Solomon was elected to the Maryland House of Delegates in 2018,[4][5] and sworn in on January 9, 2019. He has been a member of the Appropriations Committee during his entire tenure. He is also a member of the Maryland Transit Caucus and an associate member of the Maryland Legislative Latino Caucus and Women Legislators of Maryland.[1]
In January 2024, Solomon, along with state senator Shelly Hettleman and 20 other Jewish lawmakers, created the Maryland Jewish Legislative Caucus.[8]
Personal life
Solomon is married and has two children.[1] He is Jewish.[9][10]
Political positions
Environment
During the 2019 legislative session, Solomon introduced a bill providing $30 million to schools for water remediation efforts to reduce lead levels in drinking water to 5 million parts per million, which passed and became law.[11] In 2021, he introduced legislation to encourage school systems to adopt renewable energy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions,[12] and another requiring schools with lead levels higher than 5 million parts per million to make remedial repairs by summer 2022.[13]
During the 2023 legislative session and following an apartment fire that killed one, Solomon supported legislation requiring high-rise buildings to install automatic smoke alarms in public corridors.[15]
During the 2021 legislative session, Solomon introduced a bill to consolidate the collective bargaining process within the University System of Maryland, which passed and became law after legislators overrode Governor Larry Hogan's veto on it.[17] In October 2023, he participated a rally organized by SEIU 32BJ union workers to support collective bargaining efforts between the union and the Washington Service Contractors Association.[18]
Social issues
During the 2019 legislative session, Solomon introduced legislation to establish an independent inspector for the Montgomery County Public Schools system, which passed and became law.[19]
In July 2022, Solomon attended a rally at the Kensington Library to prevent disruptions to the library's Drag Queen Story Hour event.[20] During the 2023 legislative session, he introduced legislation that would require single-occupancy bathrooms to use gender-neutral language.[21]
Transportation
Solomon opposes the state's Interstate 270 and Capital Beltway highway widening plan[22] and has criticized its use of public–private partnerships and high-occupancy toll lanes to fund it, calling it a "bait-and-switch".[23][24] In December 2019, he was one of 80 lawmakers to cosign a letter calling on Governor Larry Hogan to postpone the project's first phase in December 2019.[25] During the 2020 legislative session, Solomon introduced legislation to increase the state's financial oversight over public–private partnerships and allow the Maryland General Assembly to remove public–private partnership status from state projects.[26][27] The bill was reintroduced in 2021.[28] In July 2021, Solomon participated in a rally calling on members of the National Capital Region Transportation Planning Board to not include the highway expansion projects in its environmental studies, which would prevent the projects from getting the "environmental seal of approval" needed for the state to start construction.[29]
In 2020, Solomon introduced a bill that would require the Maryland Department of Transportation to launch a memorandum of understanding process to form a regional rail service with Washington, D.C. and Virginia, which passed but was vetoed by Governor Hogan. During the 2021 legislative session, he introduced legislation to establish a regional rail system integrating commuter rail lines in Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, D.C.[30] The bill was reintroduced in 2022.[31]
In December 2023, Solomon expressed dissatisfaction with Governor Wes Moore's proposed $3.3 billion in cuts to the state's transportation fund, saying that the cuts were "a penny wise and a pound foolish".[32][33]
Electoral history
Maryland House of Delegates District 18 Democratic primary election, 2018[34]