Two More Candidates Running With Team Fulop for State Assembly in 2025

Brian K. Everett and Rashan Prailow will run with Gubernatorial candidate Steven Fulop to represent the residents of Districts 4 and 5 in the State Legislature. Both Brian and Rashan are  experienced community leaders with robust resumes who share Mayor Fulop’s commitment to transparency, reform and new leadership that is accountable to residents first.

4th District

Everett

Running to represent the 4th Legislative District in Atlantic, Camden and Gloucester counties, Brian K. Everett is an Assistant Dean at Rutgers University — Camden and a member of the Rutgers University Senate. A proud member of URA-AFT Local 1766, Brian holds a Master’s Degree in Public Administration and is pursuing a PhD in Community Development. He was recently named as one of the 100 Most Influential Leaders in the LGBTQ community by InsiderNJ. He is bilingual and currently resides in Gloucester Township in Camden County.

“New Jersey needs fresh ideas and new perspectives in state government to confront the major challenges facing our communities, and I’m so excited to run for State Assembly alongside a truly inspiring leader in Steve Fulop who is fighting to deliver the change we need,” said Everett. “As an educator, a union member and someone dedicated to solutions I’m ready to share my vision with the people of the 4th District.”

5th District

Rashan Prailow was born and raised in Camden, where he met his wife, and they are proud parents to

Prailow

their 1-year old daughter. He most recently worked as a finance strategy consultant with Capital One and previously with Deloitte Consulting’s Government and Public Services practice. Prior to those roles he began his career with an internship in the Office of Management and Budget during the administration of President Barack Obama. He is also the Co-Chair of Lead-Free NJ, a statewide nonprofit organization dedicated to removing harmful lead from local communities and he has been extensively involved in re-entry, helping people who leave the prison system regain their footing as responsible contributors to the community. Rashan has a BA from University of Pennsylvania and Master’s Degree from Georgetown University’s McDonough School of Business. He is running in the 5th Legislative District which includes parts of Camden and Gloucester counties.

“I’ve always been guided by a belief in the power of public service and a desire to give back to my community, so the opportunity to run for State Assembly alongside a leader who shares those values in Steven Fulop is something I could not pass up,” said Prailow. “I look forward to sharing my vision for a more equitable state government with my neighbors in Camden and throughout the 5th Legislative District.”

Everett (LD-4) and Prailow (LD-5) join Evesham Councilman Eddie Freeman III (LD-8) in addition to Hudson County Assembly members Barbara McCann Stamato (LD-31), John Allen (LD-32), Jessica Ramirez (LD-32) and Julio Marenco (LD-33) in aligning with Mayor Fulop in the 2025 Primary Election.

“I’m excited about the candidacy of both Brian and Rashan and I’m looking forward to helping both of them get the resources and guidance they will need to run successful races in 2025,” said Mayor Fulop. “The only way to bring change to New Jersey is to make our elections more competitive so the party bosses can no longer hand pick legislators. There is no question that primaries are healthy for both the party and for the candidates, and I believe both Brian and Rashan will demonstrate that.”

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3 responses to “Two More Candidates Running With Team Fulop for State Assembly in 2025”

  1. The only way to make New Jersey elections competitive is to make them fair. Eliminate the computer voting machines because, as has been shown in Federal Court in Atlanta Georgia, an I.T. expert showed that the computer voting machines can be hacked and manipulated/ changed in as little as 5 minutes, with a BIC pen. Stop ballot harvesting in inner cities like Newark and Hackensack–as was done in the last gubernatorial election when Murphy was trailing Ciatterelli significantly at midnight on Election Night. At 8:00 a.m. the next morning, Ciatterelli had lost the election by about 2%–when the voting was 104% of the registered voters in Democrat–controlled counties and cities.

  2. Elect representatives that truly represent the citizens of NJ; not Special Interests. Elect The Common Sense candidate, Bill Spadea.

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