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AIPAC‑Linked Networks Help Donna Miller and Melissa Bean Win as Squad‑Aligned Left Suffers Near‑Total Defeat in Illinois Democratic Primaries

AIPAC‑linked networks, joined by crypto and AI PAC money, funneled millions into Illinois Democratic primaries—using local‑branded groups like Affordable Chicago Now, Elect Chicago Women and the Chicago Progressive Partnership (which shared vendors with AIPAC‑tied entities)—to boost centrists Donna Miller and Melissa Bean. The spending blitz, which critics say included targeted attacks and vote‑splitting tactics that boosted splinter candidates, helped defeat several Squad‑aligned progressives (including Junaid Ahmed and Kat Abughazaleh) and prompted both celebration from AIPAC and accusations from progressives that outside money was reshaping the primaries.

Illinois Congressional Primaries Israel Policy and U.S. Elections AIPAC and Pro-Israel Lobbying Campaign Finance and Super PACs Illinois 9th Congressional District Primary

📌 Key Facts

  • A coordinated network of AIPAC‑linked entities and affiliates poured millions into Illinois Democratic primaries using local‑sounding groups: Chicago Progressive Partnership (about $2 million and confirmed to share vendors with AIPAC‑linked entities), Elect Chicago Women, and Affordable Chicago Now.
  • Outside spending split by candidate: Donna Miller was backed by nearly $4.5 million from Affordable Chicago Now; Melissa Bean was supported by roughly $3.3 million from Elect Chicago Women plus about $700,000 from Chicago Progressive Partnership; Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears‑Ervin faced more than $5 million in outside spending yet lost her primary.
  • The outside groups used coordinated tactics including innocuous local branding, shared vendors, targeted attack ads, ideological rebranding of centrists as "progressive fighters," messaging that painted opponents as wealthy or allied with Elon Musk/fossil‑fuel interests, boosting splinter candidates (notably Bushra Amiwala) to split the progressive vote, and supplemental ads from crypto and AI PACs.
  • Key primary outcomes: Donna Miller won in IL‑2 (over progressive state Sen. Robert Peters and others); Melissa Bean won in IL‑8 (defeating Junaid Ahmed, who had backing from Justice Democrats, Sen. Bernie Sanders, the Congressional Progressive Caucus and a local DSA chapter); Daniel Biss won the crowded IL‑9 primary (defeating Kat Abughazaleh by about four points); and LaShawn Ford won a Chicago‑area seat over Melissa Conyears‑Ervin.
  • The combined results amounted to a near‑total wipeout of Squad‑aligned and other progressive challengers across Illinois — multiple left‑wing candidates either finished well behind or had their votes split — a dynamic Axios and others described as a ‘virtually total collapse’ of the Squad‑aligned left in state congressional primaries.
  • Public reactions were polarized: AIPAC celebrated Illinois voters for rejecting what it called "far‑left" candidates, while Justice Democrats and allies accused AIPAC, AI and crypto money of "whitewashing" and improperly influencing Democratic primaries.
  • Wider context and candidate controversies: reporting noted AIPAC has had mixed 2026 results nationally (recent defeats in New Jersey and California and some former AIPAC‑backed lawmakers later distancing from the group); Daniel Biss met with AIPAC early in his campaign then denounced the group and faced criticism over his stance on U.S. aid to Israel and an acknowledged past inappropriate relationship allegation, and Kat Abughazaleh was reported to face federal charges tied to an incident near a Chicago‑area ICE holding facility.

📊 Relevant Data

Illinois' 8th Congressional District has a population where Hispanics make up 31.5% of residents, compared to the national Hispanic population of about 19%, potentially influencing candidate positions on immigration and foreign policy issues like Israel-Palestine.

Congressional District 8, IL - Profile data — Census Reporter

Illinois' 2nd Congressional District is majority Black, with Black residents comprising 53.2% of the population, far exceeding the national Black population percentage of 13.6%, which may affect voter priorities on issues like racial equity and foreign aid.

Congressional District 2, IL - Profile data — Census Reporter

Jews represent about 2.4% of the U.S. population but hold approximately 7.6% of seats in the U.S. House of Representatives as of 2024, indicating overrepresentation in Congress.

Congress is now 3 times more Jewish than the United States as a whole — Jewish Federations of North America

Illinois has an estimated 350,000 Muslim residents, representing about 2.8% of the state's population, with concentrations in Chicago-area districts that could impact Democratic primary outcomes on Israel-related issues.

Introduction, Results: Demographics — Muslim Civic Coalition

The 1965 Immigration Act contributed to demographic shifts in Illinois, increasing the Asian population in the Chicago metropolitan area from less than 1% in 1970 to 3.9% by 1990, with ongoing effects in districts like the 8th and 9th.

Shaping Illinois: The Effects of Immigration, 1970-2020 — Center for Immigration Studies

📰 Source Timeline (7)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

March 18, 2026
9:00 AM
The "Squad" left faces complete wipeout in Illinois Democratic primaries
Axios by Andrew Solender
New information:
  • Axios explicitly frames the combined Illinois results as a 'virtually total collapse' of the Squad‑aligned left in the state’s Democratic congressional primaries.
  • Details that in IL‑9, Kat Abughazaleh (backed by Justice Democrats and Sunrise) lost to Daniel Biss, with both opposed by AIPAC but AIPAC ads shifting late to target Abughazaleh as the more pro‑Palestinian candidate and boosting Bushra Amiwala.
  • Clarifies in IL‑8 that Junaid Ahmed was backed not only by Justice Democrats and Sen. Bernie Sanders but also by the Congressional Progressive Caucus and a local DSA chapter, and still lost to AIPAC‑ and crypto/AI‑backed former Rep. Melissa Bean.
  • Adds broader results: in IL‑2, progressive state Sen. Robert Peters finished a distant third behind AIPAC‑backed Donna Miller and Jesse Jackson Jr.; in IL‑7, CPC‑backed Anthony Driver Jr. and Kina Collins finished third and fourth as La Shawn Ford narrowly beat AIPAC‑backed Melissa Conyears‑Ervin.
  • Includes AIPAC’s public X posts celebrating Illinois voters for rejecting 'far‑left, would‑be Squad members' and Justice Democrats’ Alexandra Rojas accusing AIPAC, AI and crypto money of 'whitewashing' Melissa Bean’s record.
3:29 AM
Pro-Israel group AIPAC notches its first real 2026 Democratic primary wins in Illinois
Axios by Andrew Solender
New information:
  • Axios explicitly frames Donna Miller’s and Melissa Bean’s wins as 'much‑needed victories' for AIPAC and quotes a centrist House Democrat saying 'Illinois made AIPAC the comeback kid.'
  • New spending details and branding tactics: Miller backed by nearly $4.5 million in ad spending from AIPAC‑affiliated Affordable Chicago Now; Bean backed by $3.3 million from Elect Chicago Women plus $700,000 from Chicago Progressive Partnership portraying Junaid Ahmed as a wealthy ally of Elon Musk and fossil‑fuel interests.
  • Axios reports that Chicago Progressive Partnership not only attacked Abughazaleh but also 'boosted a left‑wing splinter candidate' (Bushra Amiwala) to split the progressive vote in IL‑9, a tactical detail not spelled out in the prior summary.
  • The article notes that Bean was also supported by separate Crypto and AI PAC ads and that AIPAC‑linked messaging branded the centrist former lawmaker as a 'progressive fighter' and 'staunch foe of ICE,' underscoring ideological rebranding tactics.
  • Axios adds national‑cycle context: recounting recent AIPAC defeats in the New Jersey special to replace Mikie Sherrill and in California (Dave Min), and noting that some AIPAC‑backed winners like Maxine Dexter and Valerie Foushee have since broken with the group on Israel.
3:02 AM
AIPAC-backed Chicago Democrat loses primary despite outside spending blitz
Fox News
New information:
  • Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears‑Ervin, heavily backed by AIPAC and affiliates with more than $5 million in spending, lost a 13‑way Democratic primary in a deep‑blue Chicago‑area House district.
  • State Rep. LaShawn Ford won that primary after emphasizing an endorsement from retiring longtime Rep. Danny Davis, who had represented the district for nearly three decades.
  • Conyears‑Ervin previously paid a $30,000 fine in 2025 to resolve Chicago ethics‑panel charges that she misused city funds and retaliated against whistleblowers, baggage that followed an earlier failed 2024 primary challenge against Davis.
  • Progressive activist Kina Collins and several other left‑wing candidates split votes on the party’s left flank, while AIPAC’s main super PAC also spent against developer Jason Friedman despite his raising more money than rivals.
  • Fox notes that AIPAC has had mixed 2026 primary results, contrasting this defeat with its role in blocking Tom Malinowski’s comeback in a New Jersey special election where an even more Israel‑critical candidate, Analilia Mejia, ultimately won the Democratic nomination.
2:45 AM
Establishment Democrats fend off far-left influencer in primary to succeed Rep Jan Schakowsky
Fox News
New information:
  • Illinois’ 9th Congressional District Democratic primary was won by Daniel Biss, the mayor of Evanston and a former state lawmaker, who was endorsed by retiring Rep. Jan Schakowsky.
  • Far‑left influencer and former Media Matters journalist Kat Abughazaleh lost in a 15‑candidate field and was one of three front‑runners; another front‑runner, Fine, was backed by AIPAC‑linked groups and identified as the most moderate.
  • Abughazaleh, 26, publicly opposed continuing Hakeem Jeffries’ leadership and was indicted on federal charges tied to agitators allegedly attacking an ICE vehicle outside a Chicago‑area holding facility.
  • The district is rated D+19 by the Cook Political Report, so the Democratic primary winner is effectively assured of taking the seat in November, and Biss is now the presumptive next House member.
2:40 AM
Daniel Biss wins Democratic primary for closely-watched Illinois House seat
NPR by Elena Moore
New information:
  • AP has officially called the Illinois 9th District Democratic primary for Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, ending a crowded contest for a seat that has been held by Jan Schakowsky since 1999.
  • NPR reports Kat Abughazaleh finished four percentage points behind Biss with more than 90% of the vote counted.
  • The piece adds specific detail that AIPAC‑aligned individuals and groups spent millions attacking Biss and backing state Sen. Laura Fine, and that Biss, who is Jewish, met with AIPAC early in the campaign, later denounced the group, and faced criticism for not taking a clear stance on U.S. aid to Israel.
  • The article reports a 2004 "inappropriate romantic relationship" allegation from a former student, with the Biss campaign acknowledging the relationship and calling it ill‑advised in a statement.
  • NPR highlights Abughazaleh’s generational and ideological positioning, including her quote redefining the "true center" around affordability and rejecting compromise as "getting your hand cut off and being grateful they left you your pinky."
March 17, 2026
4:34 PM
Illinois Primaries Flooded With Money From AIPAC and Cryptocurrency
Nytimes by Matt Zdun
New information:
  • Chicago Progressive Partnership has spent about $2 million in Illinois races and is now confirmed to share vendors with AIPAC-linked entities, strengthening evidence that it is part of a coordinated pro-Israel spending network.
  • The group has specifically opposed Junaid Ahmed in IL‑8 and supported Bushra Amiwala while opposing Kat Abughazaleh in IL‑9, even though Amiwala is herself a critic of Israel and has publicly denounced the ads.
  • Elect Chicago Women and Affordable Chicago Now—both working closely with AIPAC-tied groups—have separately poured millions into multiple districts, indicating a broader pattern of using innocuous local branding to intervene in primaries.
9:42 AM
Here’s the latest.
Nytimes by Lisa Lerer