Two new candidates win seats on New Bedford City Council

Most incumbents held their seats in Tuesday’s election, while two newcomers — Scott Pemberton and James Roy — won spots on the City Council amid low voter turnout

A sign at the entrance to the City Council chambers at New Bedford City Hall.
A sign at the entrance to the City Council chambers at New Bedford City Hall.
Ben Berke
Share
A sign at the entrance to the City Council chambers at New Bedford City Hall.
A sign at the entrance to the City Council chambers at New Bedford City Hall.
Ben Berke
Two new candidates win seats on New Bedford City Council
Copy

Though a slate of new candidates ran for seats on the New Bedford city council, much of the council will remain the same after Tuesday’s election, according to unofficial results.

All but one of the incumbents stayed in office. In Ward 2, Councilor Maria Giesta lost her seat to newcomer Scott Pemberton in a tight race decided by less than 20 votes. Leo Choquette was re-elected in Ward 1; Joseph Lopes was re-elected in Ward 5.

Four at-large council incumbents — Ian Abreu, Shane Burgo, Brian Gomes and Naomi Carney — held off a wave of new challengers. But the fifth at-large seat, which was open, went to newcomer James Roy, a former public school teacher. Roy finished with the second-highest vote total of the 10 candidates.

Overall, activist Marlene Pollock from the Coalition for Social Justice said the city’s voters weren’t quite as ready for change as she hoped.

“When we were going to the doors, a lot of people said they wanted change,” Pollock said. “But it didn’t seem like that’s what most people wanted, so…”

The vast majority of New Bedford’s voters stayed home for the election, with just 11% casting ballots, according to unofficial results.

Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee lauded the bystanders who stopped a mass shooting in Pawtucket and called the team ‘an inspiration for all Rhode Islanders’
A Providence chef and cocktail bar move into the final round of the 2026 James Beard Awards
Without stoves or modern tools, participants learned to prep a full 18th-century meal over an open flame in a historic Rhode Island home
In Los Angeles, a new crop of curbside libraries are helping communities recover after last year’s wildfires. But instead of books, these libraries are full of seeds
The fires will return from May through November, featuring a milestone 500th lighting and themed nights
Janet Coit, the former director of the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, and a Biden administration official, is set to begin her new job in April