Longtime Democratic Maryland Rep. Steny Hoyer has yet to announce whether he will seek re-election next year for a 24th two-year term in Congress.
If he does, he will face a primary challenger who is making Hoyer’s age — the congressman turns 86 next month and would be 89 at the end of his next term — a centerpiece of his campaign.
Harry Jarin, 35, a volunteer firefighter and emergency services consultant, said Thursday in a new video announcing his candidacy, “If you live here in southern Maryland, I want to ask you a tough question. Do you really think that Steny Hoyer, at 89-years-old, is the best person to represent us?”
Jarin argued that “we’re in a moment of real crisis. Radical Republicans are burning down our country around us. Our friends and family who work in the government are losing their jobs. We keep sending politicians like Steny Hoyer back to Congress again and again. Tired politicians like Steny can’t put up a fight that we need.”
Advertisement
PARTY VICE CHAIR IGNITES FIRESTORM WITH PUSH TO PRIMARY CHALLENGE OLDER HOUSE DEMOCRATS
Democrat Harry Jarin, seen in campaign launch video, is primary challenging longtime Democratic Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland in the 2026 elections.(Harry Jarin for Congress)
“Here’s the bottom line: You don’t put out a fire by sending in the same people who let it spread. Send in a firefighter,” Jarin said. “Maryland deserves a new generation of leadership, and I’m ready to take up the fight.”
And in an interview with Fox News Digital, Jarin said: “I think we’re facing a really serious constitutional crisis… Congress has really declined as an institution over the last three or four years. Congress has surrendered a lot of its legislative power under the Constitution over to the executive branch. I think that’s been very corrosive to our political system.”
Asked about his motivation to primary challenge Hoyer, Jarin said, “It’s not just about getting someone younger and fresher in. It’s getting someone in who understands the need to revitalize Congress as an institution.”
Advertisement
Fox News reached out to Hoyer’s office for a response, but a spokesperson declined to respond.
Hoyer, who first won his seat in Congress in a 1981 special election, from 2003 to 2023, was the second-ranking House Democrat behind Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. He served as House Majority Leader from 2007-2011 and from 2019-2023, when the Democrats controlled the chamber.
Along with Pelosi, Hoyer stepped down from his longtime leadership position at the end of 2022 but remained in Congress.
DEMOCRATS PREDICT HOUSE REPUBLICANS WILL PAY PRICE FOR PASSING TRUMP’S ‘BIG, BEAUTIFUL BILL’
“I think all of us have been around for some time and pretty much have a feel for the timing of decisions. And I think all three of us felt that this was the time,” Hoyer told CNN at the time, as he referred to the moves by the top three House Democrats — Pelosi, Hoyer and Rep. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C. — to step down from their leadership roles.
Advertisement
Hoyer has long been a major backer of the Democrats’ top issues, and during his second tenure as House majority leader, he played a crucial role in the passage of then-President Joe Biden’s so-called American Rescue Plan and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.
Longtime Democratic Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, a former House majority leader, will face a primary challenge if he decides to seek re-election in 2026.(Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)
He represents Maryland’s Democrat-dominated 5th Congressional District, which covers a region known as Southern Maryland, and includes the suburbs south and east of Washington, D.C., a sliver of suburban Baltimore and Annapolis, as well as rural areas farther south.
Hoyer, who suffered a minor stroke last year, is the latest high-ranking House Democrat to face a primary challenge from a younger opponent.
Pelosi and Reps. Brad Sherman of California and Jan Schakowsky of Illinois have drawn primary challenges, with Schakowsky later announcing that she will no longer run for re-election.
Advertisement
Jarin told Fox News that when he spoke with voters in the district about Hoyer, they had concerns about the incumbent’s age.
“The main reaction I got when I asked people about Steny Hoyer was first and foremost his age,” Jarin said. “The idea that he would be close to 90 years old at the end of the next term is just a little bit nuts for people. I think people are starting to process how extreme a situation that is.”
The primary challenges come as Democrats are still trying to regroup following last November’s election setbacks, when the party lost control of the White House and their Senate majority, and came up short in their bid to win back the House.
The party’s base is angry and energized to push back against the sweeping and controversial moves by President Donald Trump in the four months since he returned to the White House.
Additionally, while much of that anger and energy is directed at fighting the White House and congressional Republicans, some of it is targeted at Democrats whom many in the party’s base feel aren’t vocal enough in their efforts to stymie Trump.
Advertisement
Concurrently, other longtime and older House Democrats in safe blue districts are facing the possibility of primary challenges.
Democratic National Committee Vice Chair David Hogg is pledging to support primary challenges against older House Democrats in blue districts.(Dominic Gwinn/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)
This, after newly elected Democratic National Committee Vice Chair David Hogg last month pledged to spend millions of dollars through his outside political group to back primary challenges against what he called “asleep at the wheel” House Democrats — lawmakers he argued have failed to effectively push back against Trump.
The move by the 25-year-old Hogg, a survivor of the horrific shooting seven years ago at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in South Florida, to spend money against fellow Democrats ignited a firestorm within the party.
Jarin said that “we have reached out to David Hogg. We’ve been in communication.”
Advertisement
But Hogg told The Washington Post last month that he wouldn’t support primary challenges against Hoyer, Pelosi or Clyburn.
As for his ability to raise money for his campaign, Jarin said, “I do come from a political family.”
He noted that his husband was a major donor and bundler for former President Joe Biden’s successful 2020 campaign and also served as a DNC finance director, and that his uncle had “been a big bundler for Democratic causes for a long time.”
“I think a lot of donors realize that this is a problem but may not be able to say it out loud for fear of repercussions,” he argued.
Advertisement
Jarin said that he’s received “some pushback from donors for concerns of prioritizing more marginal districts” instead of pouring resources into swing seats as the party aims to win back the House majority in 2026.
“My message to them has been that putting extremely elderly politicians like Steny Hoyer back into office for a 24th term sends a message to voters across the country that Democrats are just the party of status quo and clearly that message has not been working,” he highlighted.
Paul Steinhauser is a politics reporter based in the swing state of New Hampshire. He covers the campaign trail from coast to coast.”
Rain early today and tapering to spotty drizzle through midmorning! Other than a spotty western CT shower late today it will try to dry out. Some sun, breezy and nicer Friday with some scattered showers at night and for early Saturday morning. On the chilly side this weekend with lots of 50s and another system going by just to our east Sunday that could clip eastern CT with a shower. We have been in a cycle of nice Mondays and that is the plan next week again!
Early this morning: Umbrella weather! Rain, heavy at times. Lows 45-50.
Today: Scattered showers during the morning. Drying out for much of the state with some late day partial clearing. A shower though for western areas. Cool with highs only in the 50s.
Tonight: More clearing with lows in the 40s.
Advertisement
Tomorrow (May 1st): Much nicer! Sun and clouds, warmer with highs in the lower to middle 60s. Scattered showers at night.
Saturday: Some morning showers moving out. Lots of clouds and cool with highs only in the middle to upper 50s.
Sunday: Lots of clouds, breezy and cool with highs in the upper 50s to about 60. Rain could clip eastern CT. during the morning!
Monday: Mostly sunny with highs in the 60s.
Tuesday: Sun to clouds with highs in the middle 60s.
Wednesday: More showers with highs in the middle 60s.
Thursday: Rain likely with highs in the middle 60s.
The 12-year-old boy from Allagash was excited to go with his father to the picket line.
It was 1981, and local loggers on strike were hoping to talk with Jim Irving of the massive Irving conglomerate in Canada and Maine. Times were changing, and they were worried about mechanical harvesting cutting into their paychecks.
The boy noticed the northern Maine loggers were laughing and joking. Then, Irving drove up, got out of his vehicle and delivered an ultimatum: go back to work at your current wages, or else I’m going to replace you with Canadians in the morning. The lighthearted banter between the loggers quickly turned into yelling, screaming and swearing.
It scared the boy. His father, along with most of the other loggers, would end up accepting the status quo and returning to work.
Advertisement
Decades later, the boy named Troy Jackson recounted that memory. He realized how his father, Joe, must have been feeling.
“He couldn’t say anything,” Jackson told a reporter on a recent weekday before meeting with electricians at their union building in Lewiston. “You lose your sense of pride, your sense of dignity.”
That feeling stuck with Jackson as he grew up to be a logger himself, then a state lawmaker.
What his father lost that day informs Jackson’s drive to be Maine’s next governor.
Jackson, now 57, has the life story and experience to make him a serious candidate for statewide office, but making it to November is not guaranteed. This year’s gubernatorial field vying to succeed term-limited Gov. Janet Mills is crowded and wide open. Some polls have put Jackson as high as second or as low as fifth in the five-person Democratic primary.
Advertisement
But he feels his roots in northern Maine and record of winning election after election in a pro-Trump part of the state as a progressive make him stand out. So does his past, his waking up at 2 a.m. for 18-hour days as a logger; his protests to try to improve conditions for him and lower-income workers.
“That wealth inequality and that power differential is something I’ve had to deal with my whole life,” Jackson said. “And that is what has probably shaped me more than anything.”
HISTORY REPEATS ITSELF
Troy Dale Jackson was born June 26, 1968, to a 16-year-old mother, Colleen McBreairty, in a Catholic family in Maine’s St. John Valley. Jackson’s father and mother got married young and “separated so many damn times” throughout Jackson’s childhood, he remembered. They officially divorced around the time Jackson was in middle school.
He attended the later-shuttered Allagash Consolidated School, playing any sports the tiny high school offered, and shot pool with his dad in his spare time. He later earned an associate’s degree in business from the University of Maine at Fort Kent.
His logger father and teacher mother didn’t want their son to go into logging, but he couldn’t stay out of the woods. (“I missed a lot of school,” Jackson said with a chuckle.) He rode in his father’s logging truck as a kid before starting as a logger himself at age 19.
Advertisement
In 1998, about a decade later, Jackson helped lead a weeklong blockade along the Quebec border to try to keep out the Canadian loggers their American counterparts felt were driving down pay rates. Jackson and his peers mostly blamed large American landowners for favoring the Canadian contractors. It felt like his dad’s experiences were repeating themselves.
Troy Jackson, then 6 years old, is pictured with his mom, Colleen McBreairty, on Christmas morning 1974. (Provided by Troy Jackson)
There were 90 loggers on the Maine side who were supposed to help, but only 15 showed up to block the Canadians from driving across three border checkpoints during the week, Jackson recalled.
By Friday, officials whom Jackson and his fellow loggers felt had to that point ignored them — including Republican Sens. Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins, and Democratic Rep. John Baldacci, asked the loggers to meet with them in Fort Kent.
The meeting was meant to calm tensions. Jackson called it “bullshit.” Negotiations went nowhere. After the loggers tried to continue the blockade the following Monday, it ended with them being banned from that land.
“That was government basically just telling everyone that (we’re) just scumbags,” Jackson said in his trademark St. John Valley accent.
Advertisement
Additional labor actions happened in Augusta the following year, but all those protests brought little change from policymakers, so Jackson ran for the Legislature as a Republican in 2000. Jackson said he had “no concept of parties” but he knew the Bush family had ties to Maine and respected that, so that’s why he started in the GOP.
He lost the rural Maine House of Representatives race for the district that was still heavily blue at the time to the Democratic incumbent, Rep. Marc Michaud. In 2002, he tried again as an independent and beat Michaud.
Jackson switched to the Democratic Party before his 2004 reelection, feeling aligned with lawmakers in that party who pushed to allow independent logging and trucking contractors to collectively bargain with landowners.
He has stuck with the party ever since, while Aroostook County shifted right and backed President Donald Trump in his three presidential elections.
He rose to the Maine Senate in 2008 and beat Republican opponents over the years in the northern part of the state that increasingly turned red. In 2018, he became Senate president. Except for losing an Allagash Select Board race by six votes in 2023, Jackson has a near-spotless record running as a progressive in Trump country.
Advertisement
“It doesn’t matter if you’re progressive or not. People will elect you if they think that you’re fighting for them,” Jackson said. “And they know I have been.”
RUNNING TO THE LEFT
Jackson, who is endorsed by U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and an array of labor unions, is running for governor on his populist legislative accomplishments.
He was behind a childcare overhaul in 2023 that expanded childcare subsidy eligibility to families making 125% of the state’s median income and that doubled the average monthly stipend for childcare workers, among other changes. As governor, he says he’d push to make childcare free for that income group — about $145,000 for a family of four. It would cost about $350 million per year.
He touts a 2018 bill requiring brand-name prescription drug companies to make their drugs available in Maine to generic producers, which became law without former Republican Gov. Paul LePage’s signature. And Jackson points to a measure he sponsored in 2019 to create a prescription drug affordability board, allow the wholesale importation of prescriptions and make other reforms. Mills signed that one into law.
Perhaps more than any other candidate, he is running against his Democratic predecessor’s legacy. He frequently butted heads with Mills, bashing her for vetoing his 2021 effort to ban drugmakers from enacting “excessive” price increases to certain prescriptions.
Advertisement
Though Mills approved a 2% tax on incomes above $1 million in her final state budget after previously opposing it, Jackson said the millionaire’s tax doesn’t go far enough. He would bump it up to a 4% surtax as governor and repeal LePage’s income tax cuts that lowered the top rate from 8.5% to 7.15%.
“The wealthy elite … are going to be fine,” while working-class residents have been “getting the shaft,” Jackson said earlier in April.
“(Working-class residents) are the people that I worry about,” Jackson said. “That’s my special interest group that I’m going to fight for.”
He wants to double Maine’s Earned Income Tax Credit to nearly $3,500 for families with three or more kids. (Jackson himself has a partner and two adult sons.) He says he would create a Department of Housing Affordability and consider surcharges on homes worth more than $1 million. And he would implement his long-sought “Buy American, Build Maine” effort that echoes Trumpian rhetoric by requiring state contracts to use domestic goods and give preference to products made in the state.
His views have evolved over time on certain issues. For example, Jackson went from identifying as anti-abortion in 2012 to saying he had a pro-abortion rights stance by the time of his 2nd Congressional District primary bid in 2014. (He lost the race to Democrat Emily Cain.) And on gun control, Jackson went from having a National Rifle Association endorsement to supporting new Democratic-backed limits, particularly after the 2023 mass shooting in Lewiston.
Advertisement
Jordyn Rossignol, of Caribou, has gotten to know Jackson well over the years. She saw Jackson’s dedication to tackling challenges firsthand while owning her childcare center that eventually closed in 2023 after succumbing to financial pressures. Rossignol, who is 37 and now in the process of taking over her mom’s dance studio, said “what you see is what you get with Troy.”
“I’ve seen him cry multiple times,” Rossignol said. “He definitely is passionate about what he is doing, and he cares.”
READY TO FIGHT
Jackson has worked across the aisle with Republican lawmakers and fought with governors from both parties. He’s not shying away from fights now.
That was exemplified by Jackson debating Republican Bobby Charles, who has led the GOP field in several polls. The one-on-one matchup got heated, with Jackson calling Charles a “little man” and Charles claiming Jackson was complicit in welfare fraud.
Jackson has spent years “trying to fight for the little guy,” said former state Sen. Bruce Bryant, a Democrat and retired mill worker in Rumford who overlapped with Jackson in the Legislature.
Advertisement
U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont hugs Troy Jackson after Jackson introduced Sanders at his Fighting Oligarchy rally at the Cross Insurance Arena in Portland on Sept. 1, 2025. (Brianna Soukup/Staff Photographer)
“He’s not going to be intimated by big money,” Bryant said. “He’s not going to be intimidated by big corporations because he’s been fighting them all his life.”
Jackson and his campaign have a lighter side, too. They’ve used social media and Reddit to interact with voters and let them get to know the candidate and his mother, for example, in a more intimate way.
Jackson seeks to win over not only Democrats in June but also voters of various stripes in November. He is the voter that Democrats have lost to Trump: white, male, no bachelor’s degree. Jackson believes he can get that voter back by showing him a positive vision of government.
He comes back to thinking about his father and all the time away from home the old man spent while working as a logger.
Advertisement
“Now it just feels like people are working a couple jobs,” Jackson said. “And why can’t people have time with their grandkids, with their kids, go to a basketball game, go fishing? It’s not being lazy. … We have to put more money in people’s pockets so that they can just spend a little bit more time with family), because you can’t get that back.”
Here are notable performances from boys’ lacrosse players competing in Eastern Mass. conferences/leagues in the past week.
Tomas Babine, Winthrop — The senior became a jack of all trades during a 13-2 victory over Malden Catholic on Monday, scoring a hat trick along with an assist, winning all three of his faceoff attempts, and jumping in net for the last five minutes to make two saves.
Mason Gadbois and Evan Roach, Danvers — Gadbois, a senior, scored four goals and delivered five assists in a 19-5 win over Peabody on Friday, after netting five goals and two assists in a 13-11 victory against Winthrop the day prior. Roach, a senior FOGO, went 22 for 26 on faceoffs with a goal and an assist against Peabody, and finished 19 of 27 from the X vs. Winthrop.
Cole Hogencamp, Mansfield — The Brown-bound junior began his week with two goals and three assists in a 16-4 win against Westwood on Thursday, followed by a six-goal performance to clinch the Chowda Cup title in an 11-9 win against Marshfield on Saturday. For good measure, he posted a hat trick to defeat Sharon, 16-5, on Monday.
Advertisement
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Freddy Torcasio, Newton North — The senior, committed to Roger Williams, erupted for six goals and three assists during a 13-6 win over Waltham on Saturday, then fired in four more goals to beat Milton, 9-1, on Tuesday.
Greg Walsh, Westwood — The junior middie found the net four times and supplied two assists to fight off a comeback attempt and defeat Falmouth, 13-11, to earn third place in the Chowda Cup on Saturday. On Monday, he collected three goals and three assists in a 15-3 triumph over Ashland.
Connor Wicken, Reading — The Albany-bound junior attack reached 100 career points through a four-goal, one-assist performance to defeat Catholic Memorial, 17-7, on Thursday. He then provided an identical 5-point day during a tight 12-11 win over North Andover on Saturday, for a fifth-place finish in the Players Cup.
Advertisement
Cameron Pellegrino can be reached at cameron.Pelegrino@globe.com. Follow him on X @cam_pellegrino.