Ritchie Torres
Ritchie John Torres (born March 12, 1988) is an American politician serving as the U.S. Representative for New York's 15th congressional district, which encompasses parts of the Bronx, since January 2021.[1][2] A member of the Democratic Party, Torres is a Bronx native raised in public housing by a single mother of Puerto Rican descent, and he graduated from Herbert H. Lehman High School before briefly attending New York University.[1][3] Torres entered public service early, winning election to the New York City Council in 2013 at age 25 as the youngest official in the city's history and the first openly gay elected representative from the Bronx.[2][4] He focused on local issues like affordable housing and poverty alleviation during his council tenure, securing resources for his district amid economic challenges.[5] In 2020, he was elected to Congress, becoming the first openly gay Afro-Latino member of the U.S. House, and has since advocated for federal funding that has delivered billions in investments to the Bronx for infrastructure and community development.[6][7] Torres has distinguished himself through vocal support for Israel, particularly following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks, positioning him as one of the most prominent Democratic defenders of the Jewish state in Congress despite backlash in his progressive-leaning district.[8][9] This stance, alongside his recent distancing from earlier left-wing positions on issues like criminal justice, reflects an evolving political profile as he weighs higher ambitions, including a potential gubernatorial run.[10][11]Early life and education
Childhood and family
Ritchie Torres was born on March 12, 1988, in the Bronx, New York, to a Puerto Rican father and a Black mother who was born in the Bronx to Puerto Rican parents, identifying himself as Afro-Latino.[12][7][13] He grew up with his twin brother Reuben and an older sister in a single-mother household, where his mother raised the three children independently after separating from his father.[14][2][15] Torres has credited his Puerto Rican heritage, shaped by his mother and grandmother, as a foundational influence on his upbringing amid the Bronx's Latino communities.[16] The family resided in the Throggs Neck Houses, a public housing project in the East Bronx, facing persistent poverty as his mother supported them through minimum-wage jobs, including roles paying as low as $4.25 per hour.[5][4][17] This environment immersed Torres in the socioeconomic strains of urban public housing, marked by limited resources and reliance on welfare systems that he later described as trapping families in dependency cycles rather than fostering self-reliance.[2][15]Academic background and early career
Torres graduated from Herbert H. Lehman High School in the Bronx in 2006, where he participated in moot court competitions.[1] [4] He enrolled at New York University that fall but withdrew at the start of his sophomore year in 2007, citing severe depression as the primary cause that halted his studies.[5] [18] After leaving NYU without a degree, Torres entered public service as a civil servant and community organizer, roles that provided hands-on exposure to Bronx neighborhood issues without reliance on higher education credentials.[1] [19] These positions involved coordinating local initiatives and analyzing policy implementation, fostering practical expertise in areas like urban budgeting and resident services through direct engagement rather than institutional training.[20] His progression highlighted determination in overcoming personal and socioeconomic barriers, as he built foundational skills amid environments where formal degrees often gatekeep advancement in bureaucratic systems.[21]New York City Council career
Entry into politics and elections
Ritchie Torres first sought elected office in the 2013 New York City Council election for the open 15th District seat in the South Bronx, following the decision of incumbent Maria del Carmen Arroyo not to seek re-election.[22] The district encompasses neighborhoods such as Morrisania, Claremont, and Hunts Point, where over 80% of residents identified as Hispanic or Latino in the 2010 Census, and poverty rates exceeded 35% based on U.S. Census Bureau data adjusted for local community districts overlapping the area. Torres, then 25 years old and a community advocate with experience at the New York State Assembly and local non-profits, mobilized support through personal outreach in a competitive Democratic primary against candidates including Albert Alvarez, a non-profit leader, and Joel Ray Rivera, a local activist.[23][24] In the September 10, 2013, Democratic primary, Torres secured 41.3% of the vote, outperforming his rivals in a field reflecting fragmented local party endorsements amid Bronx Democratic machine influences.[25] His platform centered on enhanced constituent services, such as addressing housing code violations and expanding after-school programs, while critiquing entrenched political interests for neglecting underinvested communities—a pitch that resonated with voters in high-poverty areas prone to low engagement due to prior unfulfilled commitments by representatives.[26] Torres won the November 5 general election decisively as the Democratic nominee in the overwhelmingly blue district, where Republicans fielded no viable contender.[27] Torres was reelected to a full term in 2017, facing minimal opposition in the Democratic primary and none in the general election, underscoring his consolidation of support in a district where registered Democrats outnumber Republicans by over 10-to-1.) This ascent highlighted a shift from grassroots challenger to entrenched figure, achieved through targeted voter mobilization in low-turnout precincts rather than reliance on party slate dominance alone.[21]Public housing and urban policy
As chair of the New York City Council's Committee on Public Housing from 2015 to 2020, Ritchie Torres oversaw policy for the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA), which manages approximately 335 developments housing over 400,000 residents, many in districts like his Bronx-based District 15 plagued by chronic underinvestment and decay.[28][6] Torres prioritized empirical assessments of NYCHA's failures, conducting oversight hearings that exposed systemic mismanagement, including deferred maintenance estimated at $25 billion in capital needs by 2018, far exceeding annual budgets reliant on federal, state, and city funds averaging under $2 billion yearly.[29][30] Torres advocated reforms to address incentive distortions in public housing, such as concentrated poverty exacerbating social isolation and crime rates—evidenced by NYCHA developments showing violent crime rates up to 50% above city averages in audits linking physical neglect to behavioral cycles—over narratives attributing issues primarily to external discrimination without addressing administrative lapses like unaddressed leaks affecting 80% of units in a 2016 survey he co-released with state Senator Jeff Klein.[31][28] He supported targeted transfers of failing NYCHA properties to non-profit or private managers under programs like Rental Assistance Demonstration (RAD), citing pilot data from similar initiatives reducing vacancy rates by 20-30% and improving upkeep through competitive incentives, though implementation faced delays from union contracts prioritizing job protections over efficiency.[28][6] Under Torres' committee, the Council secured incremental city investments, including $1.4 billion in de Blasio-era capital commitments by 2017 for repairs like boiler replacements in over 100 developments, but fiscal constraints—city budgets strained by pension obligations and competing priorities—limited scale, with only 10% of needed work completed annually amid critiques of NYCHA's opaque contracting prone to waste, as later validated by audits revealing millions in misused small-repair funds.[29][32] Torres critiqued federal oversight proposals, like the 2018 consent decree, for lacking proven mechanisms to curb entrenched mismanagement, arguing judicial monitors had failed in prior cases like the 1994 Baez agreement to deliver measurable improvements in habitability or cost controls.[33][34] These efforts yielded over 40 housing-related bills passed, focusing on accountability rather than unchecked expansion, though empirical outcomes remained hampered by structural dependencies on federal aid historically undermined by competing priorities.[35][28]Economic protections for workers
During his tenure on the New York City Council representing the 15th district in the Bronx from 2014 to 2021, Ritchie Torres sponsored legislation targeting vulnerabilities in the gig economy, particularly tip misappropriation by delivery apps. In April 2019, he introduced a bill requiring third-party delivery platforms such as DoorDash and Uber Eats to disclose to customers whether gratuities are passed directly to workers or retained by the company, framing such practices as "wage theft."[36][37] The measure aimed to address opaque algorithms that allegedly diverted tips to boost base pay, a concern amplified by investigations revealing companies like Instacart using customer tips to meet minimum wage requirements without additional compensation.[38] While proponents argued it enhanced worker earnings transparency amid gig economy growth—where delivery workers in low-income areas like the Bronx faced inconsistent income—critics noted potential regulatory burdens could raise operational costs, prompting platforms to adjust pricing or limit service in high-poverty zones, though no large-scale exodus was empirically observed post-similar state-level disclosures.[39] Torres also advocated for relief from predatory lending tied to the taxi medallion crisis, exacerbated by ride-sharing competition from Uber and Lyft after 2010, which collapsed medallion values from over $1 million in 2014 to under $100,000 by 2020, leaving drivers saddled with high-interest loans often exceeding 100% APR from city-linked lenders.[40] In May 2020, he proposed a municipal "Medallion Asset Relief Program" to revalue the roughly 6,250 outstanding medallions at $250,000 and provide city-backed loan guarantees, preempting potential state intervention by Attorney General Letitia James.[41] This built on a 2021 federal bill he co-sponsored, the Taxi Medallion Loan Forgiveness Debt Relief Act, which sought to exclude forgiven medallion debt from taxable income to ease driver burdens.[42] Empirical data indicated the crisis drove suicides and bankruptcies among immigrant-heavy medallion owners in districts like Torres's, justifying targeted debt restructuring over broader bailouts; however, opponents highlighted moral hazard risks, as government intervention might encourage future speculative borrowing without addressing underlying market disruptions from deregulated ride-sharing.[43] To safeguard unbanked workers—disproportionately prevalent in the Bronx, where 13.5% of households lacked bank accounts in 2023 compared to the citywide 8.4%—Torres led the push for a 2018 bill prohibiting retail and food establishments from refusing cash payments, enacted in January 2020 after near-unanimous Council approval.[44][45] The policy countered the exclusion of cash-only earners from cashless venues, which had proliferated for efficiency gains like reduced theft and faster transactions, but data showed Bronx residents faced heightened economic precarity, with unbanked rates correlating to poverty levels over 25% in parts of the borough.[46] Post-implementation, compliance was high with minimal reported business closures, validating worker access benefits in underserved areas, though small merchants cited added cash-handling costs potentially squeezing margins without proportional fee reductions from card processors.[47] These efforts prioritized empirical protections against verifiable abuses—such as tip diversion affecting gig earnings stability and debt traps eroding asset values—over unsubstantiated claims of equitable redistribution, while acknowledging regulatory trade-offs like elevated compliance burdens that could deter investment in precarious labor markets.Public safety initiatives
In response to the June 2018 gang-related stabbing death of 15-year-old Lesandro "Junior" Guzman-Feliz in the Bronx, Torres announced $1 million in city budget allocations for anti-gang violence measures, including community outreach and targeted interventions to disrupt recruitment and retaliatory cycles.[48] These funds supported partnerships with local law enforcement and nonprofit organizations to enhance deterrence through intelligence-driven policing and youth diversion programs, addressing root causes like territorial disputes that fuel urban violence in high-density public housing areas.[49] Torres advocated for youth employment as a preventive strategy against gang involvement, securing expansions in after-school and summer job programs in March 2019 to provide economic alternatives for at-risk teens, arguing that resource scarcity enables gangs to exploit vulnerable adolescents.[50] This approach complemented enforcement by reducing the pool of potential recruits, with initiatives emphasizing causal links between idleness, poverty, and criminal escalation in Bronx precincts experiencing elevated juvenile arrests. By August 2019, Torres spearheaded $36.2 million in citywide funding for anti-violence efforts specifically targeting gun and gang activity, prioritizing data-driven community interventions over policies that minimize policing's deterrent effect.[51] These measures yielded localized reductions in shootings through coordinated operations, as evidenced by pre-pandemic NYPD reports showing declines in gang-motivated incidents in funded districts, countering progressive critiques that undervalued proactive enforcement in protecting minority communities from self-perpetuating violence. Torres critiqued bail reforms enacted in 2019 for correlating with recidivism surges—Bronx violent crime rose 20.6% in 2020 per NYPD data—enabling repeat offenders to victimize residents in under-policed neighborhoods.[52][53]LGBT rights and social advocacy
Torres became the first openly gay New York City Council member from the Bronx upon his election in 2013, representing a district with historically limited visibility for LGBTQ issues amid its socially conservative working-class demographics.[54] In this context, he prioritized expanding services for vulnerable LGBTQ populations, particularly seniors facing isolation and poverty rates exceeding 30% in the city.[55] A key initiative was Torres's advocacy for the Bronx's inaugural LGBTQ senior center in Fordham, which opened on January 23, 2015, as part of a $1.5 million citywide expansion funded through the Department for the Aging.[56][57] The facility offered daily hot lunches, social programs, health services, and camaraderie tailored to older lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender individuals, addressing documented needs for culturally competent support in underserved areas.[55] This effort marked a tangible increase in localized resources, though empirical data on long-term outcomes like reduced isolation remains limited to anecdotal reports from participants. Torres also sponsored anti-discrimination measures, including Introduction 1379-A, enacted in October 2017, which prohibited bias against LGBTQ-owned firms in city contracting processes, extending protections alongside those for minority- and women-owned businesses.[58][59] The legislation aimed to broaden economic opportunities by enforcing compliance in procurement, with violations subject to penalties under the city human rights code.[60] These policies advanced symbolic and practical inclusion in a borough where cultural conservatism—rooted in religious and familial norms among Latino and Black residents—often tempered enthusiasm for identity-focused reforms.[54] While the initiatives boosted service access, critics of identity politics, including Torres in later reflections on Democratic strategies, have contended that such efforts risk prioritizing representational symbolism over class-based economic interventions, potentially diverting attention from poverty alleviation in districts like his where median incomes lag national averages by over 40%.[61] This tension underscores causal trade-offs: expanded niche services provided immediate relief but did not demonstrably shift broader socioeconomic indicators for LGBTQ residents, who continue to face intersecting barriers tied more to housing and employment than standalone advocacy.[62]U.S. congressional career
Elections to Congress
Ritchie Torres first won election to the U.S. House of Representatives in New York's 15th congressional district, an open seat vacated by the retirement of longtime incumbent José E. Serrano, in the Democratic primary held on June 23, 2020.) Competing in a crowded field of twelve candidates that included state Senator Rubén Díaz Sr., Torres secured the nomination with a plurality of the vote after absentee ballots were tallied over several weeks.[63] In the general election on November 3, 2020, he defeated Republican Patrick A. Murphy by a wide margin in the heavily Democratic district, receiving approximately 87% of the vote.[64] Following 2020 redistricting, which consolidated the district further into the South Bronx—a predominantly Latino area with high poverty rates (over 30% below the federal line) and a median household income of about $45,600—Torres faced no significant primary opposition in the June 2022 Democratic primary.[65] He won reelection in the November 8 general election against Republican Stylo A. Sapaskis, capturing over 80% of the vote in a district rated D+41 on the Cook Partisan Voting Index, reflecting its strong Democratic lean.[66] This outcome underscored the district's working-class electorate, where economic concerns and public safety often outweighed ideological purity tests. Torres again ran unopposed in the 2024 Democratic primary and secured a third term in the November 5 general election, defeating Republican Gonzalo Duran and other minor candidates with 130,392 votes.[67] Amid national Democratic struggles with immigration policy, Torres's vocal criticism of lax border enforcement—contrasting with more progressive stances—aligned with constituent sentiments in a district where unauthorized migration has strained local resources and housing.[68] Unlike neighboring districts where progressive insurgents have mounted challenges, Torres has faced no credible primary threats since 2020, empirical evidence of voter preference for pragmatic governance over ideological extremes in this low-income, Democratic stronghold.Committee roles and caucuses
Torres has served on the House Committee on Financial Services since entering Congress in January 2021, contributing to oversight of banking, housing finance, and emerging financial technologies such as cryptocurrency.[69] In this role, he has engaged in bipartisan efforts, including co-leading a 2023 letter with Republican Chairman Patrick McHenry urging the Treasury Department to revise guidance on financial institution collaborations and introducing the FIRM Act in April 2025 with Republican Andy Barr to prevent political bias in bank supervision.[70] [71] These activities highlight practical regulatory focus amid committee responsibilities for empirical risk assessment in housing markets, where Financial Services examines entities like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. He previously held assignments on the House Committee on Oversight and Accountability, facilitating investigations into government operations and accountability measures.[19] Torres' committee positions enable influence on policy grounded in financial data and institutional performance, contrasting with caucus dynamics that often emphasize ideological alignment over causal analysis of economic outcomes. Torres is affiliated with several caucuses, including the bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus, which seeks compromise on fiscal and legislative matters; the New Democrat Coalition, advocating moderate Democratic priorities; the Congressional Black Caucus, focused on issues affecting Black communities; the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, addressing Hispanic interests; and the Congressional Equality Caucus, where he has served as co-chair promoting LGBT equality.[69] [72] These groups, while amplifying constituent voices, can foster partisan echo chambers—particularly in identity-focused caucuses like the Congressional Black and Hispanic Caucuses, which empirical reviews indicate often align with left-leaning institutional biases in prioritizing advocacy over data-driven scrutiny.[6] His Problem Solvers involvement and cross-party financial collaborations, such as co-sponsoring a 2025 stablecoin regulation bill, demonstrate selective pursuit of realism amid such affiliations.[73]Legislative achievements and key votes
Torres co-sponsored the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (H.R. 3684), which passed the House 228–206 on November 5, 2021, allocating $550 billion in new spending for transportation, broadband, and water infrastructure, with provisions aimed at underserved urban areas like his district.[74] [75] He has supported cryptocurrency legislation, including advocacy for the Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act (FIT21), emphasizing blockchain's role in financial inclusion for low-income communities, though the bill's passage has advanced regulatory clarity without broad enactment by October 2025.[76] On housing, Torres introduced the Accelerated Supply of Affordable Production Housing Act (ASAP Housing Act, H.R. 9856) on October 24, 2024, to exempt 100% affordable housing bonds from state volume caps, potentially unlocking financing for over 100,000 units annually by reducing development barriers, but the measure remains pending in committee as of October 2025.[77] [78] Earlier, he sponsored the Stable Families Act in July 2022 to establish permanent emergency rental assistance, addressing eviction risks for low-income renters, though it did not advance to enactment.[79] In foreign aid and security contexts, Torres voted yea on the Laken Riley Act (S. 5) on January 22, 2025, a bipartisan measure requiring detention of undocumented immigrants accused of theft or assault and withholding funds from sanctuary cities, reflecting support for targeted enforcement amid rising border encounters exceeding 2.4 million in fiscal year 2024.[80] He also introduced the TRUMP Act (H.R. 5741) on October 14, 2025, barring living presidents from authorizing their likenesses on U.S. currency to maintain institutional norms, in response to private-sector Trump-themed coin proposals, but the bill has not progressed beyond introduction.[81] Torres's legislative record features bipartisan votes on enforcement and infrastructure, yielding incremental reforms like enhanced detention protocols, yet critics note limited passage rates for his sponsored bills—fewer than 5% of introduced measures in the 118th Congress enacted—amid broader federal spending exceeding $6 trillion annually, constraining causal impacts on systemic issues like housing shortages affecting 7 million U.S. renter households.[80] [82]Political positions
Domestic issues
Torres has prioritized housing affordability as a core domestic issue, drawing from his upbringing in New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) public housing in the Bronx. He has advocated for increasing housing supply through zoning liberalization and developer incentives, stating that "the answer to the housing affordability crisis is not only greater investment in public housing, but also an increase in the overall supply of housing."[83] In October 2024, he introduced the Accelerated Supply of Affordable Production Housing Act (ASAP Housing Act), which provides financial incentives to developers to expedite affordable housing projects amid national shortages.[77] Earlier, in 2022, Torres sponsored the Stable Families Act to establish a $3 billion annual national Emergency Assistance Fund aimed at preventing evictions and stabilizing low-income households.[79] His efforts earned him the National Association of Housing and Redevelopment Officials (NAHRO) Legislator of the Year award in April 2024 for advancing access to safe, affordable housing.[84] On immigration enforcement and border policy, Torres has expressed support for comprehensive reform that balances humanitarian concerns with border security, increasingly criticizing lax enforcement amid rising migrant arrivals in New York City. In late 2024, while considering a gubernatorial run, he repudiated earlier progressive positions from 2022, such as opposition to expanded deportations, and highlighted the Democratic Party's immigration stance as a factor in electoral losses, arguing that "the far left is disconnected from the economic anxiety of working-class voters."[85][86] He has intervened in constituent cases, such as demanding explanations from the Department of Homeland Security in May 2025 regarding the detention of a Venezuelan high school student in his district, emphasizing due process and access to counsel.[87] In June 2025, Torres co-signed a letter urging New York state legislators to pass the NY for All Act, which would extend certain public benefits to undocumented immigrants regardless of status, reflecting ongoing advocacy for immigrant inclusion at the state level.[88] In criminal justice and policing, Torres supports reforms focused on accountability, rehabilitation, and reducing recidivism without undermining public safety. As a New York City Council member from 2014 to 2020, he championed measures like the 2017 police reform bill, defending compromises with the NYPD amid opposition from advocacy groups seeking stricter oversight.[89] He has opposed punitive NYCHA policies that bar residents with criminal histories from returning home, calling them "cruel and unusual" in 2021, and advocated for psychosocial rehabilitation programs as part of the care continuum for those involved in the justice system.[90][91] In Congress, Torres has emphasized reforming policing to ensure constitutionality rather than "defunding," as stated in 2021, and in January 2024 met with Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark to discuss community safety strategies alongside reform.[92][93] Regarding economic regulation and cryptocurrency, Torres favors innovation-friendly policies with targeted oversight to protect consumers and prevent conflicts of interest. He has co-sponsored bipartisan legislation, such as the 2025 reintroduction of a bill with Rep. Tom Emmer to provide regulatory clarity for non-custodial digital asset service providers, excluding them from money transmitter definitions to foster blockchain development.[94] In December 2022, following the FTX collapse, he introduced bills to enhance consumer protections in crypto markets.[95] Torres co-founded the Congressional Crypto Caucus and in May 2025 proposed the Stop Presidential Profiteering from Digital Assets Act to bar presidents from profiting off crypto holdings or promotions, responding to instances like former President Trump's meme coin ventures.[96] He views cryptocurrency as holding progressive potential for financial inclusion, particularly in underserved communities like his district.[97]Housing affordability and development
Torres, who grew up in public housing in the Bronx, has emphasized the need to increase the supply of affordable units through federal incentives and regulatory reforms to address shortages driven by restricted development.[77][84] He has argued that public policy constraints on housing credit and construction exacerbate affordability crises, delaying homeownership and limiting options for low-income households.[98] In September 2024, Torres introduced the ASAP Housing Act (H.R. 9856), which seeks to exempt tax-exempt private activity bonds for affordable rental housing from state volume caps, enabling greater financing for new construction and preservation of existing units without competing against other infrastructure needs.[99][77] The legislation targets production of low-income rental housing by prioritizing it similarly to public goods like highways, potentially unlocking billions in bonds annually across states.[100] Torres has also co-sponsored expansions of the low-income housing tax credit (LIHTC), including provisions in broader bills to boost credits for affordable projects, estimating they could support over 1 million additional units.[101][102] Torres advocates reforming local zoning laws to facilitate development, stating that exclusionary zoning perpetuates segregation by race and class and hinders supply growth.[103][83] He has endorsed "YIMBY" (Yes In My Backyard) approaches, praising commitments to build millions of units and criticizing artificial supply restrictions in high-cost areas like New York City.[104] In his district, he has pushed for upgrades to New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) properties, including calls for electrification to reduce costs and interventions after structural failures, such as a 2025 gas explosion at a Bronx development.[105][101] Through bipartisan initiatives, like the Helping More Families Save Act introduced with Rep. William Timmons in 2023, Torres has sought to modernize savings vehicles for housing down payments, aiming to broaden access amid rising prices.[101] His efforts reflect a focus on both preservation of subsidized stock—serving over 9 million Americans—and incentivizing private development to combat shortages estimated at millions of units nationwide.[106][78]Immigration enforcement and border policy
Torres has expressed support for targeted immigration enforcement prioritizing public safety, emphasizing the deportation of criminal non-citizens while opposing measures perceived as punitive toward law-abiding immigrants. In May 2025, he demanded accountability from the Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement regarding the detention of a 20-year-old Venezuelan high school student in New York City, arguing that such actions create a "chilling effect" on immigrant communities and that enforcement should focus on threats rather than students complying with rules.[87][107] Earlier, in March 2021, Torres advocated defunding ICE's 287(g) program, which enables local law enforcement to perform federal immigration functions, claiming it erodes trust between police and immigrant communities.[85][108] Following the 2024 migrant surge straining New York City resources, Torres criticized Democratic reluctance on border security, describing it as a bipartisan imperative rather than a partisan Republican stance. In interviews, he has described himself as "pro-immigration and pro-border security," supporting measures to address the crisis while backing local programs like Health + Hospitals for migrants. He opposed the Secure the Border Act of 2023 (H.R. 2), which sought to resume border wall construction, limit asylum claims, and increase enforcement personnel, aligning with most Democrats in rejecting it on party-line votes.[85][83][109] Torres has urged Democrats to reclaim border security rhetoric post-2024 elections, arguing that failure to enforce laws fuels public discontent and that the party must prioritize working-class concerns over unrestricted inflows. Regarding mass deportation proposals under President Trump, he advocated prosecutorial discretion to target violent offenders, such as the perpetrator in the Laken Riley case, while expressing reservations about sweeping operations. In June 2025, he co-signed a letter pushing New York's NY for All Act to bar state resources from aiding federal immigration enforcement absent criminal warrants, reflecting ongoing commitment to sanctuary policies.[110][111][88] This evolution from early defunding efforts to qualified enforcement support has drawn accusations of flip-flopping, though Torres frames it as pragmatic adaptation to empirical border challenges like over 10 million encounters since 2021.[111][112]Criminal justice and policing
Torres has positioned himself as a supporter of police accountability and reform measures while firmly opposing the "defund the police" movement, particularly in response to rising crime rates in his district. In a June 2021 interview, he emphasized, "I'm in favor of reforming policing, not defunding it…not abolishing it," advocating for practices that ensure constitutional compliance and greater oversight without reducing law enforcement resources.[113] This stance aligns with his representation of New York's 15th Congressional District, which encompasses areas of the South Bronx experiencing elevated violent crime, including a 2021 surge in shootings that prompted him to urge abandonment of defunding policies in favor of maintaining police presence alongside investments in social services.[114] By February 2022, Torres declared the "defund the police" initiative "dead" in New York City, reflecting a broader Democratic shift amid public backlash and crime increases following 2020 reforms.[115] Earlier comments from his time as a New York City Council member, resurfaced in a December 2024 Politico report, revealed a 2020 interview in which he stated, "I'm not in favor of more police; I'm actually in favor of defunding the police," though he subsequently critiqued the slogan as "very destructive" when interpreted literally as eliminating funding.[52][116] As a councilman in December 2017, he delivered an emotional defense of a police reform bill aimed at enhancing accountability, which passed narrowly despite opposition from police unions concerned it would hinder operations.[89] In Congress, Torres has backed legislation addressing crime prevention without expansive decarceration. He voted for H.R. 8, the Bipartisan Background Checks Act, and H.R. 1446, the Enhanced Background Checks Act of 2021, to curb gun violence through expanded screening requirements.[117] In January 2025, he supported a measure allowing detention of undocumented immigrants arrested for shoplifting or other theft offenses exceeding $1,000, prioritizing public safety in high-crime urban areas.[80] Torres has also co-sponsored bills targeting illicit narcotics trafficking, such as H.R. 10459 for a Joint Task Force to Counter Synthetic Narcotics, reflecting a focus on enforcement against drug-related crime.[118] His legislative record indicates a pragmatic approach, balancing reform with robust policing to address empirical crime drivers in impoverished communities rather than ideological reductions in law enforcement capacity.Economic regulation and cryptocurrency
Torres has positioned himself as a proponent of regulatory clarity and innovation in the cryptocurrency sector, emphasizing blockchain's potential to serve underserved communities. In March 2025, he co-launched the bipartisan Congressional Crypto Caucus with Republican House Majority Whip Tom Emmer to advance nonpartisan policies on digital assets, including protections for non-custodial services like wallets, miners, and validators, which he argues should not be classified as money transmitters under existing law.[119][120] In a February 2025 House Financial Services Committee hearing, Torres questioned experts on the implications of stablecoin issuers accumulating U.S. Treasuries, highlighting potential macroeconomic effects without opposing the mechanism outright.[121] He has defended cryptocurrency against narratives portraying it as a threat to financial stability, arguing in a March 2025 hearing that blockchain enables financial inclusion for low-income and minority groups often excluded from traditional banking.[122] Torres supported a GOP-led cryptocurrency market structure bill in July 2025, urging Democratic colleagues to back it despite party divisions, and has co-sponsored legislation for a regulatory framework on digital commodities under the SEC and CFTC.[123][124] In May 2025, responding to former President Trump's involvement in meme coins and stablecoins, Torres introduced the Presidential Profiteering Prevention Act to prohibit sitting presidents from profiting from cryptocurrency ventures, framing it as a safeguard against corruption rather than a broad restriction on the industry.[96] On broader economic regulation, Torres has favored targeted reforms to reduce regulatory burdens in banking and finance. In April 2025, he co-introduced bipartisan legislation with Rep. Andy Barr to phase out "reputational risk" as a supervisory metric for banks, arguing it invites subjective political bias in enforcement.[125] He has critiqued excessive accumulation of rules and processes in government, advocating progressive regulatory adjustments to foster clean energy development and economic rebuilding post-recession.[83] Torres opposed Trump's proposed tariffs in 2025, earning recognition from the Center for New Liberalism for promoting free trade over protectionist measures.[126] In September 2025, he criticized Republican efforts to limit shareholder proposals on corporate governance, defending them as essential checks on executive power amid antitrust concerns.[127]Foreign policy
Representative Ritchie Torres has positioned himself as a defender of U.S. allies facing authoritarian threats, emphasizing Israel's security and Ukraine's resistance to Russian invasion while advocating vigilance against Chinese strategic competition.[128][129] Torres describes his support for Israel as rooted in historical necessity rather than religion, citing centuries of antisemitic persecution that underscore the need for a Jewish state as a sanctuary.[8] Following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks on Israel, which killed over 1,200 people and took more than 250 hostages, he rejected calls for an immediate unconditional ceasefire, comparing Israel's military response to Hamas with U.S. campaigns against al-Qaeda and ISIS.[8] He has characterized anti-Zionism as a form of antisemitism, arguing it delegitimizes Jewish self-determination in ways not applied to other nations.[130] Torres has actively combated rising antisemitism in the U.S., condemning its increase post-October 7 and linking campus protests to indoctrination with anti-Israel views.[131][132] In the ongoing Gaza conflict, which has resulted in over 40,000 Palestinian deaths according to Gaza health authorities, Torres has acknowledged a humanitarian crisis, urging all parties including Israel to alleviate hunger and hardship.[133] In August 2025, he critiqued Israel's war objectives as poorly defined and expressed moral concern over images of starving Palestinian children, while maintaining that Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad deliberately starve Israeli hostages, drawing attention to global hypocrisy on the issue.[133] He supports a conditional ceasefire aimed at defeating Hamas and securing hostages, viewing Israel as the victim and Hamas as the aggressor.[6] On Palestinian issues, Torres endorses a two-state solution but prioritizes Israel's security, criticizing narratives that equate the two sides or blame Israel for initiating the conflict.[8] Beyond the Middle East, Torres has advocated for robust U.S. aid to Ukraine, supporting the $60.1 billion Ukraine Security Supplemental Appropriations Act of 2024 and framing the conflict as a battle for the free world against Russian imperialism.[128] He warns against U.S. passivity, which he argues would embolden aggressors like Russia.[134] Regarding China, Torres highlights the paradox of U.S. openness providing competitive advantages yet necessitating countermeasures, as seen in his endorsement of pragmatic legislation to contend economically and technologically.[135] He views an axis of Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea as a collective threat to democracy, urging prevention of their victories.[136]Stance on Israel and antisemitism
Ritchie Torres has emerged as one of the most vocal Democratic supporters of Israel in Congress, framing his position as rooted in progressive principles of self-determination, democracy, and human rights. Following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks, he co-sponsored H.Res.771, affirming the House's solidarity with Israel in defending against terrorism and its right to self-defense.[137] He has consistently advocated for U.S. military aid to Israel, opposing efforts to condition or withhold it, and argued that "a humanitarianism that devalues Jewish life is no humanitarianism at all," criticizing those who equivocate on condemning Hamas atrocities.[138] While expressing concerns in August 2025 about Israel's conduct amid reports of civilian suffering in Gaza, Torres maintained his support for Israel's existence and security, distinguishing criticism of specific policies from broader anti-Zionism.[133] Torres links his pro-Israel stance to combating antisemitism, viewing anti-Zionism as often a veneer for Jew-hatred, particularly in academic and far-left circles. In a July 13, 2023, interview, he stated, "One need not be Jewish to condemn antisemitism, any more than one need be Black to condemn anti-Black racism," emphasizing universal opposition to bigotry.[139] He introduced the Antisemitism Inclusion in DEI Act on December 13, 2023, to mandate training on antisemitism within diversity, equity, and inclusion programs in federal workplaces.[140] Torres co-sponsored H.Res.894 in 2023, denouncing the global rise in antisemitism, and on May 29, 2025, urged the American Psychological Association to address antisemitic biases in its professional guidelines.[141][142] His advocacy intensified after campus protests post-October 2023, where on October 27, 2023, he condemned antisemitic incidents at universities and demanded federal enforcement against discrimination.[143] At the AJC Global Forum on April 28, 2025, Torres received the Nita M. Lowey Congressional Leadership Award and delivered remarks on moral courage against rising antisemitism and disinformation, reaffirming commitment to Israel's defense and Jewish safety.[144] Torres has critiqued segments of the Democratic Party for amplifying antisemitism through reluctance to unequivocally support Israel, positioning himself as a counter to such trends despite intra-party tensions.[145]Views on Gaza conflict and Palestinian issues
Torres issued a statement on October 7, 2023, condemning the Hamas terrorist attacks on Israel as "unprovoked" and "unprecedented," emphasizing that Hamas initiated the conflict and bears responsibility for the ensuing war.[146] He has consistently affirmed Israel's right to self-defense, arguing that the Gaza war stems directly from Hamas's actions, including its use of October 7 as a deliberate strategy to provoke a response that maximizes civilian casualties for propaganda purposes.[147] [148] Torres has rejected accusations of Israeli genocide or apartheid as false propaganda, attributing Palestinian civilian suffering primarily to Hamas's tactics, such as embedding military operations in densely populated areas and diverting aid for terrorist purposes.[148] On Palestinian issues, Torres has highlighted Hamas's electoral victory in 2006 as evidence of Palestinian agency in selecting leadership that prioritizes violence over governance, arguing that any ceasefire must prioritize the release of Israeli hostages and the dismantlement of Hamas's military capabilities rather than allowing the group to regroup.[149] He has stated that individuals who refuse to condemn Hamas's October 7 atrocities "have no business" influencing U.S. foreign policy, framing support for unconditional ceasefires as enabling terrorism.[150] In April 2024, during a visit to Israel, Torres reiterated that Hamas terrorists must be brought to justice and all hostages freed before sustainable peace is possible.[151] By July 2025, Torres described the Gaza war as devolving into a "quagmire" comparable to the Iraq War, expressing a desire for Israel to secure hostage releases and conclude operations, while maintaining that Hamas remains the primary obstacle to ending the conflict.[152] He has criticized extreme rhetoric, such as calls for Palestinians in Gaza to "starve away," but continued to defend Israel's actions as necessary to neutralize Hamas's threat, rejecting narratives that equate Israeli defense with aggression against Palestinian civilians.[153] [148] This stance has positioned him as one of the most vocal Democratic defenders of Israel's campaign, amid intra-party divisions.[8]Broader international engagements
Torres has expressed strong support for Ukraine's defense against Russian aggression, stating in June 2024 that "Ukraine is fighting for the free world" and urging the United States not to "turn a blind-eye" or allow Russia to prevail, emphasizing the broader implications for global democracy.[154] This aligns with his high scores from Foreign Policy for America, reflecting a commitment to international alliances and opposition to authoritarian expansionism.[128] In response to Chinese government actions, Torres co-sponsored the Uyghur Policy Act, which passed the House in 2023 and advanced investigations into the genocide of Uyghur Muslims, culminating in the bill reaching President Biden's desk on December 14, 2023.[155] He has also warned of U.S. "dangerously complacent" reliance on China for critical minerals, highlighting supply chain vulnerabilities in public statements as recently as August 2025.[156] Additionally, in May 2025, he joined bipartisan efforts to introduce legislation protecting the U.S. economy from Chinese Communist Party military aggression, focusing on financial safeguards against coercion.[157] Torres serves as an honorary co-chair of the Global Tech Security Commission, advocating for technology policies that counter adversarial influences in digital infrastructure.[158] On other fronts, Torres urged European Union nations including Cyprus, Greece, Romania, and Slovakia to recognize Kosovo's independence via letters to their ambassadors sent on March 15, 2022, framing it as essential for Balkan stability.[159] He has advocated removing Cuba from the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism, arguing in January 2025 that most Cuban Americans oppose maintaining the designation given Cuba's adversarial status toward the U.S.[160] In trade policy, Torres earned recognition in May 2025 from the Center for New Liberalism for opposing protectionist tariffs, promoting open markets as a tool for economic strength.[126]Controversies and public criticisms
Policy flip-flops and ideological shifts
In August 2025, U.S. Representative Ritchie Torres publicly recanted his prior criticisms of New York Governor Kathy Hochul, stating that he had "underestimated" her competence following observations of her governance effectiveness.[11] This reversal came after months of attacks from Torres, who in November 2024 had labeled Hochul's leadership "erratic and chaotic" while floating a potential primary challenge against her.[161] By August 18, 2025, Torres endorsed Hochul's reelection, joining her at events to highlight shared priorities on issues like federal healthcare funding cuts.[162] The shift aligned with Hochul's own rightward moves on enforcement policies, suggesting Torres' adjustment reflected empirical assessment over initial ideological opposition.[163] Torres has similarly pivoted on immigration enforcement, moving from earlier resistance to certain federal programs toward advocacy for "pro-immigration and pro-border security" measures.[85] In prior years, he co-led efforts with 37 Democrats in May 2025 to probe ICE facility conditions and criticized deportations of non-criminals, such as a Venezuelan high school student's detention without evidence of wrongdoing.[164] [107] Yet, by January 2025, amid high-profile cases like the Laken Riley murder by an undocumented migrant, Torres distanced from past defunding pushes against ICE operations, embracing enforcement as responsive to Bronx realities.[111] This evolution addressed district strains, including migrant influxes overwhelming shelters—New York City housed over 200,000 asylum seekers by late 2024, correlating with a 20% rise in Bronx emergency calls tied to shelter overflows and related petty crimes.[85] Critics attribute these changes to opportunism amid Torres' gubernatorial ambitions, but empirical district data indicate approval for such pragmatism over ideological purity.[165] Torres secured reelection in NY-15 with 72% of the vote in 2024, reflecting sustained support in a high-poverty area where voters prioritize tangible outcomes like safety and housing over abstract progressivism.[166] A 2022 survey showed his net favorability at +63 points among likely primary voters, bolstered by perceptions of him as a "pragmatic problem-solver" adapting to causal pressures like unchecked migration's local costs rather than adhering to party dogma.[167] This pattern underscores a broader congressional trend where representatives in migrant-impacted urban districts recalibrate toward enforcement realism, yielding electoral resilience absent in more insulated progressive strongholds.[165]Prioritization of foreign over domestic concerns
Critics from progressive factions have accused Representative Ritchie Torres of devoting disproportionate attention to foreign policy issues, particularly support for Israel, at the expense of urgent domestic challenges in New York's 15th congressional district, which encompasses the Bronx and faces acute housing shortages and affordability crises.[168] For example, analyses of his public output highlight a notably higher frequency of statements on Israel—often multiple daily posts on social media—compared to discussions of local housing, where the district contends with a shortage exacerbating poverty rates exceeding 25% in parts of the Bronx.[8] This perceived imbalance has fueled claims that his vocal international advocacy overshadows constituent needs, such as the nationwide housing deficit of 4-5 million units that disproportionately impacts low-income families in his district.[169] Torres has faced specific scrutiny over campaign contributions from entities like Blackstone Group, a major private equity firm implicated by critics in practices that inflate housing costs through large-scale real estate acquisitions and rent hikes, even as he champions affordability reforms.[170] In a 2025 interview, podcaster Adam Friedland pressed Torres on these donations, arguing they contradict his advocacy for addressing the housing crisis rooted in his own upbringing in public housing, though Torres maintained that such funds support broader policy efforts without compromising his positions.[171] In response, Torres contends that his emphasis on combating antisemitism constitutes a domestic priority, as surging incidents— including death threats against him personally—represent a tangible threat to minority safety in diverse areas like the Bronx, where antisemitic violence intersects with broader extremism affecting Black and Latino communities.[172] He frames this as causally linked to local security, arguing that unchecked antisemitism fuels domestic terrorism and erodes community cohesion, thereby justifying integrated foreign-domestic focus over siloed concerns.[173] Progressive commentators view this approach as alienating working-class and immigrant constituents in his district, potentially eroding Democratic cohesion by elevating geopolitical stances over economic relief.[168] Conversely, conservative and pro-Israel observers commend Torres for demonstrating moral clarity in addressing threats with direct U.S. ramifications, positioning him as a principled outlier amid partisan pressures.[174]Clashes with progressive allies
Torres has publicly diverged from progressive figures like Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC), his neighbor representing an adjacent Bronx district, over Israel's response to the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks, with Torres defending Israel's military actions while Ocasio-Cortez called for a ceasefire and criticized unconditional U.S. support.[175] This rift contributed to his effective removal from the Congressional Progressive Caucus in February 2024, after he opposed a permanent ceasefire in Gaza and maintained staunch pro-Israel positions, prompting caucus subgroups to exclude him despite his self-identification as progressive.[176] Tensions escalated in August 2025 when Torres walked out of an interview with Jewish podcaster Adam Friedland, accusing the host of a "gotcha" ambush focused on Gaza civilian casualties rather than balanced discussion of Hamas's role, highlighting broader intra-left friction over Israel policy.[177] Beyond foreign policy, Torres has broken with progressive orthodoxy on domestic issues like policing and immigration, critiquing "defund the police" rhetoric he once echoed but now views as detrimental to public safety in high-crime districts like his own, and advocating stricter enforcement against migrant crime amid New York City's 2024 influx of over 200,000 asylum seekers straining resources.[52][85] In a June 2024 interview, he described modern progressivism's "purity" tests as obstructing real-world advancements, prioritizing empirical outcomes like crime reduction over ideological litmus tests.[178] These stances have drawn ire from Squad members, including Jamaal Bowman's 2024 primary-era attacks on Torres's Israel support, yet Torres secured reelection in New York's 15th district with 68.6% of the vote in 2022—uncontested in the general—demonstrating voter preference for his pragmatic approach over boycott threats from far-left activists.[179] Despite progressive criticisms attributing Democratic setbacks to figures like Torres, his district retention underscores a divide where ideological conformity yields to constituent priorities, as evidenced by his post-2024 election analysis blaming far-left slogans for alienating moderates and enabling Republican gains.[180]Ethical and funding allegations
Ritchie Torres' campaign committees have received significant contributions from pro-Israel political action committees, with the pro-Israel sector accounting for $1,442,450 in career totals from 2019 to 2024, including $676,406 specifically from the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC).[181] In the 2023-2024 election cycle alone, AIPAC contributed $535,798 to his campaign.[182] These figures, derived from Federal Election Commission (FEC) disclosures analyzed by the Center for Responsive Politics, reflect legal bundled donations from individuals affiliated with the organizations, as direct corporate contributions are prohibited under federal law.[183] Torres has also accepted donations from financial sector entities, including $61,990 from individuals associated with the Blackstone Group in the 2023-2024 cycle.[182] Overall career contributions total $15,656,639, with top sectors encompassing securities and investment ($2,620,403), [real estate](/page/Real_estate) (1,503,972), and lawyers/law firms ($1,058,945), indicating a diverse donor base beyond any single interest group.[181] FEC records show no violations or enforcement actions against Torres' campaigns for improper disclosures or funding practices.[184] Progressive activists and left-leaning critics have alleged that AIPAC and similar contributions unduly influence Torres' legislative priorities, framing them as "buying" support for specific foreign policy positions, though no empirical evidence of quid pro quo or ethical breaches has been substantiated in FEC audits or congressional ethics reviews.[185] Such claims, often amplified by advocacy groups like CODEPINK, represent ideological opposition rather than documented impropriety, with Torres maintaining that donations from advocacy organizations constitute legitimate expressions of constituent alignment.[186] Defenders, including Torres himself, argue that rejecting policy-aligned funding would disadvantage incumbents against well-resourced challengers, a dynamic common in competitive districts. No formal ethics complaints or investigations have targeted Torres personally for funding-related conduct.[187]Personal life and identity
Family background and personal challenges
Ritchie Torres was born on March 12, 1988, in the Bronx, New York City, to a Puerto Rican father and an African American mother.[12] He was raised primarily by his single mother, Deborah Bachelet, in the Throggs Neck Houses public housing project, alongside his twin brother and younger sister.[2] [188] His mother supported the family through low-wage jobs, earning a minimum wage of $4.25 per hour in the 1990s, amid conditions in the housing project marked by leaks, lead exposure, and persistent poverty.[189] [5] These circumstances reflected broader economic hardships in the South Bronx, where single-parent households often faced food insecurity and limited resources, with Torres recalling periods without three meals a day.[190] Torres's father was largely absent from his upbringing, a dynamic common in many Bronx families during that era but one that left the household reliant solely on his mother's earnings.[2] This background instilled early exposure to financial instability without inherited privileges or external support networks, shaping a trajectory of self-reliance amid urban decay.[5] In his early twenties, after briefly attending New York University and dropping out, Torres confronted severe personal challenges, including battles with depression and substance abuse.[6] He has described experiencing suicidal ideation during this period, compounded by the stigma surrounding mental health in low-income and minority communities, where access to treatment is often limited and cultural barriers discourage disclosure.[191] [192] Overcoming these without elite resources or family wealth, Torres credits personal determination and eventual professional intervention for his recovery, highlighting empirical patterns of resilience in similar demographics despite systemic obstacles like underfunded community services.[193]Public identity as LGBTQ+ advocate
Ritchie Torres publicly came out as gay during his early political career, having realized his sexuality in middle school but delaying disclosure until 10th grade amid personal and community challenges.[194] He became the first openly gay candidate elected to legislative office in the Bronx upon winning a New York City Council seat in 2013.[195] In his 2020 congressional election for New York's 15th District—a heavily Democratic area with a diverse Latino and Black population—Torres defeated a primary challenger, state Senator Rubén Díaz Sr., who had made homophobic remarks questioning the suitability of gay candidates for office.[196] This victory positioned Torres as the first openly gay Afro-Latino elected to the U.S. Congress, alongside Mondaire Jones as one of the first two openly gay Black men in the body.[197][198] Torres has framed his openness about his sexuality as an "ethic of radical authenticity," extending to all aspects of his life and serving as a model for LGBTQ+ youth in the Bronx, where poverty rates exceed 30% and social stigma persists.[199] As co-chair of the Congressional Equality Caucus, he has advocated for inclusive education on LGBTQ+ and women's history and introduced a 2021 resolution condemning rising hate crimes and legislation targeting transgender and nonbinary communities.[200][201] His barrier-breaking role has boosted visibility for intersectional identities in underserved urban districts, potentially aiding electoral mobilization among diverse voters, though analyses attribute his primary win more to addressing local economic concerns like housing and jobs than identity alone.[62] Critics within Democratic circles have occasionally questioned whether such emphasis on personal identity in candidate selection reflects broader party tendencies toward representational tokenism over policy depth, particularly in safe seats like NY-15 where incumbency advantages dominate.[202] However, Torres' pre-Congress record in Bronx council leadership, including anti-corruption oversight, underscores merit-based achievements independent of identity signaling.[62] His public stance has intersected with resilience narratives, positioning him as a counter to homophobia in Latino communities, as evidenced by his defeat of Díaz, a figure known for anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric.[203]Health disclosures and resilience narrative
Torres disclosed his diagnosis of clinical depression in his early twenties, with symptoms manifesting as early as late high school, which contributed to his dropping out of college around 2008.[204][191] He has described a severe episode involving suicidal ideation that necessitated hospitalization approximately a decade prior to 2023, crediting prompt psychiatric intervention with preventing a fatal outcome.[191][192] Since the hospitalization, Torres has managed his condition through daily antidepressant medication, such as Wellbutrin, combined with psychotherapy, viewing depression as a chronic but treatable illness rather than a barrier to achievement.[192][191] He has emphasized personal adherence to treatment as key to his functionality, stating that without it, he would not be alive or serving in Congress, thereby framing recovery as an exercise in individual agency and accountability rather than external dependencies.[192] This approach has allowed uninterrupted career progression, from election to the New York City Council in 2013 to the U.S. House in 2021, without reported absences or diminished performance attributable to his condition.[204][191] Torres' public narrative underscores resilience through radical authenticity and stigma reduction, arguing that openness about mental health humanizes leaders and leverages lived experience for policy advocacy, such as funding community mental health services.[191][192] He has rejected viewing depression as a character flaw or destiny, instead highlighting how proactive self-management enabled him to overcome socioeconomic and personal obstacles, proving that mental illness does not preclude high-level public service when addressed directly.[204][192] No new health disclosures have emerged as of 2025, with his discussions remaining centered on advocacy for accessible treatment over excuses rooted in systemic or cultural narratives.[191]Electoral history
Local elections (2013–2020)
Ritchie Torres first won election to the New York City Council from District 15 in a 2013 special election triggered by the resignation of incumbent Maria del Carmen Arroyo amid ethics investigations. The district, located in the South Bronx neighborhoods of Morrisania, Claremont Village, and Longwood, features a population that is approximately 75% Hispanic or Latino, with a poverty rate exceeding 35% and median household income below $30,000, reflecting entrenched economic challenges and a heavily Democratic voter base registered at over 90%.[65][205] Torres, then 25 and serving as president of the Bronx chapter of the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials, campaigned as an outsider reformer against the entrenched Bronx Democratic Party machine, which endorsed and resourced rivals including former City Council Speaker Joel Rivera and party-backed Albert Alvarez. Lacking establishment support and facing superior funding from opponents tied to local political networks, Torres mobilized grassroots turnout among younger voters and community advocates disillusioned with machine politics, securing a plurality in the September 10 Democratic primary despite a fragmented field of six candidates.[27] The primary results demonstrated Torres's ability to consolidate support in a low-turnout contest of 7,675 votes:| Candidate | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Ritchie J. Torres | 2,771 | 36.1% |
| Joel R. Rivera | 1,641 | 21.4% |
| Cynthia Thompkins | 1,609 | 21.0% |
| Albert Alvarez | 690 | 9.0% |
| Raquel E. Batista | 569 | 7.4% |
| Joel M. Bauza | 392 | 5.1% |
| Write-ins | 3 | 0.04% |
Federal elections (2020–present)
In the 2020 United States House of Representatives elections, Ritchie Torres secured the Democratic nomination for New York's 15th congressional district on June 23, 2020, defeating 13 other candidates in the primary for the open seat vacated by retiring incumbent José Serrano. He won with approximately 32% of the vote in a fragmented field that included state Senator Rubén Díaz Sr. and former Bronx Borough President Rubén Díaz Jr..[209] In the general election on November 3, 2020, Torres defeated Republican Patrick A. Murphy, receiving 167,650 votes to Murphy's 21,550, for a margin of 88.8%. [64] Redistricting following the 2020 census preserved the district's status as a Democratic stronghold, incorporating neighborhoods such as Riverdale in the northern Bronx while retaining its core in the South Bronx and parts of Upper Manhattan; the changes added some more affluent and Jewish communities but did not alter its overwhelming partisan lean. In 2022, Torres faced no Democratic primary challengers on June 28 and won the general election on November 8 with 82.7% of the vote against Republican Stylo A. Sapaskis. [210] Torres again ran unopposed in the 2024 Democratic primary on June 25. In the general election on November 5, he defeated Republican Gonzalo Duran, garnering 130,392 votes (76.5%) to Duran's 36,010 (21.1%).[67] [68] This result reflected the district's resilience for Torres amid broader national polarization, bolstered by his public criticisms of the Biden administration's immigration enforcement as insufficient, which aligned with local concerns over migrant influxes straining New York City resources in a heavily Latino district.[211]| Election Year | Democratic Primary Result | General Election Result |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | Won (32% in multi-candidate field) | Won 88.8% (167,650 votes) vs. Republican (21,550 votes)[64] |
| 2022 | Unopposed | Won 82.7%[210] |
| 2024 | Unopposed | Won 76.5% (130,392 votes) vs. Republican (36,010 votes)[67] |