









Primary Election
Party selects its nominee.
Current roleCongressional candidate
PartyDemocratic
Political ideologyProgressive Democrat
LocationIllinois
BackgroundCongressional candidate
EducationYale Law School (2007–2011)
Notable personal detailsNick Pyati is a Chicago-area native who ran for Congress in Illinois’ 9th Congressional District as a Democrat in the 2025–2026 cycle. His professional background includes work as a public school teacher, a federal prosecutor (Justice Department attorney), and a product strategy leader at Microsoft. He has also been based in/around Evanston, Illinois during his campaign.
Supports expanding access to health care and advancing progressive health initiatives, emphasizing broader coverage and related policy expansion.
Supports ending federal immigration raids and lists immigration-related protections among his campaign priorities, signaling a reform- and humanitarian-oriented approach while not detailing a full pathway-to-citizenship plan on the cited page.
The candidate supports defending abortion rights and lists protecting abortion access among his campaign priorities. He positions abortion rights under civil and human rights in his campaign platform.
Supports an energy transition and investment in clean energy and innovation, highlighting solar and other clean technologies as drivers of future growth. Emphasizes orienting the economy toward solving big challenges, including clean energy, while framing technological investment as the path to achieve that transition.
Supports expanded background checks and increased regulations on firearms while indicating support for measures to protect communities and public safety. Emphasizes common-sense gun safety reforms rather than unrestricted gun rights or repeal of the Second Amendment.
Nick Pyati is in the news as one of many Democrats running in the crowded 2026 primary for Illinois’ 9th Congressional District seat, which is opening up because Jan Schakowsky plans to retire in January 2027. The race is being framed heavily around affordability issues like healthcare and housing, and also around concerns about outside money and candidates’ positions on national issues. The Democratic primary is scheduled for March 17, 2026.









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