Hopkins Cruises to Victory Against Fenton-Fung in Cranston

The incumbent won by 17 points in GOP mayoral primary and will face a Democrat in November

Cranston Mayor Ken Hopkins celebrates at the St. Mary's Feast Society.
Cranston Mayor Ken Hopkins celebrates at the St. Mary’s Feast Society.
Olivia Ebertz/The Public’s Radio
Share
Cranston Mayor Ken Hopkins celebrates at the St. Mary's Feast Society.
Cranston Mayor Ken Hopkins celebrates at the St. Mary’s Feast Society.
Olivia Ebertz/The Public’s Radio
Hopkins Cruises to Victory Against Fenton-Fung in Cranston
Copy

In the marquee race of Rhode Island’s 2024 primary, Cranston Mayor Ken Hopkins scored a commanding victory against Republican rival state Rep. Barbara Ann Fenton-Fung, as voters rejected her argument that the city needed change.

Unofficial results showed Hopkins winning 58.5% of the vote, compared with 41.5% for Fenton-Fung.

Fenton-Fung is married to longtime former Cranston Mayor Allan Fung, who remains popular locally, and she scored a big win by beating state Rep. Nicholas Mattiello, the House speaker at the time, in 2020.

However, Cranston voters made their preference clear for Hopkins, who first won election in 2020 with help from the Fungs. Relations later went south between them.

In other races, U.S. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, a Democrat first elected in 2006, cruised past rival Michael Costa with 83.9% of the vote, with 331 of 345 polling places reporting.

State Rep. Patricia Morgan, R-West Warwick, bested conservative activist Ray McKay for the chance to take on Whitehouse in November. With returns from most polling places in, she led with 64.5% of the vote. Pawtucket Mayor Don Grebien scored 73.2% of the vote against primary rival Camron Segalla.

In Woonsocket’s nonpartisan primary for mayor, John Ward and Christopher Beauchamp were the top two finishers, meaning they will square off in November.

Voters decided 18 Democratic primaries for the General Assembly.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

At Alfred Lima Elementary School, a student-run news crew is flipping the narrative on Providence’s public schools — interviewing state leaders, reporting in two languages, and sharing their stories with the world
Mayor Brett Smiley discusses how his administration is tackling the city’s biggest issues — from the housing shortage and SNAP crisis to community trust in police — as he looks ahead to a 2026 re-election bid
USDA says it will not send out food stamp money in November due to the federal shutdown. Now, Rhode Islanders are grappling with how to make ends meet
Federal cuts to Medicaid could leave up to 50,000 Rhode Islanders without health insurance, straining the state’s already limited primary care system and putting communities like Central Falls - where half the population relies on Medicaid - at particular risk, according to Dr. Michael Fine
Gov. Dan McKee says the state will shift $6 million from other federal programs to help feed Rhode Islanders as SNAP benefits run out — while Attorney General Peter Neronha joins a multistate lawsuit against the Trump administration to restore funding