India Walton’s once-promising bid to become the first socialist mayor of Buffalo, New York — and the first in a major American city in over half a century — looks like it may be over after a remarkably effective write-in campaign by the longtime incumbent she had toppled in the primary.
As of 12:30 a.m. Eastern, about 59 percent of votes submitted in her contest were for write-in candidates, and 41 percent were cast for Walton, CNN reported. Walton has not conceded, and her opponent Byron Brown has declared victory despite the fact that votes will not be tabulated until Nov. 17.
According to The Buffalo News, the accumulation of the write-in ballots “point to a significant lead for Brown.” While the race is not officially over, it’s at least safe to say this was a weak showing for Walton’s upstart campaign — especially given the inherent difficulties of convincing voters to write down the name of a candidate not on the ballot and the advantages of running in a blue city. (There are multiple write-in candidates, but Brown is by far the most prominent one.)
It’s too early for thorough post-mortems of the race, but there are some initial takeaways worth reflecting on based on what we know.
Walton’s “defund the police”-influenced police reform platform was a hugely polarizing issue.
First, Brown’s performance highlights a path for establishment Democrats who lose primaries to progressive challengers to try to stay in power. Brown, who has been in office for four terms, didn’t take Walton seriously as a challenger, declining to debate her or mention her in the run-up to the nominating contest. After Walton decisively beat him in the primary, he tried (and failed) to get on the ballot as an independent and then decided to run an aggressive, costly write-in campaign. Among other things, he spent around $100,000 on tens of thousands of ink stamps bearing his name and had them distributed by political allies leading up to Election Day to boost his name and minimize the likelihood of spelling errors.
Brown’s behavior was in defiance of party norms. Typically if a candidate loses in their party’s primary, that candidate is supposed to back the winner to ensure party unity and discipline. Brown’s decision to seek a rematch in the general election was poor form in that respect, but it wasn’t unprecedented. In 2010, Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska won as a write-in candidate after losing in her state’s Republican primary to a Sarah Palin-backed tea party challenger. In a testament to how unusual this dynamic is, Walton, an outsider and firebrand lefty activist, repeatedly emphasized her backing from the Democratic Party establishment in her closing arguments to voters as she tried to best Brown. Even if Brown doesn’t win, it’s clear he has laid out a potential playbook for other Democratic incumbents in the way he’s sought to win over support from Republicans and build a substantial centrist coalition to thwart the challenge from his left.
Another takeaway from the race: Walton’s “defund the police”-influenced police reform platform was a hugely polarizing issue and constituted Walton’s most vulnerable flank during the general election race.
Walton, a nurse and activist who gained some prominence in the city during the post-George Floyd racial justice protests, initially fully embraced the “defund the police” slogan when announcing her intention to run for mayor of the city, and she cited Brown’s incrementalism on police reform as a reason for launching her campaign. But she later distanced herself from the term.







