AOC slammed top Democrats for backing Rep.Henry Cuellar , an anti-abortion Democrat with an A rating from the NRA.- Cuellar faced a primary challenge from progressive
Jessica Cisneros , but leads her by less than 200 votes.
Democratic Rep.
"Accountability isn't partisan. This was an utter failure of leadership," Ocasio-Cortez wrote on Twitter. "
Cuellar, the only House Democrat with an "A" rating from the National Rifle Association and the only House Democrat to vote against a bill that would codify abortion rights into law, faced a primary challenge from progressive lawyer Jessica Cisneros. As of Wednesday morning, the incumbent congressman led Cisneros by less than 200 votes.
—Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) May 25, 2022
But despite his conspicuous break from major party priorities, top Democrats held fundraisers and recorded robo-calls on behalf of Cuellar. That support became even more notable as a leaked draft Supreme Court opinion indicated that Roe v. Wade was likely to be overturned, and two mass shootings took place in Buffalo, New York and Uvalde, Texas.
Adding to the drama, Cuellar's home and campaign office were raided by the FBI in January, though his lawyer says that the congressman is not the subject of the investigation.
"On the day of a mass shooting and weeks after
Top Democrats had defended their support for Cuellar in light of the leaked
"The fact is those who fail their communities deserve to lose," Ocasio-Cortez said. "They don't need rescuing from powerful leaders who state they fight for gun safety, the right to choose, and more."
The New York congresswoman and other top progressives — including Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington — had backed Cisneros, who was challenging Cuellar for the second time. And Cisneros had called on Democratic leaders to drop their support for Cuellar in light of the leaked abortion opinion.
Noting that the run-off was "extremely close," Ocasio-Cortez argued that Democratic leaders had "gone to the mat for a pro-NRA incumbent" and will have "mobilized against a badly needed grassroots" ahead of the 2022 midterm elections.
She also noted that Cuellar was a member of the "Unbreakable Nine," a group of conservative House Democrats who demanded that the bipartisan infrastructure law be passed separately from the now-doomed "Build Back Better" social spending bill, which ultimately imperiled the expanded child tax credit that was set to be renewed as part of the legislation.
"We can't afford to reward such acts," she concluded. "We can do better."