After Primary, Rhode Island Looks Set to Have Its First Black Member of Congress

Gabriel Amo, a moderate Democrat who served in the Obama and Biden administrations, won a special House primary to succeed Representative David N. Cicilline in the deep-blue state.

KAYLA GUO

Gabriel Amo, a moderate Democrat who served in the Biden and Obama administrations, won a raucous Democratic special primary election in Rhode Island’s First Congressional District on Tuesday, September 5 positioning him to become the first person of color to represent the state in Congress.

Mr. Amo, who is Black, beat out 10 other Democrats to win with about one-third of the vote in the deep-blue district, all but ensuring that he would succeed former Representative David N. Cicilline, who stepped down in May to become the president of the Rhode Island Foundation.

“This primary election showed that Rhode Islanders believe in a state where one of their sons, the son of two West African immigrants, from Ghana and Liberia, could receive the love and the investments of a community and go from serving the president of United States and briefing him in the Oval Office to being the Democratic nominee for Congress in the First Congressional District,” Mr. Amo said in his victory speech on Tuesday – September 5 – night.

“And it is not lost on me,” he continued, “that I stand on the shoulders of giants, of so many who paved the road before me — Black, brown, women — so many people who have had the opportunity to pave a pathway so I could stand here today. And I want to acknowledge them. But we got real work ahead.”

Mr. Amo will face Gerry Leonard, a former U.S. Marine who won the Republican nomination on Tuesday, in the general election on Nov. 7 to determine who will serve out the remainder of Mr. Cicilline’s term.

The crowded primary race was a tumultuous one during an otherwise quiet political summer season, rocked by a series of scandals across the field and tensions among factions of the Democratic Party. Because of a lack of independent public polling and so many candidates dividing the vote, political observers had said it was difficult to predict how the race would go.

Aaron Regunberg, a former state legislator and progressive who won support from Senator Bernie Sanders, independent of Vermont, and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Democrat of New York, was widely seen as having an edge over Mr. Amo going into Tuesday’s election. He captured about a quarter of the vote. Having lost, Mr. Regunberg plans to join Public Citizen, a progressive organization, as a climate policy advocate.

Mr. Amo began the race with little name recognition across Rhode Island, but his campaign was buoyed by more than $600,000 in donations from individuals and super PACs. Mr. Amo leaned into his professional background, which includes a stint serving former Gov. Gina Raimondo, now the U.S. secretary of commerce, in the Rhode Island State House, and his upbringing in the Ocean State.

“The big reason I’m running is my story,” he said in an interview last week. “I call it a Rhode Island story.”

Mr. Amo, 35, who grew up in Pawtucket, R.I., has frequently described his personal journey on the campaign trail, from his days as a child chasing after the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority bus to get to school to a career in which he worked for two presidents.

He made protecting Social Security and Medicare his top priorities during his campaign, in addition to tackling gun violence, bolstering abortion rights and battling climate change.

New York Times