loading . . . Eleanor Holmes Norton is facing her most serious political threat in decades White, who was attending the House hearing, praised Nortonâs political legacy in a brief interview. But, he added, âlike most people in D.C., we recognize that she canât do the things that she once did.â
âRight now, the District is vulnerable, and weâre losing ground,â White continued, âand with only one elected member in this entire Congress, we need somebody with the fight, the energy, and the know-how.â
Norton is already facing a primary challenge from former DNC official Kinney Zalesne, and additional candidates are expected to enter the race if Norton steps aside. But White is the first credible opponent with a citywide political profile to challenge Norton since she was first elected in 1990.
Nortonâs congressional office and campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
White has occupied the progressive lane in city politics, staking out political ground to the left of Mayor Muriel Bowser, whom he challenged in the 2022 Democratic primary. White, who serves in a citywide at-large seat, fell just over 10,000 votes short in a four-person field and had been widely seen as likely to launch another mayoral campaign in 2026.
White sat in the back row of the Capitol Hill hearing room during the four-plus-hour House Oversight hearing with D.C.âs top elected officials: Bowser â who called Norton as âmighty warriorâ in her prepared testimony â as well as D.C. Council Chair Phil Mendelson and D.C. Attorney General Brian Schwalb.
Norton, during her questioning time, defended the Districtâs right to self-government and asked the three officials to weigh in on why the city deserved statehood.
Most Republicans, however, pressed the city officials on their handling of crime in the District. GOP lawmakers have joined Trump in painting an image of the nationâs capital as rife with crime to justify an August presidential order commandeering the city police and flooding federal agents and National Guard troops into the city.
As local officials came under siege from Republicans on the Oversight panel, Norton sat silent at her dais. She entered and left the hearing room several times flanked by an aide, sometimes appearing to lean on the person for support.
Speaking outside the hearing room, White said that he had informed Norton of his intention to run for her seat, although he declined to detail Nortonâs response in what he called a private conversation.
âWe in the District who love the congresswoman and respect the work that sheâs done â we know that she canât fight the fight that we need right now,â White said, adding that he had met with 30 congressional offices since the presidential enforcement surge to discuss the need for a nationwide fight on behalf of the city.
He struck similar themes in a launch video he posted shortly after the hearing ended: âWe need our best fighters right now,â White said. âIâm ready to take this torch.â
That message largely echoes what Nortonâs longtime adviser Donna Brazile wrote in a Washington Post op-ed this week urging her not to run. Norton, Brazile wrote, âis no longer the dynamo she once was, at a time when D.C. needs the kind of energetic representation in Congress she provided for decades.â
Asked after the hearing if she supported another term for Norton, Bowser said, âI donât believe sheâs filed for re-election.â
Mendelson also sidestepped the question, telling reporters, âEleanor Holmes Norton has done a lot for the District over the years, and I respect her, and Iâm going to leave it at that.â https://www.politico.com/news/2025/09/18/robert-white-eleanor-holmes-norton-challenge-00571433?cvbnmss&utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=bluesky