R.I. Democrat to leave Congress for funder of nonprofits
Rhode Island congressman David Cicilline said Tuesday he will step down this summer to lead his home state's largest funder of nonprofits.
The Democrat, who is a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and the House Committee on the Judiciary, was named president and CEO of the Rhode Island Foundation, effective June. 1.
“Serving the people of Rhode Island's First Congressional District has been the honor of my lifetime,” said Cicilline, who is serving his seventh term. “As President and
CEO of one of the largest and oldest community foundations in the nation, I look forward to expanding on the work I have led for nearly 30 years in helping to improve the lives of all Rhode Islanders.”
Cicilline, 61, said the opportunity to lead the foundation was unexpected, but gives him the opportunity to “have an even more direct and meaningful impact on the lives of residents of our state.”
The Rhode Island Foundation, founded in 1916, focuses on supporting economic security, affordable health care, as well as education and job training. With $1.3 billion in assets, it raised $98 million in 2021, the most recent year for which data are available, and awarded $76 million in grants to 2,300 nonprofits, according to its website.
Cicilline takes over for Neil Steinberg, who will continue as president and CEO until Cicilline starts. The congressman has “the experience, the skills, the passion, and the network to ably lead the Foundation,” Steinberg said.
Cicilline was selected after a national search.
“Congressman Cicilline's career-long fight for equity and equality at the local, national and international level, and his deep relationships within Rhode Island's communities of color are two of the many factors that led us to this decision,” said Dr. G. Alan Kurose, chair of the foundation's board of directors, said in a statement.
Cicilline has represented Rhode Island in the U.S. House since 2011.
The news of his retirement comes months after he withdrew his bid for a leadership post in the House this Congress. Cicilline, who is openly gay, had challenged Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina for the Democrats' assistant role, arguing that it was time the party's leadership table included LGBTQ voices.
But Clyburn, the highest-ranking Black American in Congress, received unanimous support from the caucus in closed-door elections in December to stay in leadership.
The challenge to Clyburn was a surprise, but Cicilline said at the time that he felt the need to act to ensure the Democratic leadership “fully reflect the diversity” of the caucus and of the country.
During his tenure he was a frequent critic of big tech and the amount of power the nation's tech companies held. He was a House impeachment manager during former President Donald Trump's second impeachment trial, and a lead sponsor of the legislation that gave federal recognition to same-sex marriages..