To run for Nancy Pelosi’s congressional seat, it helps to know where you stand on Nancy Pelosi.
The June 2 primary to fill California’s 11th Congressional District seat, which encompasses San Francisco, features a front-runner who reveres Pelosi, a local politician who secured her surprise endorsement and a progressive challenger who has no problem critiquing her.
Analysts say the sway the longtime California congresswoman exerts over the race reflects the outsized power she wields in the Democratic Party — even as she is on her way out of elected office.
“This is not a person who’s about to drift off into the sunset,” said Larry Gerston, a California-based political analyst and professor emeritus at San Jose State University. “The sun might follow her.”
Polls show state Sen. Scott Wiener leading the field. Wiener has deep roots in Bay Area politics. He served on San Francisco’s board of supervisors before winning a state senate seat in 2016, and his congressional campaign has been endorsed by the California Democratic Party. Many in the Democratic establishment viewed him as Pelosi’s heir apparent.
Pelosi instead opted to endorse Connie Chan, a member of the board of supervisors who has the backing of Sen. Adam Schiff, former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown and the Working Families Party. Chan is polling in second or third place, neck and neck with Saikat Chakrabarti, a former chief of staff to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and co-founder of the left-wing Justice Democrats. Under California’s “jungle” primary system, the top two leading vote-getters on Tuesday will advance to the general election, regardless of party.
Unlike Wiener, who publicly praised Pelosi even after she endorsed his rival, and Chan, who appeared alongside the congresswoman in her endorsement video, Chakrabarti has touted his disagreements with her — including her opposition to Medicare for All and a ban on congressional stock trading — as part of his platform.
“I decided to run for Congress against Nancy Pelosi because we need a new generation of leadership to deliver a fundamentally better life for ALL — not just stop Trump,” he said on X.
But even Chakrabarti and the Justice Democrats, which is backing his campaign, cannot seem to entirely avoid praising her.
“We can absolutely celebrate the successes she’s had in her trailblazing career,” Justice Democrats spokesperson Usamah Andrabi told MS NOW. “And we should absolutely be a party and have leaders who are willing to criticize that leadership and willing to push for more and fight harder.”
Chakrabarti has earned the backing of Reps. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., and Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., two members of the House’s so-called squad of progressives. But his bid to replicate the nationwide trend of younger progressive Democrats challenging more moderate members of the party establishment has faced some hurdles: His opponents have repeatedly noted that Ocasio-Cortez has not endorsed him and that he has spent several million of his own money in the race, according to Federal Election Commission filings. Chakrabarti made his fortune as a founding engineer of the financial services software company Stripe. He has said he will spend whatever it takes to win.
Andrabi defended Chakrabarti’s massive self-funding as a righteous use of his wealth. “We welcome class traitors who are working to advance our movement and not the interests of the wealthiest few in this country,” he said.
Wiener and Chan, meanwhile, have positioned themselves as progressives ready to take on the Trump administration — and have campaigned on far less cash. Wiener has raised $3.9 million, including large amounts from tech and cryptocurrency titans, while Chan has taken in less than $700,000, per FEC filings.
The two have gone out of their way to praise Pelosi, even when asked to criticize her. At a recent debate where moderators asked the candidates to specify an issue they would handle differently than the congresswoman, Chan and Wiener praised her at length before pledging to support sanctuary cities and expand housing access, respectively — both issues that Pelosi has also supported. (Wiener eventually pointed to a so-called AI safety bill he authored in 2024, which Pelosi opposed.)
After Pelosi endorsed Chan, Wiener said he has “tremendous respect” for the congresswoman and “deep gratitude for everything she has done for our city and our country.”










