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Angela Alsobrooks
Alsobrooks at the Tawes Crab and Clam Bake in 2023
Alsobrooks in 2023
8th Executive of Prince George's County
Assumed office
December 3, 2018
Preceded by Rushern Baker
State's Attorney of Prince George's County
In office
January 3, 2011 – December 3, 2018
Preceded by Glenn Ivey
Succeeded by Aisha Braveboy
Personal details
Born
Angela Deneece Alsobrooks

(1971-02-23) February 23, 1971 (age 53)
Suitland, Maryland, U.S.
Political party Democratic
Children 1
Education Duke University (BA)
University of Maryland, Baltimore (JD)
Signature

Angela Deneece Alsobrooks (born February 23, 1971) is an American lawyer and politician serving as the 8th and current county executive of Prince George's County, Maryland. She is also the first female county executive of Prince George's County, as well as the first African American female county executive in Maryland history. A member of the Democratic Party, Alsobrooks previously served two terms as the county's state's attorney from 2010 to 2018.

Born and raised in Prince George's County, Alsobrooks graduated from Duke University and the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law. She began her career as an attorney for local firms before becoming involved in county government as a domestic violence prosecutor and appointed official within county executive Jack B. Johnson's administration. She was elected state's attorney of Prince George's County in 2010 and re-elected in 2014. Alsobrooks has served as Prince George's County Executive since 2018; she defeated former U.S. representative Donna Edwards in the 2018 Democratic primary election and ran unopposed in the general election. Alsobrooks was re-elected in 2022.

Alsobrooks is a candidate in the upcoming 2024 United States Senate election in Maryland. After winning the Democratic primary over U.S. representative David Trone, she will face former governor Larry Hogan in the general election.

Early life and education

Alsobrooks was raised in Camp Springs, Maryland, and attended Benjamin Banneker High School in Washington, D.C.. She earned her bachelor's in public policy at Duke University in 1993, and her J.D. degree from the University of Maryland School of Law in 1996. She was admitted to the Maryland Bar in 1996.

Political career

Alsobrooks first got involved in politics while serving as the president of her high school's student government. She later worked as an intern for House Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton. Alsobrooks attended the 1992 Democratic National Convention and volunteered for Democratic nominee Bill Clinton's presidential campaign after returning from it. After graduating, she clerked for law firms DLA Piper and DeCaro, Doran, and for Circuit Court Judges William D. Quarles Jr. and Donna Hill Staton until 1997, when she began working as an assistant state's attorney in Prince George's County, where she was assigned to handle domestic violence cases. In 2000, Alsobrooks worked on the presidential campaign of Vice President Al Gore. In 2002, she left the state's attorney office to become education liaison for then-County Executive Jack B. Johnson. In 2003, she was appointed executive director of the county revenue authority.

In 2008, Alsobrooks ran for delegate to the Democratic National Convention, pledged to U.S. Senator and former First Lady Hillary Clinton. She supported Democratic nominee Barack Obama following the convention.

Alsobrooks was motivated to run for Prince George's state's attorney in 2010 after reading a magazine profile about District Attorney of San Francisco Kamala Harris, soon after reading her book Smart on Crime. Harris supported Alsobrooks's campaign for state's attorney.

Prince George's State's Attorney

Crime Stats Press Conference in Prince George's Co. (16106533398)
Alsobrooks as Prince George's County State's Attorney in 2015

Alsobrooks was first elected Prince George's state's attorney in 2010 and re-elected in 2014. She is the first woman and youngest person to serve as state's attorney in county history.

As state's attorney, Alsobrooks took what was seen as a tough-on-crime approach while also supporting a rehabilitative approach for juveniles in the criminal justice system. During her time in office, the violent crime rate in the county declined by 50 percent, in line with national trends. Alsobrooks also increased prosecutions for car break-ins, vandalism, and burglaries, and personally prosecuted Richmond Phillips, who was sentenced to life without parole for killing his mistress and their daughter; and Daron Boswell-Johnson, who was sentenced to two life sentences after killing his two-year-old daughter and her mother. She supported initiatives by County Executive Rushern Baker to concentrate government resources in communities struggling with social problems and to take control of the Prince George's County school system, which she accredited to a decrease in crime in the county. She also created a Special Prosecutions Unit within her office to handle economic crimes, public corruption, and police misconduct cases.

Alsobrooks sought and secured funding to increase the number of attorneys in the office and increased conviction rates. She also divided her office's prosecutors into the county's six police districts to handle cases specific to each region, and concentrated on addressing quality-of-life concerns, discouraging truancy, and increasing social services. Alsobrooks worked with California Attorney General Kamala Harris to implement a program to reduce recidivism in Prince George's County, mirroring the "Back on Track" program introduced by Harris in California.

Alsobrooks served as a 2016 Democratic National Convention delegate pledged to Hillary Clinton.

Prince George's County Executive

Swearing In Ceremony PG CE Elect Angela Alsobrooks (46166606151)
Alsobrooks being sworn in as county executive, 2018

Alsobrooks announced her intention to run for County Executive on July 28, 2017. Her platform included increasing education funding, expanding the commercial tax base, and improving public safety by increasing police hires. During the primary, Alsobrooks was endorsed by The Washington Post, U.S. Senator Chris Van Hollen, U.S. Representatives Anthony Brown and Steny Hoyer, and numerous labor unions.

Alsobrooks won the Democratic primary election with 61.8 percent of the vote, defeating eight other candidates, including former Congresswoman Donna Edwards and state senator C. Anthony Muse. She faced Republican Jerry Mathis in the general election, who later dropped out and endorsed Alsobrooks on August 29, 2018, allowing her to run without any formal opposition and earning 98.9 percent of the vote in the general election. Upon election, Alsobrooks became the first woman to be elected County Executive for Prince George's County, as well as the first Black woman to serve as County Executive in Maryland. She was sworn in on December 3, 2018.

In July 2019, Alsobrooks traveled to Detroit, Michigan to lend moral support to Kamala Harris during one of the televised presidential debates, bringing her teenage daughter along. In May 2020, Alsobrooks was named co-chair of the Maryland Women for Biden group, alongside State House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones, State Senate President Pro Tem Melony G. Griffith, and Maryland Democratic Party Chair Yvette Lewis. She was a delegate pledged to Biden at the 2020 Democratic National Convention and later attended the inauguration of Joe Biden on January 20, 2021.

Alsobrooks was seen as a possible candidate for the 2022 Maryland gubernatorial election, but she instead chose to run for re-election as county executive in 2022. She endorsed Wes Moore in the Democratic primary on March 5, 2022, which was later described as "the most vital endorsement" for Moore's campaign. In November 2022, following Moore's win in the general election, Alsobrooks was named as a co-chair on the transition teams of both Moore and Comptroller-elect Brooke Lierman.

During her tenure as county executive, Alsobrooks faced criticism from Latino officials for not appointing a single person of Hispanic descent to her 39-member cabinet, despite Latinos making up 21.2 percent of the county's population. In statements to The Washington Post, she acknowledged that more could be done to include Latinos in her government, and members of her office said that the administration often does not receive Latino applicants for appointable positions. Alsobrooks would appoint Manuel Castillo as chief information security officer following this criticism, and would later claim that Latino representation in the county's workforce had increased from 6 percent to 23 percent during her tenure.

2024 U.S. Senate campaign

Angela Alsobrooks for Senate logo
Alsobrooks's 2024 U.S. Senate campaign logo

On May 9, 2023, Alsobrooks announced her candidacy in the 2024 election for the U.S. Senate from Maryland. If elected, Alsobrooks will become the first Black senator from Maryland, the first woman to represent Maryland in Congress since Barbara Mikulski's and Donna Edwards's retirements in 2017, and the third Black woman ever elected to the Senate.

During the Democratic primary, Alsobrooks ran on a platform emphasizing "kitchen-table" issues, such as community safety and health care, while also focusing on her political career as a prosecutor and county executive. She also campaigned heavily in the Baltimore metropolitan area, which was viewed as a key battleground area in the primary and general elections. She was viewed by media outlets as an early frontrunner, receiving several high-profile endorsements from the Maryland Democratic political establishment early into her candidacy, including from Chris Van Hollen, Steny Hoyer, Wes Moore, and multiple state legislators and county executives.

The Democratic primary quickly developed into a contest between money and endorsements, with Alsobrooks receiving the most individual donations while her closest competitor, David Trone, largely self-financed his campaign with $61.7 million and outspent Alsobrooks 10-to-1 as of May 2024. Trone utilized his self-funding ability to run a heavy media blitz across the state, overwhelming the Alsobrooks campaign and its resources, which looked to form fundraising alliances with high visibility supporters. As a result, the Alsobrooks campaign employed campaign events to meet with potential supporters directly and waited until the final weeks of the Democratic primary to run a slew of advertisements introducing her to voters, touting her achievements in office, and promoting her endorsements.

Alsobrooks trailed Trone in opinion polls for most of the Democratic primary, but enjoyed a surge of support in the final weeks of the election as voters finally tuned into the election and while Trone's campaign suffered from various gaffes he had made on the campaign trail. She won the Democratic primary on May 14, 2024, defeating Trone with 54 percent of the vote. Her support largely came from the state's highly-populated and urban counties, especially in her home base of Prince George's County, while majority votes for Trone came from Maryland's rural areas and Frederick County. Alsobrooks is set to face former governor Larry Hogan in the general election, in which she is expected to scrutinize Hogan's legislative record and seek to associate him with generic Republicans.

If Alsobrooks defeats Hogan in the November 2024 general election, a special election will be held to replace her as county executive in early 2025 if she resigns before December 5, 2024. If she wins and leaves after this date, the Prince George's County Council will select one of its members, or the council president if a deadlock is reached or the county council does not elect a successor within 14 days of the resignation, to become interim county executive. In either scenario, the county's chief administrative officer, Tara H. Jackson, will become the acting county executive until a successor is elected.

Political positions

COVID-19 pandemic

On March 9, 2020, Alsobrooks announced that Prince George's County had recorded its first case of COVID-19. Alsobrooks opened the first COVID-19 testing site in the county at FedExField on March 27, 2020. Prince George's County was the county hardest hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, with 27 percent of the state's known cases and 24 percent of the confirmed deaths by April 2020.

In May 2020, Alsobrooks expressed caution about the state's potential plans to begin easing some COVID-19-related restrictions, saying "We'll do what we can. But we're going to also make decisions that are specific and tailored to the challenges that we have met here in Prince George's, because we already know this virus has impacted us in a unique way". Later that month, Alsobrooks joined almost every other county executive in sending a letter to Governor Larry Hogan warning that their jurisdictions "lack sufficient resources" to take the steps to fully reopen in the weeks ahead. Alsobrooks announced on May 28, 2020, that the county would begin its "incremental opening", and would form a "Prince George's Forward" task force to help the county recover from the pandemic going forward. In November 2020, Alsobrooks announced new capacity limits at bars, gyms, and restaurants in Prince George's County amid a spike in COVID-19 cases.

In January 2021, Alsobrooks announced that the county health department would cancel any vaccination appointments scheduled after February 9 as part of a "reset" after noticing that people from neighboring counties were crossing into Prince George's to get the COVID-19 vaccine. In February 2021, she launched a "Proud to be Protected" campaign with local hospitals and non-profits to tackle vaccine misinformation and encourage residents to get vaccinated, and later joined statewide efforts to do the same. In May 2021, Alsobrooks joined local leaders in sending a letter to Gov. Hogan encouraging him to impose a temporary statewide eviction moratorium to give local jurisdictions more time to set up rent relief programs. In August 2021, Alsobrooks re-instated the county's indoor mask mandate following an increase in COVID-19 cases from the Delta variant. The county's mask mandate was lifted on February 28, 2022.

Development initiatives

During her campaign, Alsobrooks said she would "work with the owners of the Redskins as well as with Maryland Governor Larry Hogan" to keep the Redskins stadium in Prince George's County. She also opposed a proposal to build a maglev train connecting Washington, D.C., to Baltimore, describing the proposal as "outright disrespect to Prince George's County" and a "discourteous project". In 2019, Alsobrooks stayed neutral on Gov. Hogan's proposal to take control of the federally-controlled Oxon Cove Park and Oxon Hill Farm to build a new stadium for the Redskins, saying that while the Redskins are a valued enterprise, she would not be willing to take funds from other higher priorities, such as education, public safety, health care and economic development, to keep the team from moving away. In 2021, Alsobrooks proposed developing a year-round sports and entertainment venue near FedExField as an incentive to keep the Washington Football Team in Maryland.

In February 2019, Alsobrooks introduced legislation to increase transparency on state road upkeep by publishing state schedules for upholding maintenance on state medians and litter pickup.

In May 2021, Alsobrooks sent a letter to Acting Federal Railroad Administrator Amit Bose and Maryland Transportation Secretary Greg Slater to voice their opposition to the D.C.–Baltimore maglev proposal, arguing that the construction would "tear through environmentally sensitive areas and that the 311-mile-an-hour train would cause vibrations and hurt property values". In late 2021, Alsobrooks launched programs to preserve and construct mixed-use development around the Blue Line and Purple Line projects.

Education

During her county executive campaign, Alsobrooks said that her administration would increase investment in pre-K education, career and technology education, and infrastructure improvement projects within the county's schools, with the goal of achieving universal pre-K for every child. In 2019, Alsobrooks announced that Prince George's County would use public-private partnerships to build and maintain several of the county's schools, making it the first jurisdiction in the United States to do so. In 2020, Alsobrooks testified in favor of legislation that would allow the Maryland Stadium Authority to issue up to $2.2 billion in bonds to pay for school construction projects.

In January 2021, Alsobrooks appointed former state delegate Juanita Miller as chair of the Prince George's County Board of Education. After ethics charges were filed against almost all members of the Prince George's Board of Education in August 2021, Alsobrooks asked the state's top school officials to "immediately" investigate the allegations. The Maryland State Board of Education said it was unable to review the ethics allegations made against the school board members, saying that the report is confidential "until accepted by the local board of education". In June 2022, Alsobrooks asked Miller to resign from the school board after the Maryland State Board of Education made public two charges against her.

In September 2021, Alsobrooks wrote to Gov. Hogan to express concern that none of the nominees to the state's education reform panel lived in Prince George's County. The panel refused requests to reopen applications, waiting for clarity from the Attorney General of Maryland.

In February 2022, Alsobrooks asked the Maryland General Assembly to pass legislation to allow the Prince George's County school board to return to an all-elected school board, with nine members elected by district and one student member.

Minimum wage

In 2019, Alsobrooks endorsed legislation in the Maryland General Assembly to raise the state's minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2023, saying "[n]o one jurisdiction can achieve this on its own, because unless each city and county adopts the $15 minimum wage, it will not be a viable solution".

National politics

Alsobrooks opposed the 2018–2019 government shutdown, calling it "wicked" and referring to President Donald Trump as "ruthless". In July 2019, Alsobrooks traveled to Detroit, Michigan to lend moral support to Kamala Harris during one of the televised presidential debates, bringing her teenage daughter along. In May 2020, Alsobrooks was named co-chair of the Maryland Women for Biden group, alongside State House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones, State Senate President Pro Tem Melony G. Griffith, and Maryland Democratic Party Chair Yvette Lewis.

Policing

In June 2020, Alsobrooks announced that the county would forgo expanding its police training facility, instead funding a $20 million public health facility to treat mental health and addiction. In July 2020, she established a Police Reform Task Force to come up with recommendations on public police reform. In February 2021, Alsobrooks announced that the county would implement the reforms recommended by the task force, including updates to the department's use of force policy and creating a new office of integrity led by an independent inspector general.

Personal life

Alsobrooks has a daughter, who was born in 2005, and whom she raised as a single mother. She is a member of Delta Sigma Theta sorority, and is active in promoting breast cancer awareness. She is also a congregant at First Baptist Church of Glenarden.

Alsobrooks was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) when she was eight years old, which led to her attending youth theater programs at Howard University. Her daughter also has ADHD.

Electoral history

Prince George's County State's Attorney Democratic primary election, 2010
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Angela Alsobrooks 38,217 42.2
Democratic Thomas E. Dernoga 19,186 21.2
Democratic Peggy Magee 16,357 18.1
Democratic Joseph L. Wright 8,422 9.3
Democratic Mark Spencer 8,419 9.3
Prince George's County State's Attorney election, 2010
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Angela Alsobrooks 204,325 99.5
Write-in 983 0.5
Prince George's County State's Attorney election, 2014
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Angela Alsobrooks (incumbent) 196,757 99.6
Write-in 827 0.4
Prince George's County Executive Democratic primary election, 2018
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Angela Alsobrooks 80,784 61.8
Democratic Donna F. Edwards 31,781 24.3
Democratic C. Anthony Muse 13,127 10.0
Democratic Paul Monteiro 2,748 2.1
Democratic Michael E. Kennedy 728 0.6
Democratic Tommie Thompson 510 0.4
Democratic Lewis S. Johnson 416 0.3
Democratic Billy Bridges 340 0.3
Democratic Samuel Bogley 308 0.2
Prince George's County Executive election, 2018
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Angela Alsobrooks 294,372 98.9
Write-in 3,159 1.1
Prince George's County Executive election, 2022
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Angela Alsobrooks (incumbent) 219,420 98.6
Write-in 2,996 1.4
United States Senate Democratic primary election in Maryland, 2024
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Angela Alsobrooks 357,052 53.37%
Democratic David Trone 286,381 42.80%
Democratic Joseph Perez 4,688 0.70%
Democratic Michael Cobb 4,524 0.68%
Democratic Brian Frydenborg 3,635 0.54%
Democratic Scottie Griffin 3,579 0.53%
Democratic Marcellus Crews 3,379 0.51%
Democratic Andrew Wildman 2,198 0.33%
Democratic Robert Houton 1,946 0.29%
Democratic Steve Seuferer 1,664 0.25%
Total votes 669,046 100.00%
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