Rhode Island Republican Governor nominee?
Primary Election
Party selects its nominee.
Overview
Current roleAccountant
PartyRepublican
Political ideologyModerate Republican
LocationRhode Island
BackgroundAccountant
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EducationBentley University (degree; field not specified on campaign bio)
Notable personal detailsRobert Raimondo is a Republican candidate for Governor of Rhode Island in the 2026 election cycle. He is a certified public accountant (CPA) and certified management accountant (CMA) and has worked in public accounting and corporate finance/operations roles, including serving as a chief financial officer for a biotech pharmaceutical company. He grew up in Providence, attended Classical High School, and studied at Bentley University before building a career largely outside Rhode Island and later returning to the state.
SourcesShowHide
Positions
Economy & Taxes
The candidate advocates major tax cuts, including eliminating state personal income taxes, and proposes shifting revenue reliance toward increased consumption (sales tax) and tax relief for locally made products. The campaign describes a fiscally conservative approach focused on lowering taxes to spur spending and job growth.
Immigration & Border
Robert Raimondo has expressed disagreement with then-President Trump’s immigration policies and said that ICE will not come to Rhode Island, signaling opposition to aggressive federal immigration enforcement in the state and a more welcoming stance toward immigrants. His public comments frame immigration as an issue where he rejects enforcement-first approaches while emphasizing state-level protections.
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Climate & Energy
Robert Raimondo’s campaign materials emphasize pro-business energy cost incentives but do not articulate specific climate targets, support for or opposition to major clean-energy programs, or positions on fossil-fuel development. Public reporting on his campaign highlights economic and taxation priorities rather than a detailed climate or energy policy. Available public sources show general references to lowering energy costs but no clear policy agenda on emissions, renewables, or regulation.
New updates coming soon
We're monitoring and will update when new data impacts the race.
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- Endorsements
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