On a Sunday evening, about a dozen liberal housing activists from New York gathered for a virtual meeting with Senator Chuck Schumer. Although the newly anointed majority leader had served in Congress for four decades, some attendees had barely interacted with him before, and some viewed him as an insecure ally.

But Herr Schumer tried to calm things down. At some point he Several participants remembered a former tenant organizer who was now able to solve housing issues on a large scale.

“He had done a lot of homework and knew all we were going to ask about and made a number of commitments with us to make it happen,” said Cea Weaver, strategist for New York’s Housing Justice for All coalition. “He said: I’ll talk to Ilhan Omar, I’ll talk to Bernie Sanders, I’ll talk to AOC.”

The January meeting was one of several steps Mr Schumer took to win over the leaders of the left in New York and Washington ahead of his 2022 election campaign. Armed with a full set of political pledges, he touts the next generation of activists, organizers and elected officials in New York who would likely form the backbone of efforts to dethrone him if anyone should ever show up.

He is facing an extraordinary balancing act in the coming days as he simultaneously tries to falsify a massive aid law to counter the coronavirus pandemic while administering the impeachment of former President Donald J. Trump. Both tasks are seen as urgent, practical, and moral necessities by the Democratic Party’s electoral base.

The 70-year-old Schumer has tried to channel his party’s impatient goal: in recent days, he has publicly urged President Biden to be “big and bold” with his economic policies and executive measures in order to defy pressure from Republicans and a few centrist democrats to cut campaign promises.

Last week, Mr Schumer supported a new push to decriminalize cannabis. signed Senator Cory Booker’s Baby Bonds proposal, a plan to close the racial welfare gap; and appeared with Senator Elizabeth Warren and other progressives to ask Mr. Biden to cancel the student debts.

Also in impeachment, Mr Schumer has committed a breach by calling for Mr Trump’s impeachment the morning after the January 6 attack on the Capitol and seeing the upcoming trial as a crucial ritual of accountability, even if it does It is highly unlikely that two-thirds of the Senate will vote for a conviction.

Maurice Mitchell, national director of the Working Families Party, said Mr Schumer had insisted in private conversations that he intended to “get really big things done” despite the Senate’s daunting math. Mr Mitchell said he had spoken to Mr Schumer frequently but had not yet discussed the 2022 campaign with him.

“He will have to use whatever tools are available to hold his caucus together. He’s getting this, we all understand, it’s no surprise, ”said Mr. Mitchell. “I think he is also really clear that the alternative is unacceptable – that he has to deliver.”

The new Senate Chairman seems to be realizing that his political playbook needs updating. A compulsive retail politician and great fundraiser, Mr. Schumer rose to power less as a lawmaker and great idea writer than as a campaign tactician with a financial base on Wall Street and a keen eye for finding the political hub between liberals New York City and its historically conservative Suburbs.

David Carlucci, a former Rockland County senator who lost a House area code to a more progressive candidate, Representative Mondaire Jones, in 2018, said a diverse new generation had changed state policy. Mr Schumer seems relatively safe, he said, but no Democrat should feel immune.

“Any politician who is part of the old guard must be very concerned about a possible elementary school,” said Carlucci.

This is a lesson progressives taught incumbent Democrats over the last two election cycles, when the losses of Joseph P. Crowley and Eliot L. Engel, two senior members of the House of Representatives, marked a breakthrough for leftist politics in New York state.

Unlike Mr. Crowley and Mr. Engel, the New York Senate Chairman is still ubiquitous. But his ability to match the passions of his own party is another question.

Mr Schumer regularly complained from the left during the Trump years for being generally cautious about messaging and campaigning strategies, including in major Senate races last year where Mr Schumer selected moderate recruits who ended up in states like Maine and North Carolina lost. There is limited patience among Democrats right now for the kind of incremental maneuvering and horse trading traditionally required to pass laws in the Senate.

In a statement, Mr Schumer said he was trying to “do the best work for my constituents and for my country” and acknowledged a shift in the scope of his government goals.

“The world has changed and the needs of families have changed,” he said. “Income and racial inequality have worsened, the climate crisis has become more urgent, Trump has attacked our democracy – all of these things require big, bold measures and that.” is what I’m fighting for in the Senate. “

At the moment, Mr Schumer’s most serious potential challengers – including Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez – have taken no steps towards campaigning. Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, the 31-year-old Queens lawmaker, has told her staff that she has not made a decision to run, but that she believes the opportunity for a challenge is a constructive form of pressure on Mr. Schumer with her spoken said.

Other potential opponents appear to be more focused on putting together an offer to oust Governor Andrew Cuomo.

Nevertheless, Mr. Schumer seems to want to scare off even a quixotic opponent who could become an annoying distraction or worse. He has used Twitter and cable news interviews to demand that Mr Biden take bold executive action on issues such as student debt and climate change.

And since he takes over the extended powers of the Senate majority, Mr. Schumer relies on old and new alliances to help him govern.

Starting last spring, Mr. Schumer called several conference calls to work out plans for pandemic relief with some of the Democratic Party’s big political figures. This included more centrist voices such as former Treasury official Antonio Weiss; progressive business thinkers such as Felicia Wong of the Roosevelt Institute and Stephanie Kelton of Stony Brook University; and liberal think tank leaders Heather Boushey and Michael Linden, now in the Biden administration.

Mr. Schumer’s regular meetings with national liberal interest groups have intensified over the past few weeks, and he has spent time with a cohort of New York progressives elected last year. In December, he met 33-year-old Democratic Socialist Jabari Brisport, who was elected last fall, in a bar in Bedford-Stuyvesant and emphasized his support for combating climate change.

“We joked that I was a socialist in Brooklyn,” Brisport said, recalling that Mr. Schumer had noticed he works well with Mr. Sanders, who is also a Brooklyn socialist.

Representative Ritchie Torres, a 32-year-old progressive who captured an open house in the Bronx last fall, said Mr Schumer was the first official to contact him after Mr Torres won a controversial elementary school have. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Schumer visited his district for a meeting about expanding the federal tax credit for children.

Mr Torres said he intended to support Mr Schumer in any controversial elementary school. “Without a doubt, he deserves re-election,” said Torres.

Should Mr Schumer struggle to translate his zippy advocates of bold action into law, or should he be seen as an obstacle in certain clashes with Republicans, a serious challenge could arise. Mr. Schumer faces a dense ideological minefield in questions of Recovering Legislation to Eliminate Filibusters and Gain Statehood for Washington, DC

“The pressure is on now that he is one of the most powerful politicians in the country,” said MP Ron Kim, a progressive lawmaker. “If he can’t deliver, it’s not just him – it’s the party that’s going to suffer in two or four years.”

State Senator Jessica Ramos, a Queens Democrat who defeated a Conservative incumbent in an elementary school in 2018, said she believes Mr Schumer reacted to liberals but she is waiting for tough results before endorsing him. She said she was “disappointed” that Mr. Schumer had not taken a tougher line in his power-sharing negotiations with Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell.

“We have to stand up against these people who do not want to submit humane laws that take care of the people in this country.” Mrs. Ramos said.

People who have spoken to Mr Schumer about a possible primary challenge say he is confident about his chances against Ms. Ocasio Cortez or anyone else; He cites his support in the suburbs and among black voters in New York City, arguing that it would be difficult for an opponent from the left to overcome these advantages. As the first Jewish Senate majority leader, he would likely have considerable strength among an important population of left-wing whites.

But Mr. Schumer certainly also knows that coalitions can be volatile and flexible. He is said to have closely watched Senator Edward Markey’s main campaign in Massachusetts last year against Joseph P. Kennedy III. Mr. Markey, a Septuagenarian, defeated his younger and better known rival by standing up as an advocate for environmental justice and by linking up closely with Ms. Ocasio-Cortez and groups like Sunrise.

A few days after Mr. Markey won his elementary school, Rep. Yuh-Line Niou, a Manhattan Liberal Democrat, spoke briefly to Mr. Schumer at a September 11 memorial service in her district. Ms. Niou was frustrated with Mr. Cuomo’s opposition to increasing taxes on the rich and appealed to Mr. Schumer for help in raising much-needed income. He supported, she said, but at the time the Republicans controlled the Senate.

Ms. Niou said she supported Mr. Schumer and felt it was “really important that New York has the majority leader as a member”. But she said she intended to get Mr. Schumer to do the best of the job.

“Every single thing I’ve asked about I’ll ask five thousand times harder,” she said.

John Washington, a Buffalo-based housing organizer who attended the January meeting with Mr. Schumer, said he had seen a significant shift in the senator. In the past, Mr. Schumer sought support for his own priorities and offered “radio silence” for activist goals.

“I think everyone knows that there is some kind of new era in politics,” he said.