Guillaume de Ramel

Guillaume Henry de Ramel (born August 20, 1974) is a Rhode Island investor, philanthropist, and politician. He has run for the Democratic nomination for Secretary of State of Rhode Island twice, receiving 47% of the vote in 2006, losing to then North Providence Mayor, A. Ralph Mollis, and 49% of the vote in 2014, losing to executive director of HousingWorks RI Nellie Gorbea.
Early life and education
De Ramel is the son of Elizabeth Prince and the late Regis de Ramel. He grew up in Newport, Rhode Island, having lived in Monaco until he was six.
His great-great-great-grandfather was two-term Mayor of Boston Frederick O. Prince, who oversaw improvements to the city's sewer and park systems and was a key figure in the construction of the Boston Public Library.,. De Ramel, is also a lineal descendant of the French philosopher Montesquieu through his paternal grandmother, Denise de Montesquieu de Ramel.
De Ramel earned a bachelor's degree from Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Architectural Studies, and a Master's of Science (with honors) in Real Estate Development from Columbia University, New York. He graduated from the United States Marine Corps Officer Candidates School Platoon Leaders Class, Jr. in 1996. He earned his private pilot license at the age of seventeen.
Professional career
De Ramel began his career at CMD Realty Investors, Inc., a company which developed the first master-planning office park in the country. After finishing his master's degree at Columbia University, he became a real estate investment analyst for Holiday Fenoglio Fowler, L.P., a real estate investment bank.
Moving back to Rhode Island, he co-founded a new business, Air Newport, a small air-charter service, "with his twin brother, Regis." The CRMC, a quasi-judicial state agency, has a primary responsibility for "the preservation, protection, development, and restoration of coastal areas."
De Ramel serves as Chairman of the Newport Hospital's F.H. Prince Memorial Hospital Fund, and is on the Advisory Committee of Rhode Island Hospital's Norman Prince Neuroscience Institute ("NPNI"). The Institute was launched in 2010, when de Ramel led his family to gift $15 million, the largest gift in Rhode Island Hospital's history.
As the sole trustee of The de Ramel Foundation, Guillaume has directed grants and donations to a number of community, non-profit and social service organizations in Rhode Island, including: Women & Infants Hospital of Rhode Island, Rhode Island Hospital, the Newport Hospital Foundation, the Jamestown Arts Center, Save the Bay, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society of RI, of New England, Family Services of Rhode Island, the International Yacht Restoration School, the International Tennis Hall of Fame, Make A Wish Foundation, the International Institute of Rhode Island and the . Between 2009-2013, the foundation directed a record gift to seed NPNI, and donated over $2 million to non-profits.
2006 Rhode Island Secretary of State election
De Ramel ran for the Democratic nomination for Secretary of State of Rhode Island in 2006. While he did not receive the Democratic party endorsement, his campaign was supported by Senator Claiborne Pell (whose wife Nuala, served as a campaign co-chair), former Rhode Island Governor Bruce Sundlun, and a number of Rhode Island labor organizations. De Ramel's spirited campaign was managed by long-time Democratic operative and former chief of staff to Congressman Patrick J. Kennedy, Tony Marcella, who died in 2008 at the age of 43 from complications with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). De Ramel received 37,425 votes (47%) in the primary, winning 27 of Rhode Island's 39 cities and towns.
2014 Rhode Island Secretary of State election
In May 2013, the Providence Journal reported that de Ramel would be a candidate for Rhode Island Secretary of State in 2014. Nellie Gorbea and Edwin R. Pacheco have also expressed interest in running for the seat. In February 2013 de Ramel received an endorsement from the United Food and Commercial Workers Union. De Ramel campaigned on transparency in government and improving the economic climate of the state by "cutting red tape."<ref name = "edgar" /> He lost the primary to Nellie Gorbea by 58,444 votes to 55,237.
 
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