Dalya Attar
Dalya Attar | |
|---|---|
Attar in 2023 | |
| Member of the Maryland Senate from the 41st district | |
| Assumed office January 24, 2025 | |
| Appointed by | Wes Moore |
| Preceded by | Jill P. Carter |
| Member of the Maryland House of Delegates from the 41st district | |
| In office January 9, 2019 – January 24, 2025 | |
| Preceded by | Bilal Ali |
| Succeeded by | Sean Stinnett |
| Personal details | |
| Born | October 17, 1990 Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. |
| Party | Democratic |
| Relations | Jay Attar (brother) |
| Children | 2 |
| University of Baltimore University of Maryland Law School | |
| Profession | Attorney |
Dalya Attar (born October 17, 1990) is an American politician and attorney who has served as a member of the Maryland Senate representing the 41st district since 2025. A member of the Democratic Party, she previously represented the district in the Maryland House of Delegates from 2019 to 2025. She is the first Orthodox Jewish person elected to the Maryland General Assembly and the first Orthodox Jewish woman to serve in the Maryland Senate.
In October 2025, Attar was indicted on federal extortion and conspiracy charges in connection with an alleged scheme to blackmail a former campaign consultant; she pleaded not guilty.[1][2] She is a candidate for a full term in the 2026 election.
Early life and education
Attar was born fourth of six children to an Iranian-Jewish father and a Moroccan-Jewish mother.[3] She was raised as a Sephardi Orthodox Jew in Baltimore,[4] where she attended the Bais Yaakov School for Girls.[5] Attar later graduated from the University of Baltimore, where she earned a Bachelor of Science degree in criminal justice in 2011, and the University of Maryland, Baltimore, where she earned her Juris Doctor degree in 2014.[6]
While attending the University of Baltimore, Attar worked as a paralegal for Greenspan, Hitzel & Schrader until 2015, when she became a trial attorney for the firm.[7] In the same year, she also began working as an assistant state's attorney in the Baltimore State's Attorney office, prosecuting narcotics and firearms cases.[4][8]
Political career
Attar developed an interest in criminal justice while in middle school, and became interested in politics in high school.[5] She has cited Joe Lieberman, Sarah Schenirer, and Karen Chaya Friedman, the first Orthodox Jewish woman to serve as a judge in Maryland, as her role models.[3][4]
Maryland House of Delegates
On June 9, 2017, Attar announced that she would run for the Maryland House of Delegates in District 41.[9] During the Democratic primary, she ran on a platform of spurring development, improving schools, and reforming the juvenile justice system.[10] Attar won the Democratic primary in June 2018, defeating incumbents Angela Gibson and Bilal Ali.[11]
Attar was sworn into the Maryland House of Delegates on January 9, 2019.[7] She is the first Orthodox Jewish person elected to the Maryland General Assembly and the highest-ranking Orthodox Jewish woman in American history.[4][8] Attar served on the Environment and Transportation Committee from 2019 to 2020, afterwards serving as a member of the Ways and Means Committee until 2025.[7]
Maryland Senate
In January 2025, after state senator Jill P. Carter resigned following her nomination to the Maryland State Board of Contract Appeals, Attar applied to fill the remainder of Carter's term in the Maryland Senate.[12] The Baltimore City Democratic Central Committee voted 5–3 to nominate Attar to the seat later that month.[13] She was appointed to the seat by Governor Wes Moore and sworn in on January 24, 2025,[7] becoming the first Orthodox Jewish woman to serve in the Maryland Senate[14] and the youngest member of the Maryland Senate as of 2025.[15]
2026 Maryland Senate campaign
Attar ran for election to a full term in 2026, during which she ran on a slate with delegates Samuel I. Rosenberg and Sean Stinnett.[16] She also faced a primary challenge from state delegate Malcolm Ruff, who was backed by Moore,[17] Baltimore mayor Brandon Scott, and U.S. representative Kweisi Mfume.[18] In June 2026, Attar sought permission to use confidential evidence from the ongoing federal case against her in her primary campaign, which was rejected by U.S. District Court Judge Stephanie A. Gallagher.[19]
Baltimore Brew described Attar as the frontrunner in the Democratic primary, during which she ran on law-and-order messaging that touted endorsements from the Baltimore Fraternal Order of Police and Baltimore state's attorney Ivan Bates (though Bates would distance himself from his endorsement of Attar following her October 2025 federal indictment) and highlighted state funding brought into the district.[20]
Federal charges
In October 2025, a federal grand jury indictment against Attar was unsealed in U.S. District Court in Baltimore. It charged Attar, her brother, and a Baltimore Police officer with eight counts related to extortion, conspiracy and wiretapping, stemming from an alleged scheme to silence a former consultant on Attar's 2018 House of Delegates campaign with whom she had had a falling out.[1][21] Prosecutors allege that the three tracked the consultant's movements, placed a GPS device on a vehicle she was using, and concealed cameras in an apartment where she was staying; the recordings captured her in bed with a romantic partner who was married to someone else. According to the indictment, the group intended to use the footage to deter the consultant from speaking out against Attar during her 2022 re-election campaign.[1][21] The charges comprise one count of conspiracy, two of extortion, one of interception and disclosure of communications, and four of violating the Travel Act.[22] According to documents obtained by The Baltimore Banner, the consultant involved in the blackmail scheme told prosecutors that Attar's motive in the plot was driven by questions about potential campaign finance violations that her campaign manager raised internally, which led Attar to fire her after she raised these concerns to her.[23]
After her charges were made public, Attar released a statement onto a community Facebook page in which she described the consultant as a "disgruntled woman" whom she fired from her 2018 campaign "for cause" and admitted to some of the conduct alleged by federal prosecutors, including having the consultant followed and having her family capture a video of the consultant, but maintained that what she did was legal. She also rejected the federal blackmail charges, instead claiming that the consultant was extorting, harassing, threatening, and stalking her and people close to her for the next six years after her firing.[24] Attar later deleted her statement.[25] In November 2025, she pleaded not guilty to criminal charges in federal court.[2]
Political positions
Crime and policing
In March 2019, Attar voted against a bill that would allow school resource officers to carry guns in Baltimore schools.[26] She supported a bill that would allow Johns Hopkins University to have its own private police force.[27] During the 2020 legislative session, Attar introduced a bill that would require incarceration for violent offenders with open warrants.[5] She also supported a bill that would ban driver's license suspensions over unpaid parking tickets.[28] In January 2025, Attar proposed expanding access to "Grade A schools" to address juvenile crime in Maryland.[29]
During the 2025 legislative session, Attar voted for a bill to reform the Maryland Department of Juvenile Services, increase penalties for young people, and increase the number of charges kids aged 10 to 12 could face.[30]
During the 2026 legislative session, Attar introduced the NyKayla Strawder Memorial Act, which would mandate services for young children whose actions resulted in someone's death.[31][30]
Education
Attar supports improving public schools and providing publicly-funded scholarships for private schools.[8]
Energy
During the 2025 legislative session, Attar supported the Next Generation Energy Act, which mandated the Maryland Public Service Commission to seek out energy generation proposals to support energy consumption on the state's highest usage days in the summer in an effort to phase out coal and gas-fired power generation in Maryland. In 2026, she voted for the Utility RELIEF Act, which prohibits energy companies from using forecast-based energy bill increases for one year and cuts funding for Maryland's EmPOWER program.[30]
Healthcare
During the 2025 legislative session, Attar voted for legislation to allow the Maryland Prescription Drug Affordability Board to set upper payment limits for prescription drugs.[30]
Immigration
During the 2026 legislative session, Attar supported the Community Trust Act, which prohibits counties from holding people detained at state prisons and local jails at the request of United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) or from transferring detainees from one of its facilities unless presented with a valid judicial warrant.[30]
Israel
During the 2024 legislative session, after Zainab Chaudry, the director of the state Council on American–Islamic Relations (CAIR) chapter, was temporarily suspended from the state Commission on Hate Crime Response and Prevention for making Facebook posts comparing Israel to Nazi Germany and calling attendees of the March for Israel "genocide sympathizers", Attar introduced legislation to remove Chaudry from the commission and replace her with "two members of the Muslim community".[32][33] The bill was amended to remove representatives from organizations including CAIR from the hate crimes commission by requiring members to be advocates for protected classes under Maryland's hate crime laws.[34]
Social issues
Attar supports using an independent redistricting commission to draw Maryland's legislative districts.[35]
During the 2020 legislative session, Attar introduced a bill that would prevent husbands from having a civil divorce unless they granted their wife a gett.[4]
In 2022, Attar voted against a bill that would expand the types of medical professionals who can perform abortions in the state, and voted to sustain Governor Larry Hogan's veto on the bill.[36]
During the 2023 legislative session, Attar introduced legislation to move Maryland's 2024 primary date from April 23—the first day of Passover, which prevents Orthodox Jewish voters from participating in elections—to May 14.[37][38] The bill's contents were added to another bill, which passed and was signed by Governor Wes Moore.[39]
Taxes
In January 2025, Attar expressed doubts with proposals to increase income taxes on millionaires to address the state's $3 billion budget deficit, suggesting that they could just leave the state to avoid paying higher taxes.[40] She also expressed support for cutting state funding for state universities, calling it her "first choice" in choosing how to address the deficit.[29]
Transportation
During the 2022 legislative session, Attar supported a bill that would require the Maryland Department of Transportation to seek federal approval for the Red Line.[41]
Personal life
Attar is married to Asaf Mehrzadi, a longtime family friend. Together, they have two children.[4][6] Her brother is Jay Attar, a developer in Baltimore County.[42]
Electoral history
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Samuel I. Rosenberg (incumbent) | 7,795 | 17.2 | |
| Democratic | Dalya Attar | 7,773 | 17.1 | |
| Democratic | Tony Bridges | 5,476 | 12.1 | |
| Democratic | Angela Gibson (incumbent) | 5,308 | 11.7 | |
| Democratic | Bilal Ali (incumbent) | 5,194 | 11.4 | |
| Democratic | Richard Bruno | 2,996 | 6.6 | |
| Democratic | Tessa Hill-Aston | 2,862 | 6.3 | |
| Democratic | Sean Stinnett | 2,806 | 6.2 | |
| Democratic | Joyce J. Smith | 2,291 | 5.0 | |
| Democratic | George E. Mitchell | 2,101 | 4.6 | |
| Democratic | Walter J. Horton | 773 | 1.7 | |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Dalya Attar | 26,605 | 31.3 | |
| Democratic | Samuel I. Rosenberg (incumbent) | 26,333 | 31.0 | |
| Democratic | Tony Bridges | 26,194 | 30.9 | |
| Green | Drew A. Pate | 5,350 | 6.3 | |
| Write-in | 409 | 0.5 | ||
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Dalya Attar (incumbent) | 26,438 | 32.5 | |
| Democratic | Samuel I. Rosenberg (incumbent) | 25,557 | 31.4 | |
| Democratic | Tony Bridges (incumbent) | 24,782 | 30.5 | |
| Republican | Scott Graham | 4,240 | 5.2 | |
| Write-in | 272 | 0.3 | ||
References
- ^ a b c Stein, Perry; Mettler, Katie (October 30, 2025). "Maryland state Sen. Dalya Attar indicted on extortion charges". The Washington Post. Retrieved October 30, 2025.
- ^ a b Sanderlin, Lee O. (November 24, 2025). "State Sen. Dalya Attar, others plead not guilty in blackmail case". The Baltimore Banner. Retrieved November 24, 2025.
- ^ a b "Jew of the Week: Dalya Attar". Jew of the Week. May 5, 2020. Archived from the original on March 21, 2020. Retrieved September 7, 2022.
Dalya Attar (b. 1990) was born in Baltimore to a religious Sephardic family of Iranian and Moroccan heritage.
- ^ a b c d e f Deutch, Gabby (March 9, 2020). "The Sephardi Democrat serving as Maryland's first Orthodox legislator". Jewish Insider. Retrieved March 21, 2020.
- ^ a b c Conte, Carolyn (March 26, 2020). "You Should Know ... Dalya Attar". Baltimore Jewish Times. Archived from the original on September 10, 2021. Retrieved September 10, 2021.
- ^ a b Arnold, Peter (June 9, 2017). "Jmore Exclusive: Orthodox Lawyer Runs for House of Delegates". JMore.
- ^ a b c d "Dalya Attar, Maryland State Senator". Maryland Manual On-Line. Maryland State Archives. March 30, 2026. Retrieved April 9, 2026.
- ^ a b c Rabbi Shraga Simmons (January 4, 2020). "The Highest-Ranking Elected Orthodox Jewish Woman politician in U.S. History". Aish HaTorah. Retrieved March 12, 2020.
- ^ Johnson, Hannah (June 9, 2017). "Assistant State's Attorney Dalya Attar Launches Campaign for District 41 Delegate". Baltimore Jewish Times. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
- ^ Broadwater, Luke (December 5, 2018). "'A learning experience': 60 new Maryland lawmakers head to Annapolis, ready to tackle big issues". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
- ^ Kurtz, Josh (June 28, 2018). "Maryland Primary: Winners and Losers". Maryland Matters. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
- ^ Brown, Danielle J.; Sears, Bryan P.; Kurtz, Josh (January 20, 2025). "More legislative seats to fill, more money raised, more excitement over the budget, more notes". Maryland Matters. Retrieved January 20, 2025.
- ^ Wood, Pamela (January 21, 2025). "Baltimore Democrats nominate Del. Dalya Attar to the state Senate". The Baltimore Banner. Retrieved January 21, 2025.
- ^ Sears, Bryan P. (April 8, 2026). "Commemorative bill becomes focus of religious, cultural debate in the Senate". Maryland Matters. Retrieved April 8, 2026.
- ^ Wood, Pamela (January 27, 2025). "Senate honors former colleague Elfreth". The Baltimore Banner. Retrieved January 30, 2025.
- ^ Wood, Pamela (August 21, 2025). "Del. Malcolm Ruff will seek West Baltimore state Senate seat". The Baltimore Banner. Retrieved June 4, 2026.
- ^ Wood, Pamela (May 7, 2026). "Moore hands out key endorsements in several races across Maryland ahead of the primary". The Baltimore Banner. Retrieved June 4, 2026.
- ^ Williams, John-John IV (May 28, 2026). "Ivan Bates distances himself from endorsement of indicted Dalya Attar". The Baltimore Banner. Retrieved May 28, 2026.
- ^ Trovato, Maggie (June 4, 2026). "Maryland Sen. Dalya Attar barred from using criminal case evidence in campaign". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved June 4, 2026.
- ^ Shen, Fern (June 13, 2026). "Always an election season hot spot, Baltimore's 41st District is extra edgy thanks to criminal charges one candidate is facing". Baltimore Brew. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ a b "Attar, brother and campaign volunteer charged with reelection extortion plot". Maryland Matters. October 31, 2025. Retrieved June 20, 2026.
- ^ Rogalski, Nolan (June 11, 2026). "In Baltimore City, Dalya Attar runs for re-election despite federal indictment". Baltimore Fishbowl. Capital News Service. Retrieved June 20, 2026.
- ^ Sanderlin, Lee O. (May 18, 2026). "New documents suggest straw contributions as motive in Attar sextortion case". The Baltimore Banner. Retrieved May 18, 2026.
- ^ Sanderlin, Lee O. (October 31, 2025). "Dalya Attar says she's the real victim in new statement". The Baltimore Banner. Retrieved October 31, 2025.
- ^ Sanderlin, Lee O. (November 19, 2025). "Rosenbluth, named in Attar case, resigns from sheriff's office". The Baltimore Banner. Retrieved November 19, 2025.
- ^ Broadwater, Luke (March 16, 2019). "Baltimore delegates vote to kill state House bill allowing school police officers to carry guns inside schools". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
- ^ Broadwater, Luke (March 12, 2019). "Baltimore legislative delegation approves Hopkins police force after Cummings 'begs' for help to stop killings". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
- ^ Broadwater, Luke (January 15, 2020). "Brian Frosh, lawmakers push for legislation to block Maryland from suspending driver's licenses over unpaid tickets". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
- ^ a b Shen, Fern (January 22, 2025). "Upset in northwest's 41st District places Dalya Attar over Malcolm Ruff as area's prospective state senator". Baltimore Brew. Retrieved January 22, 2025.
- ^ a b c d e Gaskill, Hannah (June 18, 2026). "Where do Attar and Ruff stand on the issues in the heated D41 Senate race?". The Daily Record. Retrieved June 21, 2026.
- ^ Wintrode, Brenda (February 13, 2024). "A Baltimore family's effort to pass a juvenile justice law gets tangled in Annapolis politics". The Baltimore Banner. Retrieved June 21, 2026.
- ^ Deutch, Gabby (January 4, 2024). "Baltimore lawmaker seeks to remove CAIR from Md. hate crimes commission". Jewish Insider. Retrieved January 4, 2024.
- ^ Gaskill, Hannah (February 20, 2024). "Legislation seeks to remove Maryland hate crimes commission member following Israel-Hamas war remarks". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved February 20, 2024.
- ^ Hogan, Jack (April 15, 2024). "MD lawmakers pave way for removal of Muslim activist from hate crimes panel". The Daily Record. Retrieved April 18, 2024.
- ^ Ingram, Susan C. (June 13, 2018). "Primary Clout". Baltimore Jewish Times. Archived from the original on September 17, 2021. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
- ^ Kurtz, Josh (June 24, 2022). "Maryland After Roe Is Extinguished: 'It's Going to Be a Different World'". Maryland Matters. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
- ^ Pitts, Jonathan M. (February 28, 2023). "Bill introduced to change Maryland 2024 primary to avoid Passover". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
- ^ Pitts, Jonathan M. (March 9, 2023). "Bill to change 2024 primary date amended to avoid clash with another holiday: Ramadan". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
- ^ Bush, Matt (April 21, 2023). "The Maryland General Assembly has approved changes to the 2024 election that are a reflection of changing voter habits". WYPR. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
- ^ Karpovich, Todd (January 22, 2025). "Dalya Attar appointed to fill Baltimore's state Senate vacancy". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved January 22, 2025.
- ^ DePuyt, Bruce (February 23, 2022). "Baltimore Lawmakers Seek to Tee Up Red Line Revival for Next Governor". Maryland Matters. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
- ^ Kobell, Rona (April 2, 2025). "Choate House was a national historic landmark. A Baltimore County developer bulldozed it". The Baltimore Banner. Retrieved April 2, 2025.
- ^ "Official 2018 Gubernatorial Primary Election results for House of Delegates". Maryland State Board of Elections. July 31, 2018.
- ^ "Official 2018 Gubernatorial General Election results for House of Delegates". Maryland State Board of Elections. December 11, 2018.
- ^ "Official 2022 Gubernatorial General Election results for House of Delegates". Maryland State Board of Elections. December 7, 2022.
External links
- "Members - Senator Dalya Attar". mgaleg.maryland.gov. Maryland General Assembly. April 8, 2026. Retrieved April 9, 2026.