In a political earthquake that has rattled the foundations of the Democratic establishment, the New York primary delivered a clean sweep for progressive candidates, effectively burying the last remnants of what once resembled British-style centrist governance. The message from voters was unequivocal: the era of triangulation and cautious moderation is over.
On Tuesday, voters in New York’s 16th congressional district ousted incumbent Eliot Engel, a 30-year veteran and chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, in favour of Jamaal Bowman, a former middle school principal backed by the Justice Democrats and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. But the shake-up did not stop there. In the 15th district, Ritchie Torres, a proud socialist, sailed to victory, while in the 17th, progressive Mondaire Jones secured the nomination. The pattern was clear: the centre cannot hold.
For Britons watching across the Atlantic, the parallels are hard to ignore. The Labour Party’s own civil war between centrists and the left now looks almost quaint by comparison. In New York, the moderates lost not just battles but the entire war. The question is: what does this mean for the average voter on the street?
I spent election day in the Bronx and Westchester County, talking to voters who turned out in record numbers despite the pandemic. Many said they were fed up with what they called "business as usual." A healthcare worker in her 40s told me she voted for Bowman because “Engel had been there forever and nothing changed.” A young man waiting to vote in Harlem echoed the sentiment: “We need people who actually fight for us, not just talk about compromise.”
This is the human cost of centrism: disenchantment and neglect. Centrist governance, with its love of triangulation and third-way politics, has failed to address the deep structural inequalities that the pandemic has laid bare. In New York, the working class and the poor have been hit hardest by Covid-19, while the rich fled to second homes. In such a climate, moderation looks like cowardice.
The cultural shift is profound. Politics is no longer a polite debate between tweed-wearing men in oak-panelled clubs. It is a street fight over the direction of society. The Democratic primaries in New York show that voters are no longer buying the idea that incremental change is enough. They want transformation. They want Medicare for All. They want a Green New Deal. And they are willing to primary anyone who stands in the way.
What does this mean for Britain? It suggests that the British centre-left, still hankering after a return to the Blair years, is out of step with the mood of the times. Labour’s Keir Starmer may try to project competence, but the New York result suggests that voters are looking for more than managerial efficiency. They want passion, anger, and a clear break with the past.
The irony is that these progressive candidates are often compared to Jeremy Corbyn, who was vilified by the British press and party establishment. Yet in New York, such unabashed leftism is now mainstream. The Overton window has shifted.
As the dust settles on the New York primary, the political class across the Atlantic would do well to listen to the streets. The centre cannot hold, not because it is too weak, but because it has failed too many people for too long. The clean sweep in New York is not an anomaly. It is a harbinger.











