Saikat Chakrabarti
Saikat Chakrabarti is an American political advisor, activist, and software engineer. A progressive Democrat, Chakrabarti co-founded Justice Democrats which powered Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's successful insurgent challenge to Representative Joe Crowley and he served as her campaign manager. He then served as chief of staff to Ocasio-Cortez, who became the U.S. representative from New York's 14th congressional district, until August 2019.
Chakrabarti left Ocasio-Cortez's office to run New Consensus, a group promoting the Green New Deal, which he helped write and whose development he led. He is running to succeed former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi as the representative for California's 11th congressional district in the 2026 U.S House election. Chakrabarti was a founding engineer at Stripe, Inc. and began his political career as the Director of Organizing Technology for Senator Bernie Sanders' 2016 presidential campaign, which he joined in its early stages.
Early life and career
Chakrabarti was born into a Bengali Hindu family in 1986 to Samir and Sima Chakrabarti in Fort Worth, Texas. His father, Samir, was born in Dhaka, Bengal Presidency, one year prior to the Partition of India and later sought refuge with his parents and nine siblings in Kolkata, India. Chakrabarti's parents immigrated to New York City in 1979 where Saikat's older sister, Urmi, was born.Chakrabarti graduated from Paul Laurence Dunbar High School in Fort Worth in 2003. He then went on to attend Harvard University, graduating in 2007 with a Bachelor of Arts in computer science. Chakrabarti worked at Bridgewater Associates followed by six years in Silicon Valley at a number of startups. Chakrabarti co-founded a web design company called Mockingbird and served as the second engineer at the payments processing company Stripe. According to his financial disclosures, Chakrabarti holds at least $50 million worth of equity in Stripe.
Political career and policy positions
Bernie Sanders campaign and Brand New Congress
In 2015, Chakrabarti joined the early stages of U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders's presidential campaign. Of that decision, Chakrabarti told Rolling Stone, "I wasn't entirely sure he had all the right solutions but I knew he was talking about the right problems."Chakrabarti became the Sanders campaign's Director of Organizing Technology and was part of the effort that created technology for grassroots supporters to collaborate on organizing events. Together with Sheena Pakanati, he developed a messaging tool called Spoke which was released under the MIT license. The software helped volunteers find other volunteers who lived nearby and helped coordinate "millions" of volunteers to call into battleground states, multiplying the effort of local volunteers and staff. Chakrabarti's technological edge is credited with being "a major component in the success of Sanders' presidential run".
During the Sanders campaign, Chakrabarti worked closely with Alexandra Rojas and Corbin Trent to stage campaign events around the country. Chakrabarti told Rolling Stone that he often heard voters express strong concerns about Congress: "people would say, 'How's he going to get anything done? We just saw what Congress did to Obama for the last eight years, they’re gonna do the same thing to Bernie.'" As a result, in the spring of 2016, Chakrabarti co-founded the Brand New Congress political action committee, to recruit 400 new candidates for Congress. Chakrabarti told Rachel Maddow in 2016, the goal was to have unified fundraising of small donors modeled on the Sanders campaign in hopes of politicians who work for their voters rather than spend their time seeking donations. The group received many applications and recruited 12 candidates, of whom Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez won a seat in Congress.
Justice Democrats
In early 2017, after Trump's election, Chakrabarti, Zack Exley, a former fellow Bernie Sanders presidential campaign executive, Cenk Uygur of The Young Turks and Kyle Kulinski of Secular Talk became co-founders of the Justice Democrats. As Chakrabarti, Rojas, and Trent were less involved with Brand New Congress, they became leaders of the Justice Democrats. Chakrabarti, as an executive director of Justice Democrats, wrote software to organize in a "distributed fashion". Justice Democrats targeted an entrenched "corporate Democrat" in Joe Crowley. The group recruited Ocasio-Cortez to challenge Joe Crowley and "helped get her campaign off the ground, build an email list and raise $30,000." Activist strategies mobilized by Justice Democrats contributed greatly to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's primary win, according to The Intercept.Before U.S. Senator Al Franken resigned, Chakrabarti went on record to push for his resignation and expressed his support for Keith Ellison as his replacement.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez chief of staff
Chakrabarti was campaign manager for Ocasio-Cortez's unexpected primary victory over 10-term incumbent Joe Crowley, and afterwards became her campaign chair. While her general election victory in the heavily Democratic district was considered a foregone conclusion, Chakrabarti leveraged her newfound high profile to campaign for other progressive candidates across the country. After she won the November 2018 general election, she appointed him as her chief of staff.In 2019, Chakrabarti was named to the Politico Playbook power list to watch.
Green New Deal
Chakrabarti led the Ocasio-Cortez staff and several progressive groups in writing the Green New Deal resolution that was submitted to the House of Representatives by Ocasio-Cortez and to the Senate by Ed Markey February 7, 2019. The New Yorker quoted him as saying, "We spent the weekend learning how to put laws together. We looked up how to write resolutions." The Washington Post quoted him as well:Chakrabarti expressed a vision of what Democrats should try to do while Republicans hold power in the Senate and Presidency:
Relating that to the policies Ocasio-Cortez proposes and supports via Twitter, Chakrabarti told Brian Stelter on CNN's "Reliable Sources":
Chakrabarti publicly supported Bilal Mahmood's run as a Democrat for California's 17th State Assembly district in a 2022 special election on September 30, 2021. Together, he and Mahmood planned an environmental framework similar to the Green New Deal for California, including a carbon tax to fund zero-interest loans for green retrofits.
Amazon HQ2 withdrawal from Queens
In February 2019, Chakrabarti appeared as a guest on Bloomberg News to clarify Ocasio-Cortez's role in Amazon's decision to pull its planned HQ2 from Long Island City, Queens, saying she objected to the process by which it had received its original deal, but had no specific animus toward the company. He stated that AOC's goal had been to see the local community more involved in discussions, but once community members joined the discussion, Amazon made the decision to withdraw. Chakrabarti elaborated further that Amazon would be welcome to return to the negotiating table under the condition that the company engage adequately with the local communities to be affected by the project.Immigration reform
Chakrabarti worked on the part of the Justice Democrats platform which included abolishing ICE. To the question of whether a different agency should take its place, he replied "everyone has a different idea of what happens after".In a 2019 tweet, Chakrabarti wrote that the New Democrats and Blue Dog Caucus should be called "the New Southern Democrats" for voting to "enable a racist system". This was in response to Democratic representatives approving an aid package which included funding for southern border enforcement. The House Democratic Caucus Twitter account, managed by Hakeem Jeffries, objected to his referring to Sharice Davids by name in these posts and attacked him for his perceived targeting of a Native American woman and person of color.
Resignation as chief of staff
On August 2, 2019, Representative Ocasio-Cortez announced that Saikat Chakrabarti "has decided to leave the office to work with New Consensus to further develop plans for a Green New Deal." That same day, in an interview with The Intercept, Chakrabarti said he would be starting work with New Consensus, an organization dedicated to the Green New Deal, the congresswoman's "ambitious climate, economic, and racial justice agenda." A subsequent article in The New York Times suggested a connection between this departure and Ocasio-Cortez's adoption of a more moderate strategy for working with conservative colleagues, though a New York Post article had previously suggested a connection between his departure and a federal investigation related to campaign finance due to a complaint filed by the Coolidge Reagan Foundation. The FEC, however, found no wrongdoing.Housing
Chakrabarti supports an "all-of-the-above" approach to combat the housing crisis in the United States. He has advocated cutting "red tape to accelerate development", increasing funding "for low-income housing" and creating a federal agency to provide "low-interest financing to pay for home construction." Chakrabarti has also criticized the "tribal politics" surrounding the housing and cost-of-living crises in San Francisco, arguing that such dynamics have worsened these problems instead of encouraging engagement with fresh ideas.2026 congressional campaign
On February 5, 2025, Chakrabarti announced his candidacy for California's 11th congressional district in 2026, challenging former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in the Democratic primary. In his announcement, he affirmed his respect for Pelosi, but stated, "it's become clear to me that the Democratic Party needs new leadership," and added that Democratic congressional leaders were "paralyzed and unprepared" for the second Trump presidency.On November 6, 2025, Pelosi announced that she would not be seeking re-election for her seat, leaving it open for the first time in 40 years.