Deborah K. Ross is a seasoned civil rights attorney and a defining voice for the Democratic Party in the Research Triangle. Before her election to Congress, she spent nearly a decade serving as the state director for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of North Carolina, where she built a reputation as a fierce defender of the First Amendment and juvenile justice reform.
She represents North Carolina’s 2nd District, a highly educated, rapidly growing economic powerhouse anchored by the state capital of Raleigh and the surrounding suburbs of Wake County.
In the 119th Congress (2025-2026), Ross wields significant influence across multiple jurisdictions. She serves on the House Judiciary Committee, the House Ethics Committee, and the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee, where she operates as the Ranking Member of the Environment Subcommittee.
The 2026 DHS Clash: In early 2026, Ross has taken a highly aggressive stance against the new administration's immigration policies. In January 2026, she voted against the Department of Homeland Security funding bill, issuing a blistering statement condemning federal agents for conducting masked, unaccountable raids that terrorized North Carolina communities.
Recent 2026 Legislation: She is leading a massive bipartisan charge to lower healthcare costs. In January 2026, the House officially passed portions of her PBM Reform Act, a critical bill designed to stop corporate Pharmacy Benefit Managers from acting as unregulated middlemen and driving up the cost of prescription drugs.
"She spent a decade leading the ACLU of North Carolina before bringing that exact same civil rights ferocity to Capitol Hill. Deborah Ross is the legal anchor defending the progressive heart of the Research Triangle."
Day 61 | Deborah Ross: The Civil Rights Defender of the Triangle
Deborah Ross’s political career is deeply rooted in constitutional law and grassroots civil liberties advocacy. Born in Philadelphia and raised in Connecticut, she earned her undergraduate degree from Brown University before moving south to earn her Juris Doctor from the University of North Carolina School of Law. After a brief stint in corporate law as a municipal bond lawyer, Ross found her true calling in public advocacy. In 1994, she was named the state director for the ACLU of North Carolina. Over the next seven years, she fought aggressively to overhaul the state's juvenile justice system and successfully pressured state police agencies to collect race-based statistics to combat racial profiling in traffic stops.
Following her tenure at the ACLU, Ross served a decade in the North Carolina House of Representatives, eventually rising to become a Democratic Whip. She ran a high-profile, highly competitive U.S. Senate race in 2016 against Richard Burr, falling just short but cementing her status as a top-tier political talent. When court-ordered redistricting made North Carolina's 2nd District a secure Democratic seat in 2020, Ross easily won the election and returned to Washington.
Operating in the 119th Congress, Ross utilizes her extensive legal background to navigate some of the most complex issues on Capitol Hill. Serving on the Judiciary Committee, she sits on the critical subcommittees handling Immigration Integrity and Intellectual Property. Simultaneously, as the Ranking Member of the Environment Subcommittee on the Science, Space, and Technology Committee, she is a fierce defender of federal climate research and clean energy investments—industries that are heavily concentrated in her district.
Her legislative output in early 2026 has been incredibly aggressive. In January, she secured a massive bipartisan victory when the House passed key provisions of her PBM Reform Act, which forces massive corporate pharmacy middlemen to delink their compensation from the cost of medications, effectively lowering drug prices...