The 2026 Montgomery County Executive race is starting to heat up. County Councilmember Will Jawando (D - At-Large) officially entered the contest with a launch event last night in Silver Spring. Right off the bat, he has picked up the endorsement of the most-popular politician in Montgomery County, current County Executive Marc Elrich (D). Jawando joins existing Democratic candidates Evan Glass, his At-Large colleague on the Council, and medical assistant Celeste Iroha. Iroha is the only candidate who has actually filed with the Board of Elections to run.
Jawando has been a member of the Council for two terms, beginning in 2018. He is eligible to run for a third Council term, but the open executive seat is encouraging several Councilmembers to cut short their legislative careers to aim for the highest County office now. The executive position is becoming open because Elrich's opponents were successful in convincing a majority of voters to reduce the term limit for that office to two. They haven't been able to get rid of Elrich, as he plans to run for his old At-Large County Council seat next year, and he is almost certain to reclaim it.
If the Elrich endorsement wasn't clear enough, Jawando is seeking to put an early claim on the progressive lane in the executive race. Glass has slightly moved a notch towards the center in recent months. He is clearly seeking the Washington Post editorial board endorsement, which goes to the candidate who is most supportive of real estate developers, and puts on the best "pragmatic centrist" cosplay performance. Alas for Glass, that endorsement is more likely to go to his District 1 colleague on the Council, Andrew Friedson (D). Friedson is not even an official candidate yet, and he already has a million dollars in his campaign account, thanks to developers who not only write him big checks, but who even host entire fundraisers for him.
Jawando, in contrast, has accepted some money from developers in his past campaigns, but has largely been a nemesis for them on the Council. His leading role in getting a limited rent control measure passed has made him a punching bag for developers and their friends in the local press. Blogger and former Council staffer Adam Pagnucco has even blamed Jawando and his rent control-supporting colleagues for national and international residential development interests now "redlining" Montgomery County, as a result of that legislation.
Elrich's endorsement of Jawando is therefore not too surprising. But Jawando has also nabbed the backing of Prince George's County Executive candidate Aisha Braveboy, who is now the most-prominent Democrat in gorgeous Prince George's with the acension of former exec Angela Alsobrooks to the U.S. Senate. That is a solid one-two punch for Jawando in the endorsements race. Unions offer the biggest endorsement prizes, as they often come with mobilization of their members to put boots on the ground, and that is where the rubber usually meets the road in County elections. One union sure to be thrilled with Jawando's entry is the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 35, which went out of its way to endorse Jawando in 2018 and virtually no other candidate that year, an endorsement that majorly helped Jawando clinch the Democratic nomination and go on to victory.
Jawando's support of higher taxes in the FY-2026 budget will certainly be viewed favorable by union officials. Glass and Friedson have come out against Elrich's proposed property and income tax hikes this budget season, despite voting for budgets that contain tax increases in the past. Elrich's consistent support for higher taxes has never hurt him at the ballot box; will it damage Jawando in this race?
He certainly has the best claim to the Elrich lane in the race at this moment. But can he pull off an Elrich-style victory on June 23, 2026?
That remains to be seen. Elrich was a major political figure, activist, and local elected official in Takoma Park long before he was elected to the Council in 2006. Decades of grassroots activism on hyperlocal issues allowed him to build up a huge base of support and goodwill across the county. Democrats, independents, and Republicans alike who were facing battles against development in their neighborhoods became Elrich fans, at least on growth and zoning issues. Whatever criticism there was of Elrich's views, he has been one of the few to win elected office this century in Montgomery County who was not corrupt or out to amass money and power for personal and political gain.
Jawando's activism and profile have been more national than hyperlocal. As an author, activist, alumnus of the Barack Obama White House, and even as a Councilmember, he has made infinitely more cable TV news appearances than Elrich. Even with two terms on the Council, he does not have the level of neighborhood-centric experience Elrich has parlayed into countywide success. As just one example, Jawando - like Elrich - were among the handful of elected officials who were initially willing to speak out regarding the ongoing desecration of the Moses African Cemetery in Bethesda during campaign season in 2017 and 2018. But once in office, Jawando did not spearhead any major push to investigate or stop it.
On the other hand, he is adopting the progressive label in the race. Montgomery County and Maryland Democratic voters have shown themselves to be extremely progressive in recent elections. Billionaire David Blair went down to defeat against Elrich twice, despite spending a literal fortune on both contests. Maryland Democrats gave the (relatively) moderate and presumed favorite Peter Franchot the boot in favor of progressive Wes Moore in the 2022 gubernatorial primary. And Moore was a newcomer who hadn't even lived in Maryland that many years in total over his lifetime, most recently as resident of New York.
Jawando may be hoping for that kind of vanguard faction to put him narrowly over the top next June, drawing in the younger Bernie/AOC/DSA crowd. He won't get the Post endorsement or the responsible-growth (YIMBYs would say NIMBY) GOP votes that helped Elrich slip past Blair twice. But unlike Glass and Friedson, he has a lane all to himself, barring the entry of an even younger and even more progressive candidate. All three are spending much of their time talking about Donald Trump - not surprising given their own legislative records of failing to attract a major corporate headquarters to the County or solve its highway gridlock or persistent crime wave, while focusing on banning gas powered leaf blowers, plastic bags, and gas stoves. To be successful next June, at some point "Hey, look over there!" will have to give way to proposals to solve actual local issues impacting County residents on a daily basis.
Photo courtesy Will Jawando for Montgomery County
19 comments:
Just what MC needs, a defund the police moron who will do absolutely nothing to address crime yet the liberal voters will pull the lever for him and try to blame anyone else.
And just when you thought it couldn't possibly get worse.
I'm glad I'm old and my offspring have mostly moved away. Let's face it, our future here is bleak unless we elect competent people.
JAC, I never thought it's not going to get worse. DJT has too much to fix.
MoCo is swirling the toilet - if Jawando wins, might as well push the handle. Good god, can't we do better?
He has done such a good job as the head of the E&C Committee that he was promoted to VP at large. He tends to makes promises that he does not keep.
Case in point: https://www.fox5dc.com/news/montgomery-college-professor-fired-after-making-female-students-take-their-shirts-off-in-class-doe-report-department-of-education
1:16 - MoCo is winning the race to the bottom.
11:04 - I tell all my friends, whose children attend Southern colleges, of which there are many, that I hope they never come back. Moving to another state is not an easy endeavor obviously. But, yes, it's being made much easier by the fools that elect these people. Remember, it isn't the politicians that are the issue but rather the citizens that elect them
"Computer says no."
LMAO! FOXNEWS??
Thanks for the write up. Not a Jawando fan
""pragmatic centrist" cosplay" A perfect description Robert. Gave me a chuckle. thanks.
In my humble opinion, crossing the arms gives the wrong message.
Instead, rolling up the sleeves would have been more effective.
@6:47 AM FOXNEWS Merely quotes him!
Liberals are dooming MC/MD as this recent former Bethesda resident whose property taxes crossed $2,500/month last year with no real end of uncontrolled spending in sight. Schools that used to be great, (put TJ in Fairfax in that mix as well), are becoming social experiments instead of doing what got them where they were.
Small business unfriendly climate coupled with no real enforcement of laws got many to make the tough decision to pull up stakes and move on to greener pastures. Still own the business and several rental properties but the writing is on the wall for those who want to succeed. I coach other prospective business owners to think twice about MD.
We are in good hands:
https://assets.bethesdamagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/council-main-inaugural-photo-e1670338525681-4.png
"Southern colleges" Sounds like "Southern Comfort" with a new twist.
I promise you, he'll never take office.
Love to see Wes and Will together, what a talkfest that would be! Both make great Obama clones!
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