Doni Crawford

American politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Doni Crawford (born 1989 or 1990) is an American politician serving as an at-large member of the Council of the District of Columbia since January 2026. She was appointed to succeed Kenyan McDuffie, whom she was previously a staffer for, after he resigned to run in the 2026 Washington, D.C., mayoral election.[1]

Preceded byKenyan McDuffie
Born1989 or 1990 (age 36–37)
PartyDemocratic (before 2025)
Independent (2025–present)
Quick facts Member of the Council of the District of Columbia from the at-large district, Preceded by ...
Doni Crawford
Member of the Council of the District of Columbia
from the at-large district
Assumed office
January 20, 2026
Preceded byKenyan McDuffie
Personal details
Born1989 or 1990 (age 36–37)
PartyDemocratic (before 2025)
Independent (2025–present)
EducationUniversity of Pittsburgh (BA, MPA)
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Early life and career

Crawford graduated from the University of Pittsburgh with a Bachelor of Arts in political science and Spanish language as well as a Master of Public Affairs and International Affairs.[2]

Crawford joined Pittsburgh community nonprofit Neighborhood Allies in August 2014 as a community data and policy fellow, then was hired as a program coordinator and promoted to program manager in January 2017.[3] In January 2019, she joined the D.C. Fiscal Policy Institute as a policy analyst.[2] In March 2022, she joined the office of District of Columbia Councilmember Kenyan McDuffie's office as a policy advisor, then as his legislative director and director for the council's business economic development committee.[1]

Council of the District of Columbia

On January 17, 2026, NBC Washington reported that inside sources had confirmed that Crawford was selected to succeed McDuffie, who resigned in order to run in the 2026 Washington, D.C., mayoral election.[4] She was unanimously appointed to the council on January 20, 2026, a day after chair Phil Mendelson announced her nomination. She will hold the seat until a special election to be held June 16, 2026; she originally declined to state if she would run then announced her campaign for it on February 12, 2026.[5][6]

Personal life

Crawford resides in the Carver Langston neighborhood in Northeast Washington D.C.. She was previously a Democrat, but re-registered to Independent in the fall of 2025 in anticipation of being appointed to succeed McDuffie.[1]

References

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