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Rahway attorney joins busy Dem primary for CD-7
The already-crowded Democratic field for New Jersey’s competitive 7th congressional district is growing once again.
Valentina “Vale” Mendoza, an attorney from Rahway, will run for the seat on a progressive platform that she says contrasts with the more moderate, traditional campaigns being run by her primary opponents. If elected, Mendoza would make history: she would be the first transgender congresswoman in New Jersey, which has never before elected an openly LGBT member of Congress.
“In this race, I saw so many candidates pouring into it, discussing their identities, avoiding controversial issues, and doing the exact same thing that I consider the problem with the Democratic Party’s general strategy and why I think so many people feel disenfranchised,” Mendoza told the New Jersey Globe. “We’re just not addressing the problems that people feel are salient to them.”
Mendoza’s entry to the race means that there are now no fewer than six Democrats vying to flip the district, which spans six counties in North and Central Jersey. The eventual winner of the Democratic primary will take on Rep. Tom Kean Jr. (R-Westfield), a battle-tested incumbent who won heated races in 2022 and 2024.
Originally from Los Angeles, Mendoza said that she had a turbulent early life – “I’m not someone that has lived a life that’s pristine or free from mistakes,” she said – and first came to New Jersey around 2017. She got her law degree that same year, and spent several years working at a variety of law firms and companies like Party City before starting her own practice earlier this year.
Alongside her professional journey, Mendoza, now 39, was going through a personal journey as well: coming to terms with her identity as a transgender woman. Having only just recently finalized her legal name change, Mendoza said she wants to be an advocate for transgender Americans everywhere, especially as President Donald Trump’s administration makes them an explicit target.
“We have a lot of people who govern from a place of privilege, and I think that’s created dynamics that are really difficult for individuals to navigate day-to-day,” she said. “When you live the consequences of the legislation and the policies that people impose, you understand them more intimately.”
Already actively running for the seat are five other Democrats: physician Tina Shah, former Small Business Administration official Michael Roth, businessman Brian Varela, former Summit Councilman Greg Vartan, and U.S. Navy veteran Rebecca Bennett.
A sixth Democratic candidate, criminal justice professor Beth Adubato, said earlier this year that she plans to get in the race, but she hasn’t yet launched her campaign. And yet another, former Agriculture Department official Megan O’Rourke, is mulling a potential campaign as well.
Many of those Democrats have already begun raising huge amounts of money – Bennett, the field’s top fundraiser thus far, has raised upwards of $900,000 – and making inroads with state and local Democratic organizations. Mendoza, though, said she believes she has a different path to victory.
“A lot of people don’t vote because they don’t feel seen. They just feel like there’s no point,’” she said. “Minorities of all forms – LGBTQIA individuals, disabled individuals, you name it – those are the communities I’m focused most on… If you protect the most marginalized, the ripple effects are so profound throughout society, because your policy is based in compassion.”
To activate those kinds of voters, Mendoza said she’ll run on “the most progressive platform” in the field: ending trickle-down economics, helping minority communities start businesses, reforming public housing, increasing taxes on the wealthy, and getting money out of politics, among other things. She also hit Kean for his support of the One Big Beautiful Bill, which stands to reduce Medicaid coverage across New Jersey, and accused the Trump administration’s immigration officials of creating “concentration camps on U.S. soil.”
“People are scared,” she said. “People feel disenfranchised. And it’s incumbent on politicians and candidates to be talking about these things, and not water them down for fear of coming off less than perfect.”
Kean, for his part, was first elected in 2022 after serving in the New Jersey Legislature for almost two decades. He unseated Rep. Tom Malinowski (D-Ringoes) in an expensive contest, four years after Malinowski himself had gotten to Congress by defeating a Republican incumbent.
The district was bluer when Malinowski first won it – Democrats on the Congressional Redistricting Commission sacrificed Malinowski in 2022 in order to shore up neighboring seats – but it remains highly competitive, with Trump carrying it last year by a tiny 49% to 48% margin. National Democrats, who poured around $5 million into last year’s race, have identified the 7th district as a top target for 2026.
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