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Micah Bergdale

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This candidate is participating in a 2026 battleground election. Click here to read more about that election.
Micah Bergdale
Candidate, U.S. House New York District 12
Elections and appointments
Next election
June 23, 2026
Education
High school
Bradshaw Mountain High School
Bachelor's
Northern Arizona University, 2000
Personal
Birthplace
Sioux City, IA
Religion
Judaism
Profession
CEO
Contact

Micah Bergdale (Democratic Party) is running for election to the U.S. House to represent New York's 12th Congressional District. He declared candidacy for the Democratic primary scheduled on June 23, 2026.[source]

Bergdale completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2025. Click here to read the survey answers.

Biography

Micah Bergdale was born in Sioux City, Iowa. He earned a high school diploma from Bradshaw Mountain High School and a bachelor's degree from Northern Arizona University in 2000. His career experience includes working as a CEO. As of 2025, Bergdale was affiliated with Indivisible.[1]

2026 battleground election

See also: New York's 12th Congressional District election, 2026 (June 23 Democratic primary)

Ballotpedia identified the June 23 Democratic primary for New York's 12th Congressional District as a battleground primary. The summary below is from our coverage of this election, found here.

Alex Bores (D), George Conway (D), Micah Lasher (D), Jack Schlossberg (D), and six other candidates are running in the Democratic primary for New York's 12th Congressional District on June 23, 2026. The filing deadline was April 6, 2026. As of April 2026, Bores, Conway, Lasher, and Schlossberg led in polling, fundraising, and local media attention.[2][3][4]

Incumbent Jerrold Nadler (D), first elected in 1992, is not seeking re-election. Nadler endorsed Lasher on February 9, 2026.[5] The Washington Examiner's Ron Kampeas said, "many of the candidates are leaning into personal stories that help them stand out in a field where there is broad agreement on making New York affordable and stopping Trump’s excesses."[6]

Bores was elected to the New York Assembly in 2022. Bores earlier worked in the software industry as an engineer and manager. Bores says he is "the first Democrat elected in New York State at any level with a degree in computer science."[7] Bores supports regulations he says will limit the artificial intelligence industry. Bores said in a statement that "these AI Goliaths want to take over our safety, our workforce, and our kids’ minds for their own personal profit and power."[8]

Conway is an attorney and the co-founder of the Lincoln Project, a group opposed to President Donald Trump's (R) policy agenda. Conway says he has spent six years "[using] his skills and network to expose Trump’s lies, corruption, and lawlessness in the media and in the courts."[9] In a campaign ad, Conway said, "I'm running for Congress to take the fight directly back to him on your behalf...This is no ordinary time and I will not be an ordinary member of Congress."[10]

Lasher was elected to the New York Assembly in 2024. Lasher earlier worked as a staffer to Nadler, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg (I), and Gov. Kathy Hochul (D). City & State New York's Peter Sterne said Lasher was "widely seen as the heir apparent to retiring Rep. Jerry Nadler."[11] Lasher is running on his professional experience. Lasher's campaign website says he has "played a key role in passing landmark laws to strengthen gun control, protect abortion access, and raise the minimum wage."[12]

Schlossberg is a writer and social media personality who earlier worked at Rakuten and in the U.S. Department of State.[13] Schlossberg is the grandson of former President John F. Kennedy (D). Vanity Fair's Eric Lutz said Schlossberg is "[pitching] himself as something of a bridge between Democrats and a toxic social media environment that has been dominated by Republicans."[14] Schlossberg's campaign website says he is "focused on rooting out corruption, defending civil rights and personal freedoms, making housing affordable, protecting public health, and rebuilding trust in government."[15]

Also running in the primary are Micah Bergdale (D), Christopher Diep (D), Laura Dunn (D), Nina Schwalbe (D), Mathew Shurka (D), and Patrick Timmins (D).

As of April 2026, major election forecasters rated the general election Solid/Safe Democratic. In 2024, Nadler defeated Mike Zumbluskas (R) 80%–19%.

Elections

2026

See also: New York's 12th Congressional District election, 2026

General election

The primary will occur on June 23, 2026. The general election will occur on November 3, 2026. General election candidates will be added here following the primary.

General election for U.S. House New York District 12

Robb Huhn (Independent), Wilneida Negron (Independent), Karen Ortiz (Independent), and Lucian Wintrich (Independent) are running in the general election for U.S. House New York District 12 on November 3, 2026.

Candidate
Robb Huhn (Independent)
Image of Wilneida Negron
Wilneida Negron (Independent)
Image of Karen Ortiz
Karen Ortiz (Independent)
Image of Lucian Wintrich
Lucian Wintrich (Independent)  Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Democratic primary

Democratic primary for U.S. House New York District 12

The following candidates are running in the Democratic primary for U.S. House New York District 12 on June 23, 2026.


Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Republican primary

Republican primary for U.S. House New York District 12

Kaley Aldrich (R), Amy Jordan (R), Caroline Shinkle (R), Gavin Solomon (R), and Massimiliano Zappone (R) are running in the Republican primary for U.S. House New York District 12 on June 23, 2026.


Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Polls

See also: Ballotpedia's approach to covering polls

We provide results for polls that are included in polling aggregation from RealClearPolitics, when available. We will regularly check for polling aggregation for this race and add polls here once available. To notify us of polls available for this race, please email us.

Candidate spending

Name Party Receipts* Disbursements** Cash on hand Date
Micah Bergdale Democratic Party $0 $0 $0 Data not available***
Alex Bores Democratic Party $2,236,329 $191,021 $2,045,308 As of December 31, 2025
George Conway Democratic Party $0 $0 $0 As of December 31, 2025
Christopher Diep Democratic Party $10 $0 $10 As of December 31, 2025
Laura Dunn Democratic Party $55,124 $35,992 $19,132 As of December 31, 2025
Micah Lasher Democratic Party $1,374,760 $199,456 $1,175,304 As of December 31, 2025
Jack Schlossberg Democratic Party $1,117,588 $511,641 $605,947 As of December 31, 2025
Nina Schwalbe Democratic Party $0 $0 $0 Data not available***
Mathew Shurka Democratic Party $301,608 $47,936 $253,672 As of December 31, 2025
Patrick Timmins Democratic Party $0 $0 $0 Data not available***

Source: Federal Elections Commission, "Campaign finance data," 2026. This product uses the openFEC API but is not endorsed or certified by the Federal Election Commission (FEC).

* According to the FEC, "Receipts are anything of value (money, goods, services or property) received by a political committee."
** According to the FEC, a disbursement "is a purchase, payment, distribution, loan, advance, deposit or gift of money or anything of value to influence a federal election," plus other kinds of payments not made to influence a federal election.
*** Candidate either did not report any receipts or disbursements to the FEC, or Ballotpedia did not find an FEC candidate ID.

Satellite spending

See also: Satellite spending

Satellite spending describes political spending not controlled by candidates or their campaigns; that is, any political expenditures made by groups or individuals that are not directly affiliated with a candidate. This includes spending by political party committees, super PACs, trade associations, and 501(c)(4) nonprofit groups.[16][17][18]

If available, this section includes links to online resources tracking satellite spending in this election. To notify us of a resource to add, email us.

By candidate By election


Endorsements

Ballotpedia is gathering information about candidate endorsements. To send us an endorsement, click here.

Campaign themes

2026

Video for Ballotpedia

Video submitted to Ballotpedia
Released December 2, 2025

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection

Micah Bergdale completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2025. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Bergdale's responses.

Expand all | Collapse all

Micah Bergdale has been a part of New York City for over two decades, starting businesses focused on EV mobility and mass transit while providing technology consulting from his work with and for Apple. He has been involved in Democratic politics as a delegate in for Andrew Yang in 2020 and an active leader of Indivisible in New York City. He also has sat on the Mayor's Small Business Leadership Commission for the past 3 years advocating for changes in city government to support small businesses.
  • The Federal government needs to play a role in addressing the affordability crisis in New York City. This is a national problem. We need more housing and lower energy bills. The federal government has the power to both fund and overrule local regulations that might be limiting housing supply. We have tens of thousands of vacant units that are not profitable because of rent regulations. I will immediately support legislation that if a unit is vacant for more than one year, no city or state can restrict the property from being rented out at market rate. Either New York City and State come up with a solution for the crisis they created or the federal government will step in to solve the problem.
  • Our democracy is in peril from a rise of authoritarianism under the Trump administration. We need members of Congress who will do everything in their power to stop the illegal actions of this administration whether it is the illegal deportation of immigrations or the passage of tariffs without Congressional authorization. This lawless President and his corrupt cronies need to be stopped. I will immediately join other members of Congress to hold the President accountable for his insider cryptocurrency scams that are enriching him, his family and those in his inner circle. We have never seen such blatant corruption as we have right now in this administration, and I will not stop until there is justice.
  • New York City is the hub of transit. We have the most trains, subways, bus lines and ferry transportation of any city in the US. Yet, our transportation system is failing. We have wasteful contracts that are always late and never within their original budget. Subways in other cities are built in a few years and New York ends up taking a few decades. This has to stop. We are at risk of losing our status as a global leader because we have such a failed transit system. Most politicians do not understand the transit system well enough to come up with effective solutions at the federal level to fix our chronically unreliable system. I know what needs to be fixed, and I will introduce legislation to ensure we have fast, safe, reliable transit.
I am passionate about reforming our democracy, expanding housing development, lowering energy costs by empowering renewables and battery storage technology and dramatically improving transit in New York City.
To both fight for residents in the Congressional district but also to address the national and international issues that impact all Americans. This district is home to the United Nations and is part of the most diverse city in the US. What we do globally impacts people in New York City, and we need a member of Congress who can handle both local priorities and international affairs.
Apple as an Apple Genius. I worked for and with Apple for a decade in different capacities.
AI, Automation, and our inability to compete with China given the current administration's policies.
I support term limits, and I will not serve in the House for decades like some existing House members.
Compromise is absolutely necessary to get things done, but it is not always desirable.

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.


Campaign finance summary


Note: The finance data shown here comes from the disclosures required of candidates and parties. Depending on the election or state, this may represent only a portion of all the funds spent on their behalf. Satellite spending groups may or may not have expended funds related to the candidate or politician on whose page you are reading this disclaimer. Campaign finance data from elections may be incomplete. For elections to federal offices, complete data can be found at the FEC website. Click here for more on federal campaign finance law and here for more on state campaign finance law.


Micah Bergdale campaign contribution history
YearOfficeStatusContributionsExpenditures
2026* U.S. House New York District 12Candidacy Declared primary$0 N/A**
Grand total$0 N/A**
Sources: OpenSecretsFederal Election Commission ***This product uses the openFEC API but is not endorsed or certified by the Federal Election Commission (FEC).
* Data from this year may not be complete
** Data on expenditures is not available for this election cycle
Note: Totals above reflect only available data.

See also


External links

Footnotes

  1. Information submitted to Ballotpedia through the Candidate Connection survey on December 2, 2025
  2. Our Town NY, "Race for Congress: Bores Picks Up Big Endorsement from DC 37 Union," March 26, 2026
  3. City and State NY, "Poll: Schlossberg leads NY-12 race," March 6, 2026
  4. New York Daily News, "NYC Democrats locked in contentious congressional primary fights as high-stakes midterms loom," March 28, 2026
  5. NBC News, "Rep. Jerry Nadler endorses former aide Micah Lasher to be his successor," February 9, 2026
  6. Washington Examiner, "Will this Upper West Side-based House district elect a full-throated Israel supporter?" January 9, 2026
  7. Alex Bores campaign website, "About Alex Bores," accessed April 1, 2026
  8. City & State New York, "Alex Bores vs. AI in NY-12," April 1, 2026
  9. George Conway campaign website, "Meet George," accessed April 1, 2026
  10. YouTube, "George Conway for Congress: Launch Video," January 6, 2026
  11. City & State New York, "Micah Lasher files to run for Congress," September 4, 2025
  12. Micah Lasher campaign website, "Meet Micah Lasher," accessed April 1, 2026
  13. John F. Kennedy Hyannis Museum, "John Bouvier 'Jack' Kennedy Schlossberg," accessed April 1, 2026
  14. Vanity Fair, "Democratic Strategists Mull Jack Schlossberg’s Odds of Getting Into Congress," November 17, 2025
  15. Jack Schlossberg campaign website, "Meet Jack Schlossberg," accessed April 1, 2026
  16. OpenSecrets.org, "Outside Spending," accessed December 12, 2021
  17. OpenSecrets.org, "Total Outside Spending by Election Cycle, All Groups," accessed December 12, 2021
  18. National Review.com, "Why the Media Hate Super PACs," December 12, 2021


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