Rep. Elise Stefanik set to drop her bid for NYS governor
ALBANY, New York — Rep. Elise Stefanik is suspending her campaign for New York governor and will not seek reelection to her upstate House seat, she announced Friday.
“I am truly humbled and grateful for the historic and overwhelming support from Republicans, Conservatives, Independents, and Democrats all across the state for our campaign to Save New York,” she wrote in a social media post.
“However, as we have seen in past elections, while we would have overwhelmingly won this primary, it is not an effective use of our time or your generous resources to spend the first half of next year in an unnecessary and protracted Republican primary, especially in a challenging state like New York.”
Stefanik entered the race to challenge Gov. Kathy Hochul in November — months after President Donald Trump cleared the field by endorsing moderate GOP Rep. Mike Lawler’s reelection in his swing House seat.
But her bid became complicated this month by the entrance of Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman into the race for governor. Both Stefanik and Blakeman are Trump allies and the president has publicly praised both candidates as “great.” Blakeman’s campaign on Thursday announced it would begin airing ads during the week of Christmas in West Palm Beach — the location of the president’s Florida residence.
The party establishment quickly started to rally behind Blakeman following Stefanik’s announcement.
"Bruce Blakeman has my endorsement and I urge our State Committee and party leaders to join me,” state GOP Chair Ed Cox said in a statement. “Bruce is a fighter who has proven he knows how to win in difficult political terrain. As County Executive, he cut taxes, fought against radical leftwing social policies and made Nassau County the safest county in America.”
Stefanik was previously nominated by Trump to become United Nations ambassador. That nomination was yanked earlier this year amid concerns over House Republicans’ narrow majority. The 41-year-old Republican then turned her attention to the New York governor’s office — a seat her party has not held since George Pataki was elected three times.
The race was immediately an uphill battle for Stefanik, who hammered Hochul repeatedly as the “worst governor in America” and signaled she would link her to incoming New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani.
Early polling, though, showed her to be in a challenging race to win in a deep blue state. A Siena University survey this month found Hochul holding a 19-point advantage over the GOP challenger.
Stefanik had been scheduled to be the featured guest at the Oneida County GOP’s holiday dinner Friday night. But she canceled, citing business in Washington — despite the fact the House has adjourned for the year.
The departure leaves Blakeman as the only candidate in the GOP field as the party seeks to end what will be a 24-year drought in statewide contests in 2026.
He’s little known outside of Long Island — the recent Siena poll found 59 percent of Republicans didn’t know or have an opinion of him. And while he’s started to tour upstate in an effort to build bridges, he’s made few inroads in the vote-rich corner of northern New York where Stefanik has been building her base for a decade.
Blakeman has based his candidacy on support for law enforcement and his electability — he comfortably won reelection in purple Nassau County last month despite a strong night for Democrats practically everywhere else in the state.


© Rod Lamkey Jr./AP





















