Legendary Congressman Dead at 79

Former Rep. Eliot Engel, the powerful New York Democrat who chaired the House Foreign Affairs Committee during President Donald Trump’s first impeachment and championed international causes from Kosovo to cocoa farms, died Friday at a Bronx hospital from complications of Parkinson’s disease. He was 79.

Engel’s death on April 10, 2026, closed the book on a remarkable political career spanning over four decades—one that began with an insurgent upset and ended the same way.

In 1988, the former teacher and state Assembly member shocked New York politics by defeating Mario Biaggi, a 10-term incumbent who had resigned his seat after being convicted of bribery, conspiracy, and extortion but whose name remained on the ballot. Engel won the Democratic primary with 48% of the vote, launching a congressional career that would last 32 years. More than three decades later, progressive challenger Jamaal Bowman returned the favor, unseating Engel in a 2020 Democratic primary that signaled shifting winds within the party.

Engel’s family said he devoted “over 44 years in public service” to fighting “tirelessly for his constituents at home and for peace and security around the world.”

Representing the Bronx and Westchester County from 1989 to 2021, Engel steadily climbed the ranks of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. He spent eight years as the panel’s top Democrat before claiming its chairmanship in 2019 after Democrats gained the majority in the 2018 midterms. The position thrust him into the spotlight during one of the most turbulent chapters of Trump’s first presidency.

As committee chair, Engel led the 2019-2020 impeachment inquiry into Trump over the president’s efforts to pressure Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to investigate then-rival Joe Biden. After Trump’s acquittal in February 2020, Engel vowed to press forward, saying there were “a lot of unanswered questions that the American public deserves to know” answers to.

But Engel’s foreign policy influence extended far beyond Trump’s impeachment. In the 1990s, he emerged as one of the first lawmakers demanding intervention in Kosovo, where ethnic Albanians sought independence from Serbia. As The Washington Post wrote in 1996, “The Kosovo cause has been kept alive in Washington by a small group of congressmen led by Rep. Eliot L. Engel.” His relentless advocacy helped lay the groundwork for NATO’s 78-day bombing campaign in 1999, which ultimately opened the path for Kosovo’s declaration of independence nine years later in February 2008.

In Kosovo, Engel achieved near rock-star status. A street was named after him in Pejë, and he became the first foreign dignitary to address the Kosovo parliament. Rep. Ritchie Torres, a fellow Bronx Democrat, remembered Engel as “a fierce advocate for Kosovo and the Albanian community at a time when few others were paying attention,” according to published reports.

Engel also helped negotiate the Harkin-Engel Protocol, an international agreement signed in September 2001 that aimed to eliminate the worst forms of child labor and forced labor on cocoa farms in West Africa. The protocol was negotiated with U.S. Senator Tom Harkin and signed by the heads of eight major chocolate companies. The initiative demonstrated Engel’s ability to tackle humanitarian crises alongside geopolitical flashpoints, though the industry has repeatedly missed its deadlines for reducing child labor.

A stalwart supporter of Israel throughout his career, Engel maintained close relationships with pro-Israel organizations and consistently backed strong U.S.-Israel relations. He told the Jerusalem Post that he was “proud to stand with our ally Israel, our closest friend in the Middle East.” His foreign policy positions reflected a traditional Democratic approach to American global leadership—one increasingly at odds with the party’s progressive wing.

Despite his international profile, Engel’s 2020 primary loss highlighted vulnerabilities at home. The Atlantic reported on his absence from his district during the early COVID-19 pandemic—he admitted he had not returned to New York since March 2020. Then came the damaging hot mic incident that captured Engel at a Bronx news conference saying: “If I didn’t have a primary, I wouldn’t care.”

The gaffe proved fatal to his reelection bid. State Senator Alessandra Biaggi—granddaughter of Mario Biaggi, whom Engel had defeated in 1988—withdrew her endorsement and backed Bowman instead. Bowman, supported by progressive groups including Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, defeated Engel decisively, 61.8% to 34.9%, in a race seen as emblematic of the Democratic Party’s internal debates over issues including Israel policy. Bowman himself was later defeated by George Latimer in 2024.

For years, Engel cultivated a quirky Capitol Hill tradition that showcased both his showmanship and dedication: arriving hours early to claim an aisle seat for the State of the Union address. The prime position allowed him to greet the president—whether Democrat or Republican—in full view of television cameras as the chief executive entered the House chamber. But in 2017, he broke his 29-year tradition, declining to shake President Trump’s hand at his first address to Congress.

Rep. George Latimer, the Democrat who now holds what was Engel’s seat in New York’s 16th Congressional District, offered tribute to his predecessor’s life of service. “His legacy consists of hard work on issues and kindness to all,” Latimer said. “His work in helping bring peace to the Balkans in the 1990s was a major accomplishment, among many others.”

Born February 18, 1947, in the Bronx to a family of Ukrainian-Jewish immigrants, Engel grew up in public housing and attended New York City public schools. He worked as a teacher and guidance counselor before earning his law degree from New York Law School and entering politics. He served in the New York State Assembly from 1977 to 1988 before his election to Congress.

Engel’s career traced an arc familiar in American politics: the reformer who becomes the establishment, the outsider who rises to power, only to be toppled by a new generation of insurgents. Yet his influence on American foreign policy—from the Balkans to the Middle East, from child labor protections to presidential impeachment—proved lasting.

He is survived by his wife, Patricia Ennis Engel; a daughter, Julia; two sons, Jonathan and Philip; and three grandchildren.

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