In 2016, state Senator
Adriano Espaillat ran for
U.S. House of Representatives in the race to replace retiring long-serving Congressman
Charlie Rangel of
Harlem. Upon winning that election, Espaillat's state Senate seat became open. While Alcantara did not declare her candidacy until after Espaillat won his Congressional primary in June 2016, she entered the race to succeed him when it became clear no other notable Dominican candidate would emerge. This did not come as a surprise, as she owed Independent Democratic Leader
Jeffrey D. Klein for his assistance in her primary election campaign. After joining the majority coalition, the freshman Senator was named Chair of the Labor Committee. According to
The New York Times, Alcantara "condemned" a bill by Democrats designed to stop deportations in
New York State. Alcantara proposed a bill that raised the limit for discretionary contracts for minorities and women from $20,000 to $150,000 that passed. In April 2018, Alcantara and her IDC colleagues rejoined the Senate Democratic Conference. Subsequently, the Republican conference stripped Alcantara of her position as Chair of the Labor Committee. In the September 2018 Democratic primary election, Alcantara was challenged again by Jackson (who also won the backing of the
Working Families Party) as well as by Thomas Leon and Tirso Santiago Pina. This time, Jackson won the four-way primary in a landslide with 56% of the vote to Alcantara's 38%. Alcantara's defeat was attributed to long-simmering anger with the former members of the IDC. As part of New York State's
electoral fusion laws allowing candidates to run on multiple ballot lines in one election, Alcantara still appeared in the November 6, 2018, general election as the third-party
Independence Party of New York candidate; however, Alcantara conceded to Jackson and pledged to work with him. ==See also==