Nida Allam, a young progressive challenging Representative Valerie Foushee, one of two Black congresswomen in North Carolina, conceded the Democratic primary race for the state’s Fourth Congressional District on Wednesday evening.
The Associated Press has not yet called the contest, but preliminary results showed Ms. Allam trailing Ms. Foushee by less than a percentage point.
Ms. Allam, a 32-year-old commissioner in Durham County, had promised to be a louder voice in Washington against the Trump administration. The contest was widely viewed as a bellwether for the type of candidate that Democratic voters wished to elevate in the Trump era, as progressives have demanded more of a public fight against an administration they view as mercurial and dangerous.
But supporters of Ms. Foushee, who was first elected in 2022 and has a largely progressive voting record, viewed her as an effective legislator who had diligently worked her way up the political ladder, including as a state legislator, and who was calculated in her messaging against the president. And it appeared that Ms. Allam did not feel confident that she could overcome the support that Ms. Foushee had in North Carolina’s bluest congressional district, and among Democratic leaders on Capitol Hill.
“It should not take being challenged in a primary to take bold stances that voters overwhelmingly support, but I am proud that our movement pushed our incumbent to better reflect our deeply held values and convictions,” Ms. Allam said on Wednesday night.
Both candidates gained loyal followings throughout the messy campaign, which became a bitter battle over issues like U.S. support for Israel and the U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran.
Ms. Allam had attacked Ms. Foushee for having taken money in the past from groups tied to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the powerful pro-Israel lobbying organization; Ms. Foushee broke with AIPAC last summer and has been highly critical of Israel’s war campaign in Gaza.
Ms. Foushee was endorsed by scores of local Democratic leaders, including Gov. Josh Stein and former Gov. Roy Cooper, who handily won the Democratic primary for U.S. Senate on Tuesday.
Ms. Allam, meanwhile, was endorsed by Senator Bernie Sanders, the Vermont independent, and appeared to have won support from many young voters in the district, which includes several major universities in the Research Triangle region around Durham and Chapel Hill.
Eduardo Medina is a Times reporter covering the South. An Alabama native, he is now based in Durham, N.C.
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