From 2007 to 2008, White was a law clerk for the
Maryland District Court for
Montgomery County, Maryland, He specialized in economic development, environmental protection, and home rule legislation. In January 2013, White was a co-founder of the
Brightwood Park Citizens Association, and was elected its founding president.
2014 Council candidacy White resigned from Norton's office in September 2013, switched his political affiliation to
independent, and he filed as a candidate for an
at-large seat on the
Council of the District of Columbia, seeking to defeat one of the two incumbents (
David Catania and
Anita Bonds). The general election field was a crowded one. After the primary, Catania announced he would run for
Mayor of the District of Columbia as an independent. Instead of one open at-large seat, voters now needed to fill two slots. A number of candidates registered as independents to run for the at-large seat, while others saw their chances for winning a seat increase. White's fundraising efforts dried up as donors began sending money to other candidates. White raised another $35,000 by mid-August, During the election campaign, White advocated banning all corporate and private political donations and using public financing for all campaigns for D.C. government office. White was also backed by the
AFSCME District Council 20, the D.C. Association of Realtors, the D.C. Hotel Association, and the
Sierra Club. On October 27, the editorial board of
The Washington Post endorsed him as well. On election day, however, voters chose Anita Bonds and Elissa Silverman to represent them in the at-large seats on the council. White came in a distant fourth, with just 6.2 percent of the vote. White later said his all-volunteer campaign staff lacked the time and expertise to run the
get out the vote effort he needed. The job paid $95,000 a year. In October 2015, White supporters formed a committee to explore another run at an at-large seat on the council, challenging incumbent Vincent Orange. White hired the campaign consulting firm Apollo Political, led by Sean Rankin, to run his campaign. Although Orange had secured most of the major endorsements in the race, White was able to win those endorsements Orange could not. In mid-April, White received 96 percent of the endorsement votes from members of the
progressive group D.C. For Democracy. In May, Ward 3 Council member
Mary Cheh endorsed White, and helped him fundraise. The editorial board of
The Washington Post endorsed Orange's candidacy, praising him for his legislative skills and focus on economic development. White also won endorsements from several tenants' rights groups, an
LGBT activists' group, a
Latino political group, several other progressive political organizations, and Ward 8 city council candidate
Trayon White. White's endorsement was particularly important, as he was running for office in Ward 8 east of the
Anacostia River—areas where voters usually supported Orange overwhelmingly. Most of White's campaign funds were spent paying
canvassers to visit homes and purchase a large number of yard signs, both of which were intended to raise his profile citywide. and called his tenure as the council's workforce development overseer lackluster.
The Washington Post said unnamed political observers attributed White's win to White's persistent attacks on Orange's ethics, his use of a paid staff, and an anti-incumbent feeling among voters. The newspaper also noted that White had worked hard to keep other candidates out of the race, allowing the anti-Orange vote to coalesce behind a single candidate.
Interim council appointment On July 28, 2016, the D.C. Chamber of Commerce announced that it had selected Vincent Orange to be the organization's next president. Orange's colleagues on the council claimed this created a strong
conflict of interest, and Orange resigned from the council effective August 15, 2016 (the same day on which his Chamber of Commerce position began). On September 15, 2016, D.C. Democratic State Committee officials voted 43-to-2 to appoint Robert White to Orange's at-large city council seat. He was sworn in the following day.
General election 's proposed immigration bans in January 2017 In June 2016, White endorsed a D.C. campaign finance reform proposal to prohibit any person or corporation from receiving a city contract worth $100,000 or more if they donate to a city council election. The proposal was one of the strictest of several proposals to address corruption and ethics issues facing the council, several of whose members had been found guilty of ethics and fraud charges in the past several years. On November 8, 2016, White easily won election to the seat to which he had been temporarily appointed. He received 37.9 percent of all votes cast. Incumbent At-large Councilmember
David Grosso also retained his seat, coming in second with 17.84 percent of the vote. Challengers G. Lee Aikin (4.82 percent), Carolina Celnik (4.62 percent), and John C. Cheeks (4.12 percent) rounded out the top vote-getters. In his time on the council, he has successfully passed numerous pieces of legislation, including: the Birth to Three for All DC Act (expanded early childhood education), The Returning Citizens Opportunity to Succeed Amendment Act, the Bias in Threat Assessments Evaluation Amendment Act, the Youth Rights Amendment Act, the Housing Rehabilitation Incentives Regulation Amendment Act, the Shared Services to Improve Housing Counseling Act, the Generating Affordability in Neighborhoods (GAIN) Act, the Human Rights Enhancement Amendment Act, the Reporting Sexual Misconduct in Schools Amendment Act, the Financial Literacy Education in Schools Amendment Act, the Economic Development Return on Investment Affordability Amendment Act, the Sexual Harassment Data Collection and Reporting Act, the Fund Management Diversification Amendment Act, the Local Work Opportunity Tax Credit Amendment Act, the Returning Citizens Cannabis Equity Amendment Act, the District Government Transgender and Non-Binary Employment Study Act, the Restore the Vote Amendment Act, the Renewable Energy Future Amendment Act, the Senior Co-Living Program Establishment Act, and more. In 2019, White was a deciding vote approving the no-bid, single source award of a $215 million, five-year contract to start the District's sports betting operations. White initially opposed the deal, expressing reservations about a sole source contract. His position changed after his committee was offered oversight of the
transit agency. White claimed that he changed his mind because of benefits the no bid contract would bring to local businesses. As chair of the Committee on Facilities and Procurement, White accepted at $2,000 donation for his 2020 re-election campaign from the head of Security Assurance Management, a company that contracted security officers to the DC Government. White lost in the Democratic
primary to sitting Mayor
Muriel Bowser, coalescing support from progressives but losing all wards except for Ward 1.
2026 congressional campaign In September 2025, White announced that he would run in the
2026 election to be Washington, D.C.'s congressional delegate, the seat Norton has held since 1991. POLITICO called White's candidacy the incumbent's "most serious political challenge in 35 years." As of White's announcement, Norton was planning to run again in 2026. However, she announced her retirement soon after. More than half a dozen candidates are running for the seat in the June primary. ==Personal life==