Longtime Brooklyn congressional consultant Yvette D. Clarke formally launched her re-election marketing campaign final weekend, signaling the speedy strategy of the June 2026 congressional primaries. For her, the stakes are excessive, given what Democrats are going through in Congress.
“The ninth District of New York is true within the bull’s eye of each merciless coverage that this administration has cooked up,” mentioned Clarke, who has held workplace in Congress since 2007, and at the moment serves as chair of the Congressional Black Caucus. “When you consider these communities throughout the U.S. which have drawn the hatred and bigotry of this administration … whether or not it’s round birthright citizenship or anti-DEI initiatives, it has actually impacted the Ninth District of New York, so the battle for me shouldn’t be one that’s distant. It is extremely private and it’s existential.”
The midterms this yr will in the end decide if Democrats can shift the steadiness of energy away from the present Republican management of the Senate and Home below President Donald Trump. Clarke has two essential challengers this yr within the main and the election: Democrat Mike Goldfarb and Republican Jean Fritzner Depalis.
Clarke’s considerations earlier than the midterms heart on the possibly dire impacts of theSafeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act, which might require all voters to point out proof of their citizenship on the polls. Political organizers say that transfer might disenfranchise thousands and thousands of Black and Brown voters, married girls, youth, seniors, rural voters, and transgender voters. It was handed within the Home this February, however shouldn’t be legislation as of this April.
As well as, the present Supreme Court docket case Louisiana v. Callais,a redistricting case that focuses on the constitutionality of Louisiana’s congressional map, might “intestine” sure Voting Rights Act (VRA) protections, mentioned Clarke.
“Being an outspoken voice round voting rights; being an outspoken voice round range, fairness, and inclusion; being somebody who’s keen to be on the bottom in neighborhood, serving to to prepare and empower the voters and the individuals of the neighborhood, is one thing that I get a number of pleasure in doing, fairly frankly,” she mentioned. “I’d say that that’s part of my dwelling legacy.”
Clarke is a Flatbush native and the daughter of Jamaican immigrants. Her district contains 10 communities, very closely populated by the West Indian neighborhood. In Congress, she co-chairs the Congressional Caribbean Caucus. Earlier than being elected to the Home of Representatives, she served on town council succeeding her mom, former Councilmember Dr. Una S. T. Clarke. The district Clarke has served for therefore lengthy is closely affected by the present financial disaster, so she additionally plans on hyperfocusing on immigration reform, the affordability disaster within the metropolis, and regulating synthetic intelligence (AI).
“The escalating prices of groceries, on a regular basis provisions that folks must take pleasure in a high quality of life to satisfy the wants of their households, [are] compounded by what’s going down proper now in Washington,” mentioned Clarke. “The tariffs had been one factor. Now you add to that the warfare in Iran, and once more, it’s compounded. The affordability disaster has not let up, and doesn’t present any signal of letting up.”
Pinpointing Trump’s “pointless” spat with Iran, Clarke slammed his plans to make crucial price range cuts to assist fund the warfare: $10.7 billion for housing, $8.5 billion for Okay–12 applications, $2.5 billion for clear ingesting water, and $5 billion from the Nationwide Institutes of Well being.
Clarke added that immigration reform is a matter that’s been dearly private to her since her begin in Congress. She mentioned that the “foot dragging” is why the nation is within the state it’s in with rampant hostile anti-immigrant rhetoric.
“Lastly, for me, I’ve been very centered on the emergence and integration of expertise within the lives of the those that I characterize and the nation at giant, beginning with how the tech corporations have exploited the dearth of regulatory framework,”she mentioned.
Within the tech area, Clarke hopes to create extra fairness in AI areas and has pushed to fight misinformation with laws, such because the DEEPFAKES Accountability Act, to cease the unfold of malicious deepfakes; and the REAL Political Adverts Act, which will increase transparency about political AI-generated ads.
Even with the whole lot that’s taking place on the federal stage, Clarke mentioned she was excited to proceed her storied profession in Congress. “It was fantastic to have so many members of the neighborhood come to validate and uplift my re-election. It was heartwarming. I’m in Washington more often than not, battling it out,” Clarke mentioned in regards to the launch. “To know that it reverberates with my constituency is a degree of pleasure for me. I felt gratitude to the individuals. [They] haven’t missed or undervalued the work that I do.”
The New York State main election takes place June 23, and early voting is from June 13 to June 21.



















