Elected to the mayorship in 2008, Fung became the first mayor of Chinese ancestry in Rhode Island. He was previously a state prosecutor and attorney on legislative and regulatory affairs before serving on the Cranston City Council as a city-wide councilman.
Early life and education
Allan W. Fung (Chinese: 馮偉傑), born on February 25, 1970, at Providence Lying-In Hospital (now known as Women & Infants Hospital), is the eldest of Kwong Wen and Tan Ping's three children. Crown colony Chinese immigrants from British Hong Kong, his family settled in Rhode Island in 1969, and ran a restaurant on Cranston Street and Gansett Avenue in Cranston, Rhode Island.[3]
Fung graduated from Classical High School in Providence, Rhode Island, in 1988, in the same class as future Providence mayor Angel Taveras. In Fung's 2014 gubernatorial campaign, he disclosed that he had been involved in a fatal car crash in 1989.[4] Fung said he lost consciousness and struck and killed James W. Skipper Jr., who had stopped on the side of the road to change a tire. Fung was charged in the incident but a grand jury did not indict him. Fung said he reached an out-of-court settlement with Skipper's family. He said no drugs or alcohol were involved in the incident.[5]
Prior to his municipal leadership career, from 1999 to 2001, Fung served as a prosecutor, acting as Special Assistant, for the Rhode Island Attorney General.[7] Fung served from 2001 to 2009 as the government relations counsel for Metropolitan Life Insurance Company MetLife. In 2003, he was elected to the Cranston City Council. In 2004, Fung was honored as a Rhode Island Bar Foundation Fellow. He was also a Providence Business News 40 Under Forty honoree.[8] Fung was chairman of the Rhode Island Governor's Insurance Council from 2005 to 2008.[9]
A Republican, he was elected mayor in November 2008, beating Democrat Cynthia M. Fogarty by 63% to 37%. He is the first Chinese American elected as mayor in the state.[10][11] He succeeded Michael Napolitano, who defeated him for the position in the 2006 election by 79 votes.[12][13] Fung was re-elected in 2010 against Richard R. Tomlins by 76% to 24% and in 2012 against only write-in opponents by 97% to 3%.[14] Fung is a council member for the Republican National Committee's Asian Pacific American Advisory Council.[15][16][17]
Fung won re-election to a fourth term as Cranston mayor in November 2016, by a margin of 2 to 1.[18]
Under Fung's leadership, Cranston became one of the Top 50 Cities to Live in America for three years in a row according to the website 24/7 Wall Street.[19] Cranston, according to Alarms.com website, was also named one of the Top 100 Best Cities to Raise A Child in 2017.[20]
Because of term limits established in 2012, Fung could not re-run for mayor in 2020 and instead endorsed Kenneth Hopkins, who went on to win the election against Democratic candidate Maria Bucci.[21] On January 4, 2021, Fung planned to attend the inauguration of Hopkins and administer the oath, but instead tested positive for COVID-19 and immediately left Cranston's City Council chambers, the location where the ceremony was being held.[22]
In October 2017, Fung announced he would again seek the governorship,[36] but went on to lose again to Democrat Gina Raimondo by a vote of 198,122 (53%) to 139,932 (37%)
Fung identifies as fiscally conservative. Fung said he raised taxes during his first three years as mayor after "inheriting a fiscal mess". He did not raise taxes during his final three years as mayor.[40] Running for governor, he pledged to cut the sales tax rate in Rhode Island.[44] During a primary debate, he said he supported making Rhode Island a "right-to-work" state and noted that he switched some city employees from a public pension to private plans.[45] During the 2018 gubernatorial campaign, Fung proposed reducing the sales tax to five percent, cutting fees, and introducing a concierge service for businesses.[46] His proposed budget for Cranston in 2018 did not include a tax increase.[47] Fung criticized giving health care subsidies to certain corporations, calling such a plan "corporate welfare".[48] Also in 2018, Fung supported increasing city spending by $4.4 million; in 2017, he had supported a 2.2% tax increase.[49]
For funding education, Fung supports charter schools and wants to increase funding for technical education.[50]
Social policy
During his 2018 gubernatorial campaign, Fung described himself as pro-choice on the issue of abortion but "not extreme", and said he supported "common sense restrictions, such as his opposition to late-term abortion".[51] He was endorsed by Rhode Island Right to Life, a group opposed to legal abortion because they supported the restrictions proposed by Fung.[52] As governor, Fung said that he would consider Roe v. Wade to be the law of the land and would not change that.[53] Fung later said he no longer identified as pro-choice but said he supports a "woman's right to make medical decisions" within some limitations.[54][55] In 2018, Fung said "I have always respected a woman's right to make a medical decision, but with common sense limitations that many of us can agree upon, including a ban on the disgusting practice of late term abortions, having the option of a plan on the healthcare exchange that does not include abortion coverage, and parental notification for minors".[56][57] In 2019, Fung endorsed a pro-choice Republican, Rebecca Schiff, who was running to be the state GOP chairwoman.[58][59] In 2022, he described himself as neither pro-life nor pro-choice and said he was "not a labels-type person".[60] Running for Congress, he said that he supports legal abortion "up to a certain time frame" during the second trimester with exceptions for later in a pregnancy for the health of the patient, rape, and incest.[61] He stated he would oppose a national ban on abortion.[62]
As Mayor of Cranston, Fung said he is "for civil unions but not same-sex marriage".[63] In 2020, Fung participated in and supported LGBT pride events in Cranston, saying "We are very excited, once again to be here, in celebration of Pride Month."[64] In 2022, he said "I am a supporter of the LGBTQ+ community" and that he "could support gay marriage" with protections for religious institutions that disagree with same-sex marriage.[65]
In 2018, the NRA Political Victory Fund (NRA-PVF) gave Fung a 92% score, and an "A" grade in 2022.[66][67] He was endorsed by the NRA for governor.[68] In 2018, he opposed Rhode Island's "red flag" gun control executive order signed by the governor because it did not require input from mental health professionals.[69]