Former prosecutor Keith Hoffmann launches bid for Rhode Island attorney general

Hoffmann is among at least a trio of Democrats vying in the September 2026 primary

Hoffmann, right, with his wife, Rachel, and Attorney General Peter Neronha.
Hoffmann, right, with his wife, Rachel, and Attorney General Peter Neronha.
Keith Hoffmann campaign
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Hoffmann, right, with his wife, Rachel, and Attorney General Peter Neronha.
Hoffmann, right, with his wife, Rachel, and Attorney General Peter Neronha.
Keith Hoffmann campaign
Former prosecutor Keith Hoffmann launches bid for Rhode Island attorney general
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Keith Hoffmann, who worked in a series of different roles in the Rhode Island Attorney General’s office, formally announced Tuesday his campaign to be the state’s next attorney general.

Hoffmann, 38, until recently served as director of policy in current Attorney General Peter Neronha’s office, and before that as chief of the civil and community rights unit.

Neronha was on hand as Hoffman spoke about his campaign during a mid-day event at the pedestrian bridge in Providence.

The longtime North Kingstown lawmaker and House Judiciary chair enters a Democratic primary already featuring state Rep. Jason Knight and former AG policy director Keith Hoffmann, with others eyeing a run to succeed term-limited Peter Neronha

Hoffmann said he would try to emulate his former boss’s approach, in part by working to keep Rhode Islanders safe from violence and seeking progress on key issues.

“They need access to healthcare,” he said. “They need someone to stand up to the extremism and the overreach of the federal government. They need an attorney general who’s willing to fight for them and stand up for them and that’s what I’ll do as attorney general.”

Hoffman, who previously indicated he would seek the AG’s office, staged his formal event one day after state Rep. Robert Craven (D-North Kingstown), chair of the House Judiciary Committee, announced his run. State Rep. Jason Knight (D-Barrington) is set to unveil his campaign at 6 p.m. on Oct. 6 at the Guild in Warren.

Neronha is prevented by term limits from seeking re-election.

Hoffmann is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania and Fordham Law School.

According to the information published when he became Neronha’s chief of policy, Hoffman grew up in Rhode Island and worked as a fellow establishing medical-legal partnerships to aid veterans, and led a team of legal aid lawyers at New York Legal Assistance Group before returning to the state.

Hoffman has represented the state in complex civil and criminal cases, according to the release, and he helped pass legislation seeking to end childhood lead poisoning in Rhode Island.

Neronha previously encouraged former U.S. Attorney Zachary Cunha to seek to succeed him, but Cunha does not appear to be pursuing a run.

In an interview, Hoffman said Neronha and former AGs Sheldon Whitehouse, who served from 1999 to 2003 and is now a U.S. senator, and Patrick Lynch, who served from 2003 to 2011, have been the best Rhode Island AGs in his lifetime.

Hoffmann said the biggest challenge he’s faced was losing his father at age 13, due to lung cancer linked to Agent Orange exposure during the Vietnam War.

With his mother raising three teenagers alone with the support of family, friends and neighbors, “I learned from that not just the value of perseverance, but also the strength of our community and the importance of that community to helping me get up when you get knocked down.”

Hoffmann said the biggest challenge facing the next attorney general is harm posed by the federal government to Rhode Islanders and the loss of legal and regulatory protections.

“I think we have to continue fighting every day when the federal government breaks the law,” he said.

At the same time, he said, federal agencies such as the Environmental Protection Agency, Occupational and Safety Health Administration and Federal Trade Commission can no longer be counted on to protect Rhode Islanders.

Hoffmann added, “When the federal government is distracted by a petty politics of grievance, and is inadequately resourcing core federal law enforcement functions — the FBI, the ATF, the DEA — when they aren’t focusing sufficiently on gun-running, when they aren’t focusing sufficiently on human trafficking, we have to fight back and we have to make sure we are protecting Rhode Islanders against those things through our work in the office of Attorney General.”

Hoffman lives in Providence with his wife, Rachel, and their two children.

He is being advised in his campaign by Tad Devine, a Providence native who is a prominent Democratic strategist. Hoffman has not yet reported any fundraising, although he said he will have something to say on that next week.

Neronha is expected to reveal soon whether he will run for governor next year. Hoffmann said if Neronha runs, he will support him.

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