Kenyan McDuffie

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Preceded byMichael Brown
Succeeded byAnita Bonds
Preceded byElissa Silverman
Succeeded byDoni Crawford
Kenyan McDuffie
Chair pro tempore of the Council of the District of Columbia
In office
January 2, 2013  January 5, 2026
Preceded byMichael Brown
Succeeded byAnita Bonds
Member of the Council of the District of Columbia
from the at-large district
In office
January 2, 2023  January 5, 2026
Preceded byElissa Silverman
Succeeded byDoni Crawford
Member of the Council of the District of Columbia
from Ward 5
In office
May 30, 2012  January 2, 2023
Preceded byHarry Thomas Jr.
Succeeded byZachary Parker
Personal details
Born1975 (age 5051)
PartyDemocratic (before 2022, 2026-present)
Independent (2022–2026)
EducationUniversity of the District of Columbia (attended)
Howard University (BA)
University of Maryland, Baltimore (JD)

Kenyan Renard McDuffie[1] (born c. 1975)[citation needed] is an American politician who served as an Independent at-large member of the Council of the District of Columbia from 2023 to 2026 after previously representing Ward 5 on the council as a Democrat from 2012 to 2023.[2] He resigned from his position to re-register as a Democrat and run for mayor in the 2026 mayoral election.

McDuffie grew up in the Stronghold neighborhood in Northeast Washington, D.C.[3] After graduating from Woodrow Wilson High School, he sold ice cream at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C., and briefly attended the University of the District of Columbia.[4] He later worked for the United States Postal Service, delivering mail in the Friendship Heights and Spring Valley neighborhoods.[4]

After four years with the Postal Service, McDuffie returned to the University of the District of Columbia before graduating from Howard University summa cum laude with a bachelor's degree in political science and community development[5] in 2002.[6] He then received a Juris Doctor from University of Maryland School of Law[7] in 2006. In law school, he served as an associate editor of The University of Maryland Journal of Race, Religion, Gender, and Class, and as a research assistant to then-professor Tom Perez.[6]

Following his graduation, McDuffie was hired by Prince George's County, Maryland, first working as a law clerk for an Associate Judge on the 7th Judicial Circuit of Maryland and later as an assistant state's attorney where he prosecuted misdemeanor and felony cases in District Court and on appeal in Circuit Court.[7] McDuffie later worked for Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton in both her local constituent services office and Capitol Hill office, where he drafted legislation.[8] In 2008, he served as a trial attorney for the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, where he conducted investigations and managed complex cases throughout the United States regarding enforcement of key federal civil rights statutes, including defending the rights of the mentally ill. During his tenure at DOJ, he worked on cases to reform the policies and procedures of police departments.[3][7] In 2010, McDuffie became a policy advisor to Public Safety and Justice Deputy Mayor Paul Quander,[7][9] serving as a liaison to public safety agencies.[10] He has also served as president of the Stronghold Civic Association.[11]

Electoral history

2010 election

In February 2010, McDuffie resigned from his position in the mayor's administration[12] and declared his candidacy to represent Ward 5 on the Council of the District of Columbia.[3] McDuffie supported expanding employment opportunities and tackling HIV.[8] He criticized incumbent Harry Thomas Jr. for being reactive rather than proactive.[8] During his campaign, McDuffie stressed several urgent problems in the ward, including lack of quality education, lack of effective job-training programs, lack of affordable housing, and a need for more services for senior citizens.[13] Thomas won the Democratic Party primary election[14] and went on to win the general election as well.[15]

2012 election

In January 2012, Thomas resigned from the Council and pleaded guilty to two federal crimes: theft and filing three years of false tax returns.[16] McDuffie entered the special election to fill the vacant Ward 5 seat.[17]

The District's firefighter union, the Service Employees International Union Maryland and DC State Council, National Nurses United union, Local 25 Hospitality Workers' Union, AFL-CIO, DC Latino Caucus, Gertrude Stein Democratic Club and Councilmember Tommy Wells[18] endorsed McDuffie's candidacy.[18][19][20][21]

McDuffie won the special election,[22] receiving 43 percent of the votes.[23]

2014 election

McDuffie ran for re-election in the 2014 election[24] and won the primary against Kathy Henderson, Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner for Carver Langston;[25] and Carolyn C. Steptoe, Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner for Brookland.[26] Libertarian Preston Cornish is the only candidate who opposed him in the General Election.[27] He was re-elected with 83.93% of the vote.[citation needed]

2018 election

McDuffie ran for re-election in the 2018 election. He won with 79.3% of the vote, defeating Kathy Henderson, Joyce Robinson-Paul, and Amone Banks on November 6, 2018.

2022 election

McDuffie announced his candidacy for Attorney General for the District of Columbia and said that he would not run to represent Ward 5 for another term.[28] McDuffie's qualifications were challenged by candidate Bruce Spiva, who argued that the legislation required that the attorney general was "actively engaged" as an attorney for five years and that service on the Council was not adequate.[29] The Board of Elections supported the challenge, the Court of Appeals upheld their decision, and McDuffie's appeal for a rehearing was denied.[29][30]

In June 2022, McDuffie changed his registration to independent and picked up paperwork to file to run as a candidate for one of the at-large seats on the Council held by incumbents Elissa Silverman and Anita Bonds.[31] He was elected in November 2022, finishing behind Bonds but ahead of Silverman.[32]

2026 Election

On January 14, 2026, McDuffie announced his candidacy to seek the Democratic nomination for the Office of Mayor for The District of Columbia. [33]

Political positions and initiatives

Personal life

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI