Loading your ballot results. Please wait.
Loading your ballot results. Please wait.
House of Delegates Member · Legislative District 9A · Maryland · 2026 Primary
Members of the Maryland House of Delegates represent their local districts in the state legislature by proposing, debating, and voting on laws that impact public education, healthcare, and transportation. They work alongside the state Senate to pass Maryland’s annual budget and determine how tax dollars are allocated to community services and infrastructure projects. This office is vital because delegates shape the statewide policies and spending priorities that directly influence the daily lives of all residents.
View all candidates in this raceFitzgerald Mofor is a Republican candidate running for Maryland House of Delegates District 9A in the 2026 election. Born August 18, 1995 at Shady Grove Hospital in Gaithersburg, Maryland, he grew up as a Protestant Christian and attended Quality Time Early Learning Center before moving to Brookeville where he played football for St. Peter's Panthers and Sherwood High School. He earned a scholarship at the University of Alabama Birmingham, became an All-Conference Honors linebacker who started 35 games, and helped deliver the school's first conference championship. After college, he enrolled at Washington University in St. Louis School of Law to study public policy and American common law while organizing clothing drives, working on political campaigns, testifying before the Maryland State Senate Budget and Taxation Committee, and running for Montgomery County School Board. He created a construction firm to generate jobs, was elected Secretary of the Montgomery County Taxpayers League, founded Restore Maryland to engage voters, and served as an at-large member of the Montgomery County Republican Central Committee.
Sources: Campaign website
Fitzgerald Mofor will be a champion for providing much-needed tax relief for middle-class families. He also plans to provide tax relief to businesses to create more jobs.
He plans to prioritize pragmatic solutions regarding energy policy to bring down the cost of living for everyday ratepayers.
As a delegate, Fitzgerald will be 100% committed to resolving our broken juvenile justice system.
Fitzgerald Mofor was born in Gaithersburg, Maryland, on August 18th in Shady Grove Hospital. He began his early years of education at the Quality Time Early Learning Center in Downtown Silver Spring, Maryland, right on Georgia Avenue.
Source: mofor4md.com
Tax Policy
Reduce individual income, corporate, and gas taxes to relieve strain on families and businesses; lower corporate tax rate from 8.25% to 6%; cut gas tax from 46¢ to 31¢ per gallon; eliminate new income tax brackets from 2025 Budget
“Reduce the individual income, corporate, and gas taxes that strain families and local businesses. Lower the corporate tax rate from 8.25% to 6% to boost job creation and economic growth.”
Energy Policy
Repeal Climate Solutions Act; streamline permitting for power plant companies; offer tax incentives to energy companies investing in Maryland communities
“Repeal the Climate Solutions Act to ease unnecessary burdens on consumers and energy producers. Streamline permitting for power plant companies to encourage innovation and reliability.”
Juvenile Justice System
Repurpose four closed juvenile justice facilities into vocational boarding schools where young people will have access to education, training, and opportunity
“As a delegate, Fitzgerald will be 100% committed to resolving our broken juvenile justice system. Repurpose four closed juvenile justice facilities into vocational boarding schools”
Economic Development
Create jobs through business tax relief and streamlined permitting; focus on growth-first economic strategy
“He also plans to provide tax relief to businesses to create more jobs.”
MDBayNews describes Fitzgerald Mofor as a Republican candidate known for grassroots organizing and door-to-door voter outreach across Maryland, with supporters characterizing him as a tireless worker and strong advocate for fiscal responsibility, public safety, and protecting rural communities. At the Chris Burnett Innovation Corridor Forum in February 2026, he proposed a growth-first economic strategy emphasizing tax repeal, streamlined permitting, and energy reliability while criticizing the 2025 budget for hindering business competitiveness.
“Reduce the individual income, corporate, and gas taxes that strain families and local businesses. Lower the corporate tax rate from 8.25% to 6%”
Source“He also plans to provide tax relief to businesses to create more jobs.”
Source“As a delegate, Fitzgerald will be 100% committed to resolving our broken juvenile justice system. Repurpose four closed juvenile justice facilities into vocational boarding schools”
Source“Repeal the Climate Solutions Act to ease unnecessary burdens on consumers and energy producers. Streamline permitting for power plant companies to encourage innovation and reliability.”
Source