Rep. Ayanna Pressley is taking herself out of the conversation around Massachusetts’ Democratic Senate primary, ending months of behind-the-scenes chatter about whether she would challenge Sen. Ed Markey.
In a statement, Pressley acknowledged that she had been actively encouraged to consider a statewide run—encouragement that intensified as potential candidates weighed whether to take on the longtime progressive senator and as Democrats looked ahead to what could become a high-profile intraparty contest. (RELATED: Progressive Squad Member Mulls Massachusetts Senate Bid)

“Hearing from so many people from throughout our Commonwealth encouraging me to run for the United States Senate was deeply humbling and a testament to the strength of our movement,” Pressley said.
Speculation about Pressley’s intentions had been fueled by several factors: her strong statewide profile as a member of “the Squad,” her national fundraising network, and her standing within Massachusetts’ progressive base—an overlap that would have made a primary against Markey both competitive and politically delicate. The idea of a Pressley bid also drew attention because it could have reshaped the Democratic field, potentially consolidating left-leaning voters and donors who otherwise might stick with the incumbent.
Ultimately, Pressley said the timing isn’t right—pointing both to family priorities and the political realities of her current district. With her daughter entering her final year at home before college, she said she wants to be present for key family moments that a Senate campaign would complicate.
“It would be an honor to serve the whole Commonwealth, but with our daughter in her last year at home before college and a district that has been in the crosshairs of this White House, I am certain that the Massachusetts 7th is where I belong in this moment,” she said.
Pressley also made clear she isn’t ruling out a statewide run later. In comments to The Boston Globe, she said, “I’m not closing the door to a Senate run down the line.”
Her decision avoids what could have become an awkward contest between two figures closely identified with the party’s left flank. Markey has long aligned himself with progressive priorities, and a Pressley challenge could have turned into a proxy fight over the direction and generational leadership of the Massachusetts Democratic Party.
The race is already taking shape with Rep. Seth Moulton, who has tried to draw a generational contrast with Markey, 79. A Suffolk University–Boston Globe poll released before Thanksgiving showed Markey leading Moulton 45% to 22% among likely Democratic primary voters. But the same poll suggested the dynamic could have shifted significantly if Pressley entered: in a hypothetical three-way matchup, Pressley narrowly led Markey 35% to 34%, with Moulton at 16%.
For now, Pressley is signaling she plans to stay focused on defending and representing Massachusetts’ 7th District—while leaving open the possibility that the Senate speculation could return in a future cycle.
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That bald-headed hag just needs to drift off into the night with her ill-begotten gains and never open her fat mouth in public again…