Generated by GPT-5-mini| Maya Rockeymoore | |
|---|---|
| Name | Maya Rockeymoore |
| Birth date | 1971 |
| Birth place | Chicago |
| Occupation | Political consultant, policy analyst, politician |
| Alma mater | Barnard College, Howard University, Oxford University |
| Spouse | Kweisi Mfume (m. 2020) |
Maya Rockeymoore is an American political consultant, policy analyst, and politician who has worked at the intersection of public policy, electoral politics, and civil rights advocacy. She has led political organizations, advised elected officials, and run for public office, drawing on experience with think tanks, advocacy groups, and campaign organizations. Her career includes roles in policy research, campaign leadership, and nonprofit management in the context of contemporary debates involving racial justice, health care reform, and economic inequality.
Born in Chicago, Rockeymoore attended St. Louis-area schools before matriculating at Barnard College of Columbia University, where she studied political science and related fields in the context of metropolitan issues. She earned graduate degrees from Howard University and completed postgraduate study at Oxford University, engaging with comparative public policy and international perspectives during her academic training. While a student she became involved with campus chapters of national organizations such as NAACP affiliates and participated in networks connected to Democratic Party policymaking and civil rights movement history.
Rockeymoore has held leadership positions with national policy and advocacy organizations, including roles at research institutions and consulting firms that advise on campaign strategy for United States Senate and United States House of Representatives contests. She served in executive capacities for organizations focused on social policy, health advocacy, and voting rights, collaborating with municipal and state officials across jurisdictions such as Maryland and metropolitan regions like the Baltimore metropolitan area. Her consulting practice provided strategic communications and policy analysis to a range of actors from labor organizations such as AFL–CIO affiliates to nonprofit health coalitions and progressive political committees connected to Democratic National Committee networks. Rockeymoore's career also included participation in policy forums hosted by institutions like Brookings Institution, Urban Institute, and academic centers at Johns Hopkins University and Georgetown University.
Rockeymoore has been active in electoral politics as a candidate and as a strategist. She ran for statewide office in Maryland in contests that intersected with local and national debates involving members of the United States Congress and state legislative leadership. Her campaigns engaged organizations such as the Maryland Democratic Party, union chapters, and advocacy coalitions linked to Black Lives Matter-era activism and Progressive Democrats of America networks. She faced opponents with ties to incumbent political figures and aligned political organizations, and her electoral efforts drew endorsements and opposition from groups within the broader Democratic Party ecosystem. Rockeymoore also served in campaign management and advisory roles for other candidates in municipal and federal races, coordinating voter outreach strategies informed by data tools used in modern campaigns and coalition-building practices modeled by groups like MoveOn.org and EMILY's List.
Throughout her public career Rockeymoore advocated for policies advancing healthcare access, economic opportunity, and criminal justice reform, aligning with policy agendas promoted by organizations such as Center for American Progress and coalitions in the health policy space. She supported expansions of insurance coverage similar to proposals debated in Affordable Care Act deliberations and pushed for targeted investments in communities affected by structural disparities reminiscent of programs championed by leaders connected to President Barack Obama and Senator Elizabeth Warren. On workforce and fiscal issues she emphasized equitable tax and labor policies advocated by progressive caucuses in the United States Congress, and on criminal justice she backed reforms that paralleled initiatives from groups like the Sentencing Project and bipartisan commissions convened in state capitols. Her advocacy work also intersected with civil rights litigation trends and voting rights campaigns associated with ACLU affiliates and state-level election protection coalitions.
Rockeymoore is married to Kweisi Mfume, a former United States Representative and president emeritus of NAACP, following a public wedding that united two figures with overlapping careers in African American civic leadership. She resides in Maryland and has been visible in community events, civic forums, and academic symposia, participating alongside leaders from institutions such as Howard University and policy organizations like Center for American Progress and Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies. Her networks include long-standing ties to figures in national politics from Baltimore to Washington, D.C., and to advocacy leaders across organizations including National Urban League, Sierra Club, and labor partnerships.
Category:American political consultants Category:Maryland politicians