



Primary Election
Party selects its nominee.
Current roleAttorney
PartyDemocratic
Political ideologyModerate Democrat
Age62 years old (Sep 2, 1963)
GenderMale
LocationNew York
BackgroundAttorney
EducationHarvard College (A.B., Biochemistry, magna cum laude)
Notable personal detailsGeorge Thomas Conway III is an American attorney and political activist who is a Democratic candidate for the U.S. House in New York's 12th Congressional District in the 2026 cycle. He is a Harvard College graduate and earned a J.D. from Yale Law School, later practicing as a litigation attorney. He became nationally known as a prominent critic of Donald Trump and as a co-founder of the anti-Trump Republican group The Lincoln Project before later affiliating with the Democratic Party.
Supports lowering health-care costs and protecting coverage for Americans, framing rising prices and millions losing coverage as a major problem. Public campaign materials state the goal of making health care more affordable but do not specify detailed policy proposals (for example, Medicare for All or a public option) in the cited campaign launch material.
The candidate has publicly supported stronger border security measures, including barriers and technology, while emphasizing limits on asylum fraud and the need to control unlawful crossings. Public remarks indicate acceptance of enforcement-focused responses alongside calls for law-based processes at the border.
Supports federal protections for abortion access and backs the Women’s Health Protection Act to preserve the right to terminate a pregnancy through viability and protect providers from state-level restrictions.
Supports reasonable federal gun regulations, explicitly endorsing regulation of AR-15–style semiautomatic rifles and backing commonsense measures such as improved background checks and other limits while recognizing Second Amendment constraints.
George Conway is running in the crowded Democratic primary for New York’s 12th Congressional District, where the race to replace Jerry Nadler is still tight and undecided. Recent coverage says he remains in contention but is trailing some rivals in polls, with Jack Schlossberg, Micah Lasher, and Alex Bores drawing more of the attention and endorsements. The contest has also been shaped by outside spending and issue debates, including AI regulation and family caregiver policy.




Aggregation source: FiftyPlusOne
2026
LatestCycle 2026
Source: FEC
New updates coming soon
We're monitoring and will update when new data impacts the race.