



Primary Election
Party selects its nominee.
Current roleCouncil Member
PartyDemocratic
Political ideologyModerate Democrat
GenderFemale
LocationDistrict of Columbia
BackgroundAttorney
EducationCornell University, School of Hotel Administration (undergraduate)
Notable personal detailsBrooke Pinto is an American attorney and politician who has represented Ward 2 on the Council of the District of Columbia since 2020. She previously worked in the D.C. Office of the Attorney General, including as an assistant attorney general in policy/legislative affairs and in the Tax and Finance Section. She earned an undergraduate degree from Cornell University’s School of Hotel Administration and a J.D. from Georgetown University Law Center (2017). She has chaired the D.C. Council Committee on the Judiciary and Public Safety.
Supports pro-growth, pro-business measures and has publicly opposed specific local tax increases (higher payroll tax and a residential property surtax on properties over $2.5M). Proposes programs to catalyze economic opportunity (apprenticeships, grants, tax-assessment reforms) aimed at supporting businesses and workforce development rather than raising taxes broadly.
Supports preserving and funding Medicaid for District residents and encourages enrollment in DC Health Link; advocates for government programs that expand access to health coverage. Does not endorse single‑payer or Medicare for All in available statements.
Supports protecting immigrant communities through local services, oversight of police cooperation with federal immigration agencies, and strengthening the District’s Office of Migrant Services; expresses concern about federal enforcement actions and militarization that traumitize families.
Supports protecting and expanding abortion access, including measures to shield providers and people who self-manage abortions, requiring insurance coverage for abortion care, and codifying Roe v. Wade at the federal level. Has co-introduced multiple District bills to strengthen reproductive health protections and has publicly affirmed commitment to preserving the right to choose in the District.
Supports reducing reliance on fossil fuels and increasing renewable energy and energy efficiency in the District, endorses the District’s net-zero-by-2050 commitment and local climate legislation, and has advanced local measures to adapt to increasing heat and update building/air‑conditioning rules in response to climate change.
The candidate has prioritized tougher criminal penalties and accountability for gun offenses, sponsoring legislation that creates new felony offenses for firing a gun in public and expands penalties for firearm-related endangerment. She has led an omnibus public-safety package (Secure DC) and emergency legislation to increase prosecution capacity and make it easier to detain people charged with violent offenses, while emphasizing support for law-enforcement tools and prosecution. Her public materials focus on stronger enforcement and prosecution of gun crimes rather than on expanding civilian‑
Brooke Pinto lost the Democratic primary for D.C.'s at-large delegate seat to Robert White Jr. and conceded after the first round of results. White is now the likely next nonvoting delegate for Washington, pending the general election. Pinto had been one of the leading candidates in a competitive race focused on home rule, affordability, and public safety.




Aggregation source: FiftyPlusOne
Endorsers of Brooke Pinto for DC Democratic House delegate nominee?
Advocacy group
Restaurant Association Metropolitan Washington endorsed Brooke Pinto for D.C. delegate.
Public endorsement
The Washington Post editorial board endorsed Brooke Pinto for the D.C. delegate race.
2026
LatestCycle 2026
Source: FEC