The knives came out fast.
Far-left media allies are raging after Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was crushed in a secretive internal vote, blocked from taking a powerful watchdog role in Congress. Instead, Democrats chose an older, safer insider.

Behind the closed doors of the Democratic caucus, the vote wasn’t even close. Rep. Gerry Connolly, a veteran institutionalist, easily beat Ocasio-Cortez for the top Democrat slot on the House Oversight Committee, first in the Steering and Policy Committee and then in the full caucus. For many on the left, that outcome felt less like routine politics and more like a deliberate rebuke.

Progressive commentators and activists saw a pattern: a party leadership clinging to seniority, consultants, and familiar faces instead of elevating a nationally known firebrand who energizes young voters and the base. Joy Reid’s exasperation — blasting Democrats for protecting a “gerontocracy” — captured a broader fear that the party is sidelining its future to protect its past. In that tension between insurgent energy and entrenched power, AOC’s defeat became a symbol of a deeper, unresolved war inside the Democratic Party.

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