California State Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), a gay lawmaker long targeted by the right for his progressive record on LGBTQ rights and criminal justice reform, is reportedly planning to run for U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi‘s (D-Calif.) congressional seat in 2026, according to The San Francisco Standard.
At 85, Pelosi — a two-time Speaker of the U.S. House — has largely receded from the political spotlight, creating an opening for challengers in her heavily Democratic district. She has not yet said whether she plans to seek another term.
Wiener, who previously indicated he would not run until Pelosi stepped down, has been spurred by the rise of progressive candidate Saikat Chakrabarti — a tech millionaire and former chief of staff to U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.). A formal campaign announcement is reportedly expected next week.
In recent months, Chakrabarti has drawn sizable crowds to campaign events across San Francisco, using them to criticize the Democratic Party’s current direction and appeal to disenchanted progressives and anti-establishment voters. He has said he’ll run regardless of Pelosi’s decision to retire or seek another term.
Chakrabarti’s campaign released a poll showing that 65% of registered voters in the district — including 51% of self-described Pelosi supporters — believe the area, which covers most of San Francisco, needs new congressional leadership. In a head-to-head matchup, Chakrabarti outperformed Pelosi after respondents reviewed both candidates’ biographies.
Sources close to Wiener say the poll reinforced the idea that Pelosi could be vulnerable to a primary challenge. By announcing now, Wiener would have time to build a credible campaign, secure endorsements, and raise funds for what’s expected to be an expensive race in one of the nation’s costliest media markets. His exploratory committee has already raised about $1 million.
“People are hungry for something different,” one source told The Standard of Wiener’s expected entry into the race. “There’s a sense that the time has come for other candidates to run.”
A separate EMC Research poll of 500 registered San Francisco voters found that 51% would prefer to elect someone other than Pelosi to Congress. Among potential challengers, Wiener — whose state senate district overlaps with Pelosi’s — earned the highest favorability rating at 61%. Another progressive, Supervisor Connie Chan, came in at 28%, while Chakrabarti and Pelosi’s daughter, Christine, each registered 21%.
Asked about his plans, Wiener told The San Francisco Standard in a text message, “I’ve been preparing and raising money for whenever the race starts.”
Pelosi, meanwhile, has remained quiet about her political future. Her spokesperson, Ian Krager, said she’s focused on building support for Proposition 50, a ballot measure backed by Gov. Gavin Newsom that would help Democrats redraw five congressional seats in their favor — a counterweight to Texas’s mid-decade redistricting effort benefiting Republicans.
“Speaker Pelosi is fully focused on her mission to win the ‘Yes on 50′ special election in California on the path to taking back the House for the Democrats,” Krager wrote in a statement. “She urges all Californians to join in that mission.”
U.S. Rep. Julie Johnson, one of several Democrats targeted in Texas's latest gerrymander, says she will seek reelection after a federal three-judge panel blocked a Republican-backed congressional map that would have drawn her out of her Dallas-area district for 2026.
The lesbian congresswoman is one of five Texas Democrats whose districts were reshaped to give Republicans a 2026 edge, and among several Democrats who were effectively drawn out of the seats they currently represent.
In Johnson's case, the proposed map would have stretched her Dallas-based 32nd District into Republican-leaning Rockwall County and rural East Texas, while shifting her hometown of Farmers Branch into GOP Rep. Beth Van Duyne's 24th District, a seat Trump won by 16 points in 2024.
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that cisgender students may repeatedly and intentionally misgender transgender classmates, invalidating an Ohio school district's policies that sought to stop the practice.
In a 10-7 decision, the court found that Olentangy Local School District's prohibition on using "gendered language they know is contrary to the other student's identity," including pronouns and honorifics, infringes on the rights of students who believe there are only two genders.
The challenged policies include an anti-harassment rule prohibiting "discriminatory harassment" or bullying based on gender identity and other protected traits that "places a student or school employee in reasonable fear of harm," interferes with education or work, or disrupts school operations, according to The Associated Press.
In a letter to House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), 213 Democratic U.S. representatives, as well as Delegates Stacey Plaskett (Virgin Islands), Eleanor Holmes Norton (D.C.), and Resident Commissioner Pablo José Hernández (Puerto Rico), are demanding that Johnson rebuke Republican lawmakers for using "demonizing and dehumanizing" language when speaking about the transgender community.
"We write to you to strongly condemn the rise in anti-transgender rhetoric, including from members of Congress, and to urge you to ensure members of Congress are following rules of decorum and not using their platforms to demonize and scapegoat any marginalized community, including the transgender community," the Democrats' letter reads.
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