “That creates not only an opportunity, but a need for the Democratic Party to assert what has always been foundational to us, which is that we are that party of selflessness and the common good.”
The group’s launch is spurring talk among his supporters that Ryan, a West Point grad and Army veteran, is eyeing statewide or federal office in the coming years after representing a purple-hued swing seat in New York’s Hudson Valley since 2022.
National Democrats are also taking notice of Ryan’s effort.
“People who have worn the uniform, who have worked in classrooms or hospitals, know what it means to sacrifice for something greater than themselves,” said Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, a retired Army officer and potential presidential candidate, in a statement. “Our country needs more patriots in elected office, at every level.”
The PAC’s formation arrives at a precarious time for Democrats — especially in deep blue New York. Democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani’s shocking primary win has sharply divided the party as left-leaning Democrats pressure moderates — including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and top House Democrat Hakeem Jeffries — to endorse. Some centrist Democrats worry Republicans will effectively leverage Mamdani’s hard-left policies against them in crucial races next year.
Ryan’s new group seeks to sidestep the ideological debate as Democratic voters urge their leaders to take an aggressive approach with Republicans.
Building broad support in the Empire State’s Democratic Party can be tricky, especially for upstate politicians who are relatively unknown in New York City. Ryan, though, is accustomed to making gutsy moves — comfortable with campaigning alongside lefty Democrats like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and working with centrists like Gov. Kathy Hochul.
A moderate, Ryan endorsed the front-running Mamdani’s mayoral campaign weeks before Hochul — a nod that included a fiery denunciation of Andrew Cuomo, who is polling consistently in second. Ryan was also among the first Democrats nationally to publicly urge Joe Biden to drop out of the presidential campaign following a disastrous debate performance last year.
Speaking with Blue Light News this week, Ryan demurred when asked if he has ambitions outside of his House seat.
“I really am worried and focused about the moment we’re in where there’s tremendous harm being done to my community, my district, my state and to my country,” he said. “The only way I know how to stop that is to put forward the best people. Literally, these elections in 2025 are going to be critical, the midterms are going to be important to check a lot of the overreach and the harm being done.”
Ryan’s PAC plans to endorse 50 New York-based candidates around the state. They include Hempstead Supervisor candidate Joe Scianablo, a Marine veteran and retired NYPD officer. In the Buffalo suburbs, he’s backing Amherst town supervisor candidate Shawn Levin, who serves in the Air National Guard. Another endorsement will go to Jackie Salvatore, a candidate for Columbia County sheriff. (She would become the first woman of color elected sheriff in New York.) And in New York City, he will endorse Council Member Rita Joseph, a former public school teacher.
Next year during the midterm elections, the PAC plans to endorse 250 candidates across the country.
The group follows a prior effort Ryan started in 2021 while he was the Ulster County executive to support locally elected Democrats. The PAC’s launch will be followed in October by a statewide tour of New York — a swing through the Empire State that stands to lift his otherwise low profile with voters outside his House district.
“No amount of money will change the fact that any Democrat who accepts funding from an open-borders, Mamdani-supporting radical like Pat Ryan will be tied to those policies and will have to defend them in the general election,” said state GOP spokesperson David Laska.
Ryan’s effort coincides with a PAC launched earlier this year by Rep. Elise Stefanik, who’s supporting down-ballot GOP candidates in local races and is a likely Republican opponent against Hochul next year.
Key powerbrokers in New York, eager for a Democrat who represents and understands voters outside of wealthy coastal areas, are closely watching Ryan’s effort to politically branch out.
“Pat Ryan has a future in the Democratic Party,” said John Samuelsen, the president of the Transport Workers Union International. “He’s an antidote to much of what’s plagued the Democrats.”
Samuelsen, an outspoken labor leader who has feuded with some Democrats he considers insufficiently pro-union, praised Ryan’s support for bills his union pressed federal lawmakers to pass.
“He’s an American patriot, he’s an economic populist, he’s 100 percent pro-trade union. That’s the secret sauce for all Democrats,” Samuelsen said.
Samuelsen, though, did not want to get crosswise with Hochul — or suggest Ryan should challenge her next year.
“I would hate to see him in a confrontation with Kathy Hochul — there’s room enough for both of them in the Democratic Party,” he said.
Ryan’s sprawling upstate House seat is a mix of rural communities, small cities and suburban towns, the kind of geographic regions where Democrats nationally have struggled to succeed.
He drew notice in his first House campaign — waged in the summer that Roe v. Wade was overturned by the Supreme Court — by framing his vocal support for abortion rights as a matter of freedom and liberty. In the House, Ryan champions customers being ripped off by utilities and fans’ headaches over livestreamed sports — seemingly quotidian consumer concerns that resonate in a political era in which “affordability” is a crucial watchword.
Since Trump’s victory, Ryan has urged Democrats to embrace a “patriotic populism” to counteract the president’s MAGA movement. He handily won reelection last year, outpacing Kamala Harris and defeating Republican Alison Esposito, a former NYPD lieutenant.
Ryan’s success in a battleground House seat comes from being authentic, a crucial coin of the realm in today’s politics, said former Rep. Max Rose, a moderate Staten Island Democrat.
“I know a lot of politicians. I’ve served with some, had drinks with others, most of them are fake and completely void of character,” Rose said. “Pat’s a genuinely good person and he’s the same person privately as he is publicly. I’m proud that he’s able to focus part of his efforts on finding other Pats.”
Congress
Senate Democrats to hammer affordability concerns in budget fight
Senate Democrats want to use a marathon voting session this week to hammer Republicans on cost-of-living issues.
As part of the amendment free-for-all known as “vote-a-rama,” Democrats can force a vote on any proposal they want before the Senate votes on the GOP’s budget blueprint for an immigration enforcement bill. They are vowing to try to show a “contrast” that hits at the heart of their midterms message.
“Republicans want to shell out billions of dollars to Donald Trump’s private army without any common sense restraints or reforms. Democrats want to put money in people’s pockets by lowering their costs,” Minority Leader Chuck Schumer told reporters Wednesday.
“We’re going to keep at it, and keep at it, and keep at it,” Schumer added.
The Senate could move as soon as Wednesday to kick off the hourslong voting marathon. Republicans have to adopt the budget resolution before they can take up a subsequent bill they expect will provide roughly $70 billion for immigration enforcement.
Republicans decided to go it alone on funding for ICE, Border Patrol and other agencies after they were unable to get a deal with Democrats to impose new restrictions on the funding in the wake of federal agents fatally shooting two people in Minneapolis in January.
Few, if any, of the Democratic amendments are likely to be adopted. But they could provide fuel for campaign season attacks as Republicans unite to keep their party-line funding plan intact.
Schumer declined to offer specifics on his caucus’ amendments, but he said they will relate to reducing costs on issues like housing, health care, food costs and child care. Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), the No. 3 Senate Democrat, indicated that Democrats will force amendment votes related to local law enforcement funding, lapsed Obamacare subsidies and housing costs.
“Those are the choices we are going to present to them over these next few days,” she added.
Congress
Capitol agenda: Jeffries vows ‘maximum warfare’
Virginia just delivered the moment Hakeem Jeffries has been waiting for.
Voters approved a new congressional map that adds up to four Democratic-leaning districts, handing the party a stronger chance of retaking the House. The minority leader is leaning in, taunting Republicans and vowing “maximum warfare, everywhere, all the time.”
“Democrats defeated Donald Trump’s gerrymandering scheme in Virginia tonight,” Jeffries said in a statement Tuesday evening. “We will crush the DeSantis Dummymander in Florida next.”
Jeffries has staked much of his credibility as a party leader on the effort, pouring time, money and political capital into a nationwide push to create new blue districts as Republicans rush to do the same in red states.
Tuesday night’s narrow win marks a major feather in Jeffries’ cap that will help burnish his reputation in the Democratic caucus as an operator and foil to Trump. It’s also a signature win for a rising leader who is often compared to his iconic predecessor, Nancy Pelosi.
Democrats are reading the success as a promising bellwether ahead of the midterms and a sign of mounting voter frustration with Trump and the GOP trifecta.
Yet Tuesday night’s buzz could quickly become a political hangover, as a handful of Democratic primaries spring up in new seats and Republicans take a fresh look at other newly competitive districts.
“We don’t take anything for granted,” Democratic Rep. James Walkinshaw said in an interview. “All of the districts will get a little bit more competitive.”
Walkinshaw listed five districts, including his own in Northern Virginia, that he thinks could require renewed attention from Democrats to hold. He said Democrats are bracing for the likelihood that “strong Republican candidates” may be waiting in the wings.
But House Republicans aren’t exactly projecting confidence about sudden pick-up opportunities, and they seem to be more focused on the sudden need for defense. All five Virginia Republicans — Ben Cline, Morgan Griffith, Jen Kiggans, John McGuire and Rob Wittman — skipped votes Tuesday.
Notably, Wittman serves as vice chair on the Armed Services Committee. A loss in his new district — which Kamala Harris would have won by over 17 points in 2024 — throws a wrench into his not-so-secret plan to become the panel’s next top Republican.
NRCC Chair Richard Hudson said in an interview Tuesday that he hopes the state Supreme Court “will step in and stop” the new map.
Pressed on whether NRCC strategy or funding will change at all, Hudson did not offer any specifics — just that he believes Kiggans, who Republicans saw as their most vulnerable Virginia member, “can win either map.”
What else we’re watching:
— Vote-a-rama time? Senate Republicans are preparing to start a marathon voting session as soon as Wednesday to kick off consideration of Trump’s $70 billion immigration enforcement funding bill. It may slip to Thursday.
— FISA latest: House GOP leaders are exploring bipartisan options for extending Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, as Republican hard-liners dig in over privacy concerns with the spy program. Speaker Mike Johnson met Tuesday evening with Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick and Darin LaHood, who have been talking with Democrats including Rep. Jim Himes, the ranking member on House Intel.
Jordain Carney, Jennifer Scholtes and Mia McCarthy contributed reporting.
Congress
Americans’ disapproval rating of Congress matches historic high
Americans’ disapproval of Congress has matched an all-time high, a new poll from Gallup finds, as the beleaguered institution grapples with scandals, expulsions and its role as a co-equal, independent branch of Congress.
The survey released Wednesday shows that only 10 percent of Americans approve of Congress, just barely above 2013’s all-time low of 9 percent. In contrast, 86 percent of Americans disapprove of the job Congress is doing — matching the historic high in the over 50 years Gallup has been asking Americans for their opinions on the legislature.
The last time 86 percent of Americans disapproved of Congress was in 2015.
The poll shows much of the disapproval likely stems from repeated government shutdowns, including the ongoing partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security. Approval ratings for Congress fell sharply during the October shutdown and have not recovered since.
However, Congress has broadly grappled with other challenges, including concerns over the war in Iran, sexual assault allegations and high-profile ethics investigations against multiple members that may also be impacting Americans’ views of Capitol Hill.
Approval ratings, which hovered around 17 percent after President Donald Trump’s inauguration in January 2025, briefly peaked at 31 percent in March last year.
Gallup’s poll also shows that those who lean or identify as Republican are leading the recent decline in approval ratings.
Republicans, who previously offered a 63 percent approval rating shortly after Trump was inaugurated, now offer the GOP-led Congress barely 20 percent approval rating.
The Gallup poll was conducted via telephone from April 1 through April 15, 2026, with a sample of 1,001 adults. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 4 percentage points.
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