Aside from former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s progressive line-up had also faced a crushing defeat in the first congressional primaries.

Despite the heads and warnings from her political party, the far-left congresswoman had chosen to overhaul the PAC endorsement, with the dream of defeating “long-established politicians.”

In an interview, AOC said “My ambition right now is to be a little less lonely in Congress,” and chose the slate because “One of our primary goals is to reward political courage in Congress and also to help elect a progressive majority in the House of Representatives. There’s kind of a dual nature to this: One is opening the door to newcomers, and the other is to reward members of Congress that are exhibiting very large amounts of political courage.”

Unfortunately, AOC’s progressive line-up backfires and fails to overthrow the politicians she had claimed to loathe.

One of AOC’s PAC endorsement was Texas congressional candidate Jessica Cisneros, an immigration lawyer, who had also received similar high-profile endorsements from Democratic presidential candidates, including Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.

In her tweet, AOC wrote: “I am so incredibly proud of Jessica Cisneros. At 26 years old, she ran for office for the first time to offer TX28 new leadership that fights for workers, gender rights,& a climate agenda. She stood up to Koch brother money & incumbent, & she came closer than anyone imagined.”

On the other hand, Christina Tzintzún Ramirez, who was running for the Texas Senate seat, has lost over MJ Hegar. AOC also posted her praise for Ramirez, “My heart is also full at the candidacy of @cristinafortx whose race is currently too close to call in the runoff for TX Senate. These women come from backgrounds that typically make running for office inaccessible,” Ocasio-Cortez said. “They are holding their own & building progressive power,” AOC wrote.

As Fox News reported, “Despite the fact that all three candidates had strong organizations and fundraising numbers, the youth vote that they were desperate to turn out did not appear to show up. In Texas especially, only 16 percent of voters were 18-29 years old, compared to voters who were 65 or older who made up 24 percent of the vote. Youth voter turnout was only 13 percent nationally.”

In the long run, AOC’s decision to overhaul the PAC endorsement might ultimately cost her her own House Seat. In a New York Post Editorial, the media outlet claimed that Democratic leaders were not happy with AOC’s decision with the PAC endorsements and we’re planning to push her out of power.