Saturday, September 20, 2025

Kathy Hochul deputy announces decision to challenge her in New York governor’s race – as it happened

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New York’s lieutenant governor, Antonio Delgado, announces run against his boss, Kathy Hochul

New York’s lieutenant governor, Antonio Delgado, announced on Monday that he is running for governor, setting up a Democratic primary battle against the sitting governor, Kathy Hochul, who selected him for the job as her deputy.

In a campaign video posted on YouTube, Delgado introduced himself to voters as “a hip-hop artist, a congressman, a man of faith” with working-class roots in upstate New York and his desire to provide “transformational leadership”.

A campaign video from New York’s lieutenant governor, Antonio Delgado.

“Listen, the powerful and well-connected have their champions,” Delgado says in the video. “I’m running for governor to be yours.”

Delgado gave up a House seat in the Hudson valley to become lieutenant governor to Hochul, a post Hochul herself held until Andrew Cuomo was forced to resign as governor and she inherited the top job in 2021.

Hochul narrowly won a full term in 2022 in a race against Republican Lee Zeldin, a former Congressman who is now head of the environmental protection agency.

Delgado has refused to rule out a primary challenge against Hochul for months and earlier this year said he would he would not run for reelection alongside her.

He broke publicly with the governor on two fights within the Democratic party over the past year. In 2024, when Hochul was a campaign surrogate for Joe Biden, Delgado called on the then president to drop out of the presidential race.

Earlier this year, Delgado called for New York City’s mayor, Eric Adams, to resign when it became apparent that he had cut a deal with the Trump administration to have his indictment on federal corruption charges dropped.

Hochul, who had the power as governor to depose Adams, chose not to do so.

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Key events

Closing summary

This concludes our live coverage of the day in US politics. We will return on Tuesday to continue chronicling the second Trump administration, but here are some of Monday’s main developments:

  • Federal and state authorities filed murder and hate crimes charges against Mohamed Sabry Soliman, the suspected attacker in Boulder, Colorado who hurled Molotov cocktails at a demonstration for Israeli hostages still held in Gaza, injuring 12 people.

  • The head of Ice defended his agency’s decision to arrest an 18-year-old Massachusetts high school student on his way to volleyball practice. US district judge Richard Stearns later ordered a 72-hour stay to “provide a fair opportunity for the judge who will be randomly assigned to this case” to review merits and rule on any contested issues in the case of Marcelo Gomes Da Silva.

  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) barred its 2025 class president from attending her graduation ceremony on Friday after she delivered a speech during a commencement event the day before condemning Israel’s war in Gaza and criticizing the university’s ties to Israel.

  • China accused the US of “seriously violating” and undermining the agreements reached in Geneva in May.

  • Prosecutors in Milwaukee charged a man on Monday with four felonies for attempting to frame an undocumented immigrant he is accused of assaulting, by sending forged letters in the immigrant’s name with a threat to kill Donald Trump.

  • New York’s lieutenant governor, Antonio Delgado, announced on Monday that he is running for governor, setting up a Democratic primary battle against the sitting governor, Kathy Hochul, who selected him for the job as her deputy.

  • Senator Chuck Schumer, the Senate’s senior Democrat, released a social media video on Monday in which he seemed to taunt Donald Trump for supposedly being too “chicken” in negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program.

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