Massachusetts

Andrea Campbell Elected Mass. Attorney General

She is the first Black woman to serve as the state's top law enforcement officer

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For the first time in history, a Black woman has been elected Massachusetts’ attorney general.

Democrat Andrea Campbell has been elected as Massachusetts Attorney General, NBC News projects, making her the first Black woman to serve as the state’s top law enforcement officer.

She defeated GOP candidate Jay McMahon, who was seeking to become the first Republican elected to the post since the 1960s.

During the campaign, Campbell promised a focus on equity while McMahon vowed to target crime and corruption.

Campbell also spoke openly about her father’s and brothers’ involvement in the criminal justice system, including her twin brother Andre who died in state custody.

The 40-year-old pointed to a public education system in Boston with helping put her in schools that opened doors to success while her brother’s schools had far fewer resources. She also said that as a girl she was less likely to be racially profiled than her brother by the criminal justice system.

Campbell attended Princeton University and UCLA Law School and later served as deputy legal counsel to former Democratic Gov. Deval Patrick.

During the campaign, Campbell said she would “look at every issue through an equity lens.” She said Massachusetts residents don’t all have the same access to affordable health care or housing and aren’t all affected equally by the criminal justice system, crime or the climate crisis.

Campbell said she is “living proof that a girl who grew up in public housing with a family torn apart by incarceration, crime and poverty, with the help and support of a community could become the first Black woman president of the Boston City Council.”

She added that communities of color are “disproportionately policed and incarcerated,” and the contrast in funding and quality of schools – when broken down by income, race, and region – is stark.

McMahon, who said during the campaign that Campbell would be soft on crime, also pointed to a personal tragedy as motivation for running for attorney general. McMahon said his son Joel, an Army veteran, died in 2008 as the result of an opioid overdose.

He said he wanted to ensure other families don’t have to suffer a similar tragedy.

McMahon, 68, has also vowed to investigate corruption at all levels of government in Massachusetts and to protect residents from what he described as the “renegade mobs who destroy our cities.”

“I will vigorously prosecute ‘woke’ mobs who harm people and/or property,” he said in a statement. “I will work to abolish Sanctuary Cities since they assist in violating laws.”

The last Republican elected attorney general in Massachusetts was Elliot Richardson in 1966. Richardson later served as U.S. Attorney General until he resigned in 1973 rather than follow President Nixon’s order to fire special prosecutor Archibald Cox during the Watergate scandal.

Campbell had won the endorsement of the governor-elect, Democratic Attorney General Maura Healey, as well as four prior state attorneys general, U.S. Sen. Edward Markey and U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley — all Democrats.

She is now the third woman in a row to hold the office of attorney general in Massachusetts. All the prior attorneys general were men.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Copyright The Associated Press
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