Democrat Amish Shah Embraces Further Left Agenda After 2024 Loss

Democrat Amish Shah Embraces Further Left Agenda After 2024 Loss

By Staff Reporter |

Congressional candidate Amish Shah vowed to represent a further left faction of the Democratic Party should he be elected.

Shah made the promise during a recent candidate forum hosted by LD3 Democrats. His shift represented a reflection on his 2024 loss against Rep. David Schweikert (R-01), who is running for governor. Shah served in the Arizona House of Representatives from 2019 to 2024. 

Per Shah, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) told him that he was too much of a “nice guy” to win the 2024 election. The DCCC refused to endorse Shah this time around, instead endorsing his primary opponent, Marlene Galan-Woods, earlier this month. 

It appears Shah’s response was to move aggressively to the left on policy. 

“I am not hesitating one bit to use my platform to be able to prosecute [President Donald Trump and Republicans] as vigorously as I can, sometimes with expletives or whatever it takes,” said Shah during the LD3 virtual forum.

Shah also promised to repeal Trump’s tax cuts for working families. He called them “abominable.”

National Republican Congressional Committee spokesman Ben Peteresen told The Yellow Sheet, which first reported on this virtual forum, that Shah’s statements were “radical.” 

“Democrat Amish Shah said he lost because Biden and Harris were toxic, then ran even further left by calling for massive tax increases, socialism and open borders,” said Petersen. 

The version of his candidacy that Shah presented on that virtual forum diverges slightly from the public version of his candidacy. 

Shah has publicly claimed that he doesn’t recognize party differences and would work across the aisle to solve problems. 

“When I served in the Arizona House, I didn’t see ‘Democrats’ and ‘Republicans.’ I saw problems that needed to be solved,” said Shah. “I’m running for Congress to bring that same mindset to Washington; focus on solutions, find common ground where we can, and actually deliver results that improve people’s lives.”

Shah’s platform on his campaign website focuses on expanding federal healthcare, codifying abortion, ending tariffs, and increasing public school funding and teacher pay. On his “resources” page targeting primary opponent Galan-Woods, Shah promised to pass a ban on stock trading by members of Congress.

Similarly, in his failed 2024 challenge to incumbent Schweikert, Shah styled himself as an “independent” candidate — despite his consistently progressive actions in the state legislature and a past admission to his alliance with socialists. 

In a town hall with the Phoenix Democratic Socialists of America and the Progressive Democrats of America in 2019, Shaw encouraged the adoption of government-run universal healthcare. Months prior to that town hall, Shah proposed replacing capitalism with socialism. 

Shah received national recognition by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists for successfully defending the abortion drug mifepristone against attempts to outlaw it. 

Shah was also behind legislation to expand anti-discrimination laws to afford protections to gender identity and sexual orientation, and to redefine marriage within the state constitution. 

Shah has funneled over $230,000 of his own money into his congressional campaign according to Federal Election Commission records. So far, Shah has raised nearly $1.9 million.

Top donors include the D.C. organizations IA Victory Fund and 314 Action Impact Slate; Illinois entrepreneur Purav Kapadia; and Chandler doctor Snehal Bhoola.

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Tucson Elects Socialist Council Member Backed By Powerful Progressive Organizations

Tucson Elects Socialist Council Member Backed By Powerful Progressive Organizations

By Staff Reporter |

The newest member of the Tucson City Council is further left than the rest of the council’s Democrats.

That’s because newly elected Tucson Councilwoman Miranda Schubert is a socialist. Schubert’s victory can be credited in part to several powerful national players in progressive politics.

One of those key players is the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA). The DSA endorsed Schubert; she is also a member of their Tucson chapter. 

The DSA platform is the furthest to the left, policywise, on every issue. 

The DSA advocates for:

  • making all healthcare, college, and childcare free; 
  • cancelling all student loan debts; 
  • decriminalizing all drugs; 
  • abolishing prisons, mandatory minimum sentencing, and cash bail; 
  • stripping police departments of military-grade weapons and equipment; 
  • establishing universal rent control;
  • providing free counsel for all tenants; 
  • expanding subsidized housing; 
  • mandating paid family leave for all workers; 
  • reducing the regular workweek to 32 hours; 
  • establishing more unions in the workforce; 
  • eliminating fossil fuels; 
  • transferring ownership of transportation and energy infrastructure to the public; 
  • raising taxes on wealthier families, corporations, and private colleges and universities; 
  • mandating a permanent ceasefire in Gaza; 
  • ending military support and commerce to Israel; 
  • closing overseas bases and reducing the military budget; 
  • abolishing borders and immigration enforcement; 
  • ending economic sanctions on foreign countries; 
  • restoring voting rights to felons; 
  • granting voting rights to noncitizens; 
  • establishing statehood for Washington, D.C.; 
  • abolishing the electoral college; 
  • adding more House seats; 
  • ending the Senate filibuster; 
  • and limiting the Supreme Court’s powers

Schubert’s local DSA in Tucson aligns with this platform, and also supports progressive causes like allowing gender transitions for minors.

Another key player integral to Schubert’s victory was Run For Something (RFS), a political action committee devoted to recruiting and providing campaign assistance to progressive candidates across all 50 states. A former staffer from Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign, Amanda Litman, and a Democratic Party consultant, Ross Morales Rocketto, launched RFS in 2017. 

Schubert was one of two 2025 candidates in Arizona to receive support from RFS. They also provided Schubert support for her unsuccessful council run in 2021; that year she was their only endorsed candidate for Arizona. 

IRS records show the social welfare nonprofit arm for RFS — formed in 2020 with the same name as its parent organization — reported over $6 million in revenue, over $9 million in expenditures, and nearly $7 million in total assets in the last available reporting (2023). 

Another DSA member won a significant seat across the country on Tuesday night: Zohran Mamdani for New York City mayor. 

Along with the strength of progressive powerhouses DSA and RFS, Schubert had significant support from the corporate sector: specifically, those assisting in transitioning the state to “clean” energy.

Schubert’s partner, Amanda Maass, is senior managing consultant at Illume Advising, a progressive research and advisory firm with headquarters in Tucson and Madison, Wisconsin. Illume assists utilities, states, and governments with the adoption of “clean” and “green” initiatives such as decarbonization and renewable energy. 

Both Arizona Public Service (APS) and Tucson Electric Power (TEP) have been Illume clients. In recent years, Illume worked with both to craft a DEI-driven plan to electrify transportation across Arizona. 

Illume has close ties to local and state leaders, including Tucson Mayor Regina Romero, Pima County Deputy Administrator Steve Holmes, Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego, and Attorney General Kris Mayes. Romero’s communications and policy advisor, Victor Mercado, was Illume’s marketing and business development principal. 

Illume founder and co-owner Anne Dougherty is board chair of the LGBTQ+ Alliance Fund of Southern Arizona, and director for the Arizona Technology Council as well as Groundswell Capital.

Prior to running for council, Schubert founded a labor union for Arizona’s public universities and some community colleges, CWA Local 7065 United Campus Workers of Arizona, and a local housing and transit advocacy group, Tucson for Everyone.

Schubert also served on two city commissions, the Complete Streets Coordinating Council and the Board of Adjustment.

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