Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Showing posts with label People MD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label People MD. Show all posts

Friday, November 03, 2006

20061102 Carroll County Republican Club charged with violating two state election laws




Carroll County Republican Club charged with violating two state election laws

November 2nd, 2006

All the local Carroll County newspapers have posted articles early Thursday evening, November 2nd, 2006, that report that the Maryland State Prosecutor has filed charges against the Carroll County Republican Club president Scott Hollenbeck and club secretary Suzanne Primoff for “alleging violations of two state election laws.”

The Westminster Eagle article can be found here: EAGLE ALERT: Republican club charged with election law violations.

The Eldersburg Eagle article can be found here: EAGLE ALERT: Republican club charged with election law violations.

The Baltimore Sun - Carroll Sun article by Laura McCandlish, Sun Reporter, filed at 5:45 PM EST can be found here: “Carroll Co. GOP club said to violate election laws - 2 officers charged for failing to register group as political action committee.”

And the Carroll County Times article by Justin Palk. Times Staff Writer, can be found here: “Charges filed against Republican club.” Mr. Palk’s article is short; hopefully he will write more on Friday, November 3rd, 2006. Update: To find his longer article, click here.

The Westminster Eagle article noted, The statement by the State Prosecutor’s Office notes that, ‘All of those who have been identified ... are merely charged and are presumed innocent until and unless convicted in a court.’ ”

For my previous posts about the matter of the negative campaigning in Carroll County please see:

20060925 Cartoon on Carroll County primary elections

20060908 Negative ads and fliers plague Carroll County primary election

20060907 Thoughts on the Carroll County primary election

In the September 6th, 2006 issue of the Westminster Eagle and the Eldersburg Eagle, both Editor Jim Joyner and I wrote columns addressing the negative campaigning dynamic in what many recall as one of the most unpleasant election years in 16 years.


The title of my column is: “Just so no to reality TV in Carroll County election campaigns.”

The title of Mr. Joyner’s column is: “Final daze Voters should be aware of wild political finish.”

I also have a Tentacle column addressing this issue of negative campaigning. “Why go negative?”

The best background on this story was written by Justin Palk back on September 7th and 8th, 2006. I just tried the links to the stories and the Carroll County Times does not use permalinks – and the links are dead behind a pay wall.

On September 7th, 2006, Mr. Palk wrote, “State probing election adverts” and on September 8th, 2006, he wrote, “Candidates deny contact with group.”

A portion of the story which Mr. Palk wrote on September 7th, reads:

Maryland's State Board of Elections is reviewing negative campaign ads from what appears to be a new Republican club in Carroll County for compliance with state law.

An organization calling itself the Carroll County Republican Club, which has sent out mailings to county residents, among other advertising, is not registered with the state as a political action committee, said Jared DeMarinis, director of the State Board of Elections' candidacy and campaign finance division.

DeMarinis said he could not comment further on the matter because the board is reviewing it.

In general, organizations that raise or spend money for a specific candidate in an election do have to register with the state, he said.

The ads and mailings, which list Scott Hollenbeck as the club's president, attack the sitting county commissioners and urge voters to back challengers in Tuesday's primary election.

Carroll County Commissioner Perry L. Jones Jr. rejected some of the claims made specifically about him in the ads, such as the accusations that he spends the night in Frederick County, rather than Carroll.

Other accusations are based on incomplete information, he said, such as statements criticizing him and Commissioner Julia Walsh Gouge for having county cars, but fail to mention that they both pay leases for their vehicles, he said.

"In a way, it's humiliating, in a way it's hilarious," Jones said. "If we did half of what they say we did, we'd be sitting in the Carroll County lockup, I believe."

The ads contain other inaccuracies as well, including a statement that the county allows multiple housing units to be built on a single building permit, when the county requires one permit per unit, said Vivian Laxton, the county's spokeswoman.

Similarly, the county commissioners are not, as one ad states, considering any legislation that would permit them to impose a personal property tax, Laxton said.

The Carroll County Republican Club does not appear on the list of Republican clubs in Carroll on the Carroll County Republican Central Committee's Web site, and Joe Burns Jr., the committee's secretary, said he had not heard of the organization.

Hollenbeck did not return phone calls or an e-mail requesting comment for this article Wednesday.

Going negative

Negative politics work because it's always easy to find an area of disagreement to focus voters' attention on, and then attack repeatedly on that issue, Thomas Schaller, a professor of political science at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, wrote in an e-mail. Even if a voter agrees with a candidate on three out of every four issues, he or she can still be persuaded to dislike that candidate on the fourth issue.

People also have better memories for critical messages rather than positive ones, which makes negative politicking a powerful tool, he wrote.

In terms of outright dirty tricks, it's key for the trickster to keep his or her fingerprints off the deed, because tricks have the potential to backfire disastrously if the trickster is caught, Schaller wrote.

The Westminster Eagle article this evening reports that Ms. Primoff and Mr. Hollenbeck, “were charged in Carroll County District Court on Thursday with alleged violations of election laws, namely:

•Engaging in campaign finance activity other than through a campaign finance entity, an offense that is punishable by up to a year in jail and a fine of up to $25,000; and

•Causing the publication and distribution of campaign literature without a proper authority line, an offense is punishable by up to a year in jail and a fine of up to $1,000.”

Ms. McCandlish reported what many political pundits are saying, on and off the record: "People have gotten tired of all this negativity of the extremists," said Tony Roman, an adjunct political science professor at Carroll Community College. "The Democratic Party is getting a boost out of this. If Beard gets elected, it gives them sort of a basis to start from."

She added: “Both Primoff and Hollenbeck have been outspoken critics of the current board of commissioners, all GOP moderates. Ed Primoff, a club member married to Suzanne Primoff, defended the club's actions today. If the club had agreed to register as a PAC, the state prosecutor would have dropped charges last week, Ed Primoff said.

He said the club rejected that offer. "Everything we did was reviewed by competent legal counsel, and they assured us that we were in compliance with all the Maryland election laws," Primoff said. "This club is fighting corruption and fighting for ideologies that we believe in."

Indeed, The Westminster Eagle article reveals, “In ads published this week, the CCRC contended that it acted in the primary as a political “club,” and not a political action committee.”

I found the ad on page two at this address: http://carrollstandard.com/standard_12p_11-1-06.pdf

In a Baltimore Sun article on October 28, 2006 entitled, Republicans split in Carroll County - Democrat Beard gains GOP backing,” Sun writers Laura McCandlish and Mary Gail Hare wrote: “ ‘If the primary purpose is campaign finance, then clearly you have to register,’ said Mark J. Davis, the assistant attorney general for the board of elections. "But if the club only occasionally engages in campaign finance, then no registration is required. The laws on political clubs tend to be vague and should be clarified by the General Assembly, Davis added.”

However, in a broad-sweeping conversation earlier this evening with several political scientists, it was called to my attention that the state takes a dim view of folks participating in electioneering without registering and has been relatively consistent in taking the approach that whenever in doubt – register…

I was reminded of a series of instances in the 1986 campaigns in Baltimore County by our current governor, in which the question over registering political action committees was alleged and in that instance, the state pursued the matter, although, it was not clear to me as to the outcome of that example…

On September 8th, 2006, Westminster Eagle Editor penned an article which examined the claims made in the ads and a response by Carroll County government on behalf of Commissioners, Dean Minnich, Perry Jones and Julia Gouge. County government responded because the ads made claims which some would consider a cause for action on the part of county government…

The piece, “County refutes ads, mailers attacking commissioners” 09/08/06
By Jim Joyner, begins:

“Carroll County officials this week refuted several claims made in political ads this past week by a group called the Carroll County Republican Club, saying the bulk of the organization’s accusations are false or misleading.

The group has distributed mailers, placed paid advertising in county newspapers — including The Eagle — and is reportedly also operating an automated messaging campaign, phoning homes in the county.

The bulk of the campaign is aimed at unseating the incumbent Board of County Commissioners, and suggests that voters opt for challengers.

Various aspects of the ad campaign claim… […] Read the rest here.

The fallout?

In a straight-down-the-middle news article written by Kelsey Volkmann in the Baltimore Examiner on October 31st, 2006, entitled, “Zimmer, Beard face off in race for county commissioner seat,” she reported:

“For the first time in more than a decade, a Democrat has garnered support from Republicans for a Carroll County commissioners’ seat.

Dennis Beard, a Democrat with GOP support will face-off against Republican Michael Zimmer in next week’s election.”

Read the rest of the article here.


In conversation after conversation, the feedback that I continue to get from “folks in the grocery store check out line,” is enough already, we can’t wait for this election to over.

Amen.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org http://www.thetentacle.com/ Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report http://www.thewestminstereagle.com/ www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

20061016 Gov to St Elections Brd Resolve NAACP concerns

Governor to State Elections Board – Resolve NAACP concerns

Posted October 16, 2006

[For previous posts on Maryland State Board of Elections Administrator and the Maryland primary election fiasco, please see: “20060923 The Linda Lamone Vote-o-matic” and “20060917 Cartoon MD Primary Election Voters What Voters” and “20060915 Crablaw is staying on top of Maryland’s primary election fiasco” and “20060923 Lamoned again and again.”]

_____

Speaking today with Bruce S. Gordon, President & CEO of the NAACP, Maryland Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich has called upon the Maryland State Elections Board to resolve he NAACP’s concerns about Maryland’s upcoming general election.

Of course, since the “state elections administrator for life” has been protected from any lack of performance of her duties by Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller, Jr., (D - 27, Calvert & Prince George's Counties) and House Speaker Michael Erin Busch (D - Dist. 30 Anne Arundel County); what does she care about any request from Governor Ehrlich.

Remember, Ms Lamone no longer works for Maryland’s executive office as it has for decades and decades. She is now “appointed by the State Board of Elections with Senate advice and consent;” which means she essentially has a job for life as a result of the 2005 Maryland General Assembly’s “Linda Lamone – appointment for life legislation.” Remember: 2005 SB 444/HB 675: “State Elections Office and State Elections Advisory Committee” sponsored by Senator Hollinger and Delegate Hixson?

Oh, anyway, below please find a press release about the Governor’s interest that the State Board of Elections address the concerns of the NAACP - - and the Governor’s letter to NAACP president Gordon:

Governor Ehrlich Calls on State Board of Elections to Resolve NAACP Concerns

ANNAPOLIS – Governor Robert L. Ehrlich, Jr. today called on the Maryland State Board of Elections to expeditiously resolve concerns held by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and Governor Ehrlich about Maryland’s elections process. Governor Ehrlich spoke today with Bruce S. Gordon, President & CEO of the NAACP, about Maryland’s election environment.

“The NAACP and I share strong concerns about Maryland’s current election system, including the reliability of electronic poll books, the dependability of electronic voting machines, and the training and supply of election judges,” said Governor Ehrlich. “
To ensure that every Marylander has access to a fair and accurate election system, the State Board of Elections must act expeditiously to address my concerns and those of the NAACP.”

Mr. Gordon encouraged the State to 1) hold demonstrations of the new voting machines in key precincts statewide; 2) formulate a contingency plan to use in the event voting machines malfunction; 3) ensure the electronic poll books are updated; 4) make certain there are adequate numbers of trained election judges who arrive at the polls on time and remain for the entire day; 4) verify that each precinct has a sufficient number of provisional ballots; 5) maintain privacy for citizens whether they vote using tough-screen or paper ballots; 6) ensure that voters fully understand how to cast an absentee ballot.

Governor Ehrlich supports the NAACP’s efforts and is encouraging the State Board of Elections to expeditiously resolve them. The Governor’s letter to the State Board of Elections is attached.


----- #### -----

20061016 Dear Mr. Gordon

Mr. Bruce S. Gordon, President & CEO
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
4805 Mt. Hope Drive
Baltimore, Maryland 21215-3297

Dear Mr. Gordon:

Thank you for the opportunity to speak by telephone about Maryland’s election environment. Please know that the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and I share strong concerns about the integrity of the General Election to be held on November 7. To be sure, I support your request for key actions to be taken prior to the General Election to ensure a fair, accurate and accessible election process and I call on the State Board of Elections to take those actions.

The problems encountered by the citizens of Maryland during the September 12primary are unacceptable. Marylanders deserve an election process that provides free, open and unfettered access to cast a ballot and that gives voters confidence that their vote will be accurately counted.

Regrettably, the leadership of the General Assembly has dramatically altered the administration and oversight of the state’s elections over the past four years. Local elections administrators throughout the state have been overloaded with complex legal changes and questionable technology, among other problems, all of which led to the Primary Election fiasco this past September.

In addition, the General Assembly since 2003 has insulated the State Elections Administrator from accountability to the Governor’s Office and, in many respects, to the State Board of Elections. The General Assembly passed legislation that makes it impossible for the State Board to fire the State Administrator, even for actions of illegality and gross misconduct, unless the State Senate confirms a successor, thus virtually eliminating accountability at the top level of the state’s elections system. The General Assembly also handcuffed the State Board’s decision-making process by requiring a super-majority vote (4 of 5 members) before it can take any actions.

Unfortunately, state law does not grant me authority to require the State Board of Elections to perform the six specific items delineated in your letter. Nonetheless, I support the actions you are requesting and, in fact, have called for many of these actions over the course of the past several weeks and months. I can assure you that these topics, especially the contingency plan for voting machine malfunctions and the upgrading of e-pollbooks, are priorities that I have stressed with the board and the State Administrator in public meetings of the State Board of Public Works.

Last year, I appointed a bipartisan elections commission chaired by former U.S. Attorney George Beall, consisting of 5 Democrats and 4 Republicans. This panel made a number of improvement recommendations and forewarned that the local elections boards were not prepared for rapid changes in elections administration and that more resources from the State Administrator were necessary to plan for the implementation of new laws (early voting) and new technology (e-pollbooks). In their rush to gain every political advantage, the leadership of the General Assembly ignored these warnings and created the unstable elections system that we saw in the Primary and still face in the General Election.

In direct response to your Maryland Election Protection Operation effort, I will send a copy of your letter and my response to Mr. Gilles W. Burger, Chairman of the State Board of Elections, and request that they provide a full and complete response to your six proposals within the next week.

Again, I sincerely appreciate the leadership and initiative of the NAACP in protecting the elections process for all citizens of the state and look forward to your continued cooperation in this effort.

Very truly yours,
Robert L. Ehrlich, Jr.
Governor

####For previous posts on Maryland State Board of Elections Administrator and the Maryland primary election fiasco, please see:

20060923 The Linda Lamone Vote-o-matic” and “20060917 Cartoon MD Primary Election Voters What Voters” and “20060915 Crablaw is staying on top of Maryland’s primary election fiasco” and “20060923 Lamoned again and again.”

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org www.thetentacle.com Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report www.thewestminstereagle.com www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

20060926 Take your pick Absentee ballots or purple thumbs

Washington Examiner Editorial: Take your pick: Absentee ballots or purple thumbs?

September 26th, 2006

http://www.examiner.com/a-311406~Editorial__Take_your_pick__Absentee_ballots_or_purple_thumbs_.html

The Washington Examiner editorial for September 26, 2006 calls to our attention that Maryland's elections boss, Linda Lamone, isn't addressing the very real and fundamental problems with those Diebold voting machines.”

Editorial: Take your pick: Absentee ballots or purple thumbs?

Sep 26, 2006 5:00 AM

WASHINGTON - Gov. Robert Ehrlich is urging all registered voters in Maryland to cast absentee ballots for the November general election after technical glitches and human error marred the state’s Sept. 12 primary. The governor says he’s lost confidence in the Diebold touch-screen voting machines purchased for use in all Maryland counties in order to comply with the federal 2002 Help America Vote Act.

Just two months ago, a trio of nationally recognized computer science experts directed harsh criticism at the Maryland State Board of Elections for its failure to alert the Federal Elections Commission about Diebold’s serious security vulnerabilities. In a July 24 op-ed, “The Diebold Bombshell,” Stanford Professor David Dill, the University of Iowa’s Doug Jones and retired IBM executive Barbara Simons disclosed the fact that Diebold “included a ‘back door’ in its software, allowing anyone to change or modify” it. Amazingly, there are “no technical safeguards in place to ensure that only authorized people can make changes.” So anybody who knows how to can literally hijack an election.

But that’s not all.

Read the rest here.

For more of my view, please see: (UPDATE: To see more on Ms. Linda Lamone – please click here.)

20060923 KDDC The Linda Lamone Vote-o-matic

23 Sep 2006 by Kevin Dayhoff

The Linda Lamone Vote-o-matic. © Kevin Dayhoff September 23 rd, 2006. Linda Lamone unveils her plan for Maryland’s Nov. 2006 general election. ####

Kevin Dayhoff - http://www.kevindayhoff.com/index.html

20060923 KDDC Lamoned again and again

23 Sep 2006 by Kevin Dayhoff

Lamoned again and againSeptember 23rd, 2006Photo credits: left photo, “Linda Lamone answers questions at the Board of Public Works meeting (Photo by WBAL's Scott Wykoff)†Right photo: YouTube: “Linda Lamone: I’m the boss.†Much ...

Kevin Dayhoff - http://www.kevindayhoff.com/index.html

20060917 KDDC Cartoon MD Primary Election Voters What Voters

18 Sep 2006 by Kevin Dayhoff

Cartoon by (c) Kevin Dayhoff September 13, 2006 State elections administrator Linda Lamone and Maryland General Assembly Speaker of the House, Mike Busch engage in a spirited conversation about the Maryland primary elections on ...

Kevin Dayhoff - http://www.kevindayhoff.com/index.html

####

Sunday, September 24, 2006

20060923 The Linda Lamone Vote-o-matic


20060923 The Linda Lamone Vote-o-matic.

The Linda Lamone Vote-o-matic.
© Kevin Dayhoff September 23rd, 2006

Linda Lamone unveils her plan for Maryland’s Nov. 2006 general election.

####
For previous posts on Maryland State Board of Elections Administrator and the Maryland primary election fiasco, please see:

20060917 Cartoon MD Primary Election Voters What Voters” and “20060915 Crablaw is staying on top of Maryland’s primary election fiasco” and “20060923 Lamoned again and again.”

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org www.thetentacle.com Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report www.thewestminstereagle.com www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

20060923 Lamoned again and again




Lamoned again and again
September 23rd, 2006

Photo credits: left photo, “Linda Lamone answers questions at the Board of Public Works meeting (Photo by WBAL's Scott Wykoff)”

Right photo: YouTube: “Linda Lamone: I’m the boss.”



Much has been written about the elections meltdown in several jurisdictions in Maryland during the September 12th, 2006 Maryland primary elections.

Throughout it all, Maryland state elections administrator Linda Lamone has remained relatively unscathed by the awkward series of events.

In my Tentacle column on Wednesday, September 20th, 2006, “Lamoned, again,” I noted: “The Baltimore Sun is quick to say in a September 14th, 2006 article: “Lamone, for her part, said she was "horrified" by the problems that snarled the start of voting on Tuesday … but she attributed most of the problems to the largely autonomous local election boards -- especially in Montgomery County and Baltimore -- not to anything that her office or its staff did wrong.”

I also called to the reader’s attention: “Then in a letter to the Maryland Attorney General Joseph Curran (D), (on September 13th, 2006) Ms. Lamone says, “As you know, the local election boards are gubernatorial appointments, the local boards appoint the local directors and they are locally funded…””

Last Wednesday, September 20th, 2006, Ms. Lamone was asked to address the election challenges with the Board of Public Works in Annapolis. WBAL Radio carried an article about the meeting on its web site: “State Election Director Grilled; Schaefer Says 'This Is The Dirtiest, Stinking Game I've Ever Known’” by WBAL Radio's Scott Wykoff.

In Mr. Wykoff’s piece, he reported, “Tough questions Wednesday for the state elections chief who went before the Board of Public Works.

Linda Lamone and other election officials have been criticized for widespread problems on primary election day.

Lamone was questioned for more than a hour by Governor Ehrlich, Comptroller Schaefer and Treasurer Kopp.”

As far as responsibility for the election problems, the WBAL article said: “When asked by Comptroller Schaefer who is to blame, she said she was not here to point figures.”

WBAL went on to say: “Meanwhile, new audio has emerged from testimony Lamone gave before the Virginia legislature in July 2005. Testifying about elections in Maryland, Lamone told lawmakers there, "...in Maryland, the authority to run elections is centralized. I am the boss. The buck stops with me. I'm the one who gets in trouble when anything happens. The counties have to use the voting systems that the state selected. They have to follow state procedures."

Lamone's comments seem to conflict with statements she's made since last week's primary election. Lamone has been saying elections in Maryland are decentralized and local boards have the most authority.”

WBAL Radio’s web site has a link to the audio of Ms. Lamone’s presentation in Virginia in July 2005 - - but now, [Hat Tip: TSL, September 22nd, 2006, “Marbella Misses Lamone Concession”] a video has surfaced.

It is on YouTube: “Linda Lamone: I’m the boss.” It is a very enlightening snippet of her presentation.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org http://www.thetentacle.com/ Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report http://www.thewestminstereagle.com/ www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

Sunday, September 17, 2006

20060917 Cartoon MD Primary Election Voters What Voters


MD Primary Elections on September 12, 2006: "Voters? What Voters?"

"Voters? What Voters?"

Cartoon by (c) Kevin Dayhoff

September 13, 2006

State elections administrator Linda Lamone and Maryland General Assembly Speaker of the House, Mike Busch engage in a spirited conversation about the Maryland primary elections on September 12th, 2006: “Voters? What Voters?”

For a previous post on Maryland’s primary election fiasco, see my post on September 15th, 2006: “20060915 Crablaw is staying on top of Maryland’s primary election fiasco.”

####

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org http://www.thetentacle.com/ Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report http://www.thewestminstereagle.com/ www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

Friday, September 15, 2006

20060915 Crablaw is staying on top of Maryland’s primary election fiasco




The eyes of the nation are on Maryland’s election process


© Kevin Dayhoff September 15th, 2006

Crablaw is staying on top of Maryland’s primary election fiasco

Crablaw is staying on top of Maryland’s election fiasco. Please visit his site for the blow-by-blow and intelligent commentary. Bookmark his web site and check back with him in the coming days as hopefully the etiology of the mess is uncovered and measure taken to prevent it in the future.

To paraphrase one of Bruce Godfrey’s, Attorney and Editor in Chief, Crablaw Maryland Weekly, comments; we should all, no matter what political persuasion, support the right of each and very candidate in Maryland to be afforded a fair and honest election process.

Whether the candidate for office is a conservative or a liberal, the voters of Maryland deserve to have their collective decision respected – and each and every vote needs to count and be counted.

Maryland is once again on the keyboards and lips of political and business observers from throughout the nation and our great state is not being portrayed in a positive light.

We should all be ashamed.


Yes, Maryland progressives and all fair-minded people are angry about the uber-fiasco in Montgomery County and similar farces in Prince George's County and the City of Baltimore.

Yes, we should be furious. But that is not enough.

We should support and applaud all efforts to uncover the truth about what happened in the different jurisdictions that effected such a large disenfranchisement of literally tens of thousands of Marylanders, of American citizens.

We should support everyone who supports fair process and sunshine upon this fiasco.

Read the rest here.


Sun (AP): Montgomery County Election Board Hires Outside Consultant to Review Fiasco
In fairness to (Montgomery Elections Director Margaret) Jurgensen, it seems fair at first glance to allow the Elections Center to produce an independent report before anyone gets fired, unless that will put the reliability of the general election in meaningful doubt.

Read the rest here.



There is an article in the Baltimore Sun, September 15, 2006, on the current mutual recriminations regarding the Baltimore part of the election Fiasco between Maryland Elections Administrator (and long-time target of Bob Ehrlich) Linda Lamone, Ehrlich ally Gene Raynor, the Baltimore City Council and others. The article did not discuss the larger problems in Montgomery County.




This looks interesting.


Of Paul Valette, Mr. Godfrey writes: “Maybe this man deserves be fired. Maybe he does not deserve to be fired at all. I don't claim to know. Valette is a former military office and an attorney, two professions where standards and responsibility are supposed to matter. In Valette's case, sounds like they do matter to him. His straightforward response is most refreshing; it may or may not be sufficient.”
There are many more posts – check out his web site

Thanks for the excellent work Crablaw.

Oh PS: The Baltimore Reporter also has a post worth reading: “The Mess in Montgomery.”
####

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

20060807 Steele Submits Sun Survey Answers to Marylanders, Not Paper




Steele Submits Sun Survey Answers to Marylanders, Not Paper

August 8th, 2006

TEMPLE HILLS, MDToday, Michael Steele’s campaign for U.S. Senate publicly posted the answers to the Baltimore Sun’s candidate survey on the www.SteeleforMaryland.com website, deciding not to submit the survey to the paper.

Steele said, “After careful consideration, I have decided not to submit to the Baltimore Sun my responses to its candidate survey, but instead to post them on my website for the people of Maryland to view unfiltered and without bias.

“In 2002, the Sun editorial board concluded that I brought ‘little to the team but the color of [my] skin.’ And although I have spent my years as Lieutenant Governor chairing the Commission on Quality Education, reforming the state’s Minority Business Enterprise program, and promoting policies to reduce crime and protect our environment, their attitude toward me and my campaign has progressed little.

“Therefore, I have decided to take the Sun’s questions and my answers straight to the people of Marylandhttp://www.steeleformaryland.com/MichaelSteeleSunSurvey.htm. instead of giving their editorial board’s judgment – and past inflammatory and personally insulting statements - any further credence. Marylanders can view my answers to the Sun’s survey questions by visiting

“I am hopeful that the hiring of a new publisher may help shift the Sun toward listening to the views of all Marylanders. I also encourage the new publisher to increase diversity among the paper’s editors and management staff because they are at the heart of what perpetuates these paternalistic and stereotypical attitudes toward certain politicians and leaders from a certain part of the community.”

Michael Steele’s responses to the Baltimore Sun’s candidate survey can be found by visiting http://www.steeleformaryland.com/MichaelSteeleSunSurvey.htm.

The Baltimore Sun’s 2002 editorial which stated that Michael Steele “brings little to the team but the color of his skin” can be found on the Sun’s website @ http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/bal-ed.endorsegovnov03,1,1616905.story.

_________________

Pasted below, please find Lieutenant Governor Steele's answers:

Michael Steele's Responses to Baltimore Sun Survey

1) Should judicial candidates be potentially subject to a filibuster, or should that rule be changed?

The bi-partisan “Gang of 14” should be applauded for coming together to find common-sense solutions when partisanship threatened to tear the Senate apart.

Many state and federal districts have had judicial vacancies prolonged due to political posturing in Washington. This must end. If a nominee is clearly qualified to serve as a judge, the nominee deserves an up or down vote. Any nominee outside of the mainstream would not receive the votes necessary for confirmation, so the threat of a filibuster would not apply.

2) Is the current U.S. energy policy adequate? If not, what changes would you support?

All one has to do is look at the price of a gallon of gas to know that our energy policy is not adequate. My family paid $600 in gasoline costs for the month of April alone. While current energy costs are a strain on middle-class families, they are a real crisis to many of Maryland’s working families. This is unacceptable and has had a negative impact on families all across Maryland.

To provide immediate relief for Marylanders, I have called on President Bush and Congress to enact an immediate moratorium on the federal gas tax - more than 18 cents per gallon - and an immediate moratorium on the 24 cents per gallon diesel tax. Moreover, Congress should approve legislation to suspend the tariff on ethanol imports.

But those actions are designed to deal with our immediate crisis. Congress must roll up its sleeves and work to solve the underlying problem - our dependence on foreign sources of energy. To do that, I’ve called on Congress to double President Bush’s budget request for biomass and bio-refinery research, and create market and tax incentives for E85 fuels, hybrid technologies and alternative energy sources. Tax credits for hybrid and alternative fuel vehicles need to be renewed and expanded. Additionally, we must increase fuel efficiency standards for automobiles – not just this year, but over the next several years.

Our dependence on foreign sources of energy has been an important issue for generations. Repeatedly, Washington has failed to act – and failed us – on this issue. Marylanders deserve leadership on creating and sustaining real energy independence.

3) How would you address the growing gap between Americans who have adequate health care insurance and those who don’t?

In 2003, a survey of Baltimore City revealed that almost half of those interviewed (47.1%) were currently without health insurance. We do not have a quality problem or even a quantity problem like our neighbor to the west (West Virginia). We have an access problem. We need to increase access to health insurance through Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) and high deductible policies, so individuals and families can purchase the insurance that's best for them and meets their specific needs.

As Lieutenant Governor, I worked with legislators to create the Office of Minority Health and Health Disparities, and worked to pass the Health Care Services Disparities Prevention Act to require the Maryland Department of Health to reduce health care disparities – like the number of uninsured - based on race, gender, ethnicity and poverty. The Senate has to get serious about closing this gap on the federal level as well.

Additionally, I believe we need to create a health care system that works for small business owners and small business employees. Millions of them are going without health care today just because bureaucrats in Washington won’t wake up to the fact that our current system is burdensome and ineffective. That is why I support allowing small businesses to band together and compete for better insurance options. With Association Health Plans, small employers will be able to pool their health insurance costs and have greater purchasing power to achieve better benefits for their employees.

To help increase our nation’s seniors access to affordable care, I have called to extend the sign up period for the Medicare Prescription Drug plan. Maryland seniors need more time to learn about the different drug plan options available to them so they can make the best choices for their health care. Once again, Washington has failed Marylanders by rushing through a program just to meet a government deadline, instead of acting in the best interests of our seniors.

4) What should be done about the enormous federal budget deficit?

I often hear politicians jump through complicated hoops when trying to explain why we have such an enormous deficit. Of course, any such discussion quickly devolves into partisan name calling. The time for partisan rancor and political double talk has passed. The plain truth is we are spending more than we have in the bank. We’ve all heard it said that we are mortgaging our children’s future. Not true, we are now mortgaging our grandchildren and great grandchildren’s future. When a “bridge to nowhere” receives millions of dollars in funding, we know Washington has lost touch with reality; and until Congress places real priorities on spending, deficits will always be a pressing concern.

Congress must also enact pro-growth policies that encourage the economy to expand: like making tax relief permanent and repealing the death tax. As we saw with the most recent deficit figures, a growing economy will in fact reduce the size of the budget deficit. In order to achieve optimal economic growth, Congress must adhere to sane spending guidelines while promoting smart policies devoted to growing businesses and creating jobs.

5) Are federal affirmative action programs necessary and effective?

Studies show enormous disparities still exist in education, healthcare, employment and economic opportunities along racial lines in the United States. I believe programs are still necessary to help close these divides. I support giving people opportunities. Programs must be fair to all Marylanders – of every color – and they should focus on economic empowerment.

6) What further investment - monetary and military - if any, should the United States make in Iraq? When should U.S. troops leave Iraq?

There is no doubt that war requires sacrifice and fiscal constraint. We have a responsibility to ensure that our armed forces have the supplies, the equipment, and the technologies they need to get the job done.

It is imperative we improve conditions on the ground so we can bring our troops home as quickly as possible and have the Iraqi people take control of their own destiny. At the same time, we should not publicly state a timetable for implementation. I do not support a “cut and run strategy.” Any politician out there talking about timetables and timelines is playing into the hands of our enemies who have an enormous capacity to wait. It would be a disaster for us to cut and run, as it would destroy our credibility in the region for at least a generation. At the same time, it is the Iraqi’s themselves that will ultimately have to make democracy work in their country. We should stay there only long enough to give the Iraqi people the tools they need to secure the very democracy they voted for three times. After that, it’s up to them.

7) Do you support easing federal restrictions on embryonic stem cell research? And please outline any specific proposals on this subject.

I am very encouraged by innovations in technology that make it possible to treat and prevent disease without the willful destruction of human embryos, including innovative technologies practiced right here in Maryland. We have a lot to gain through furthering stem cell research, but medical breakthroughs should be fundamentally about saving, not destroying, human life. Therefore, I support stem cell research that does not destroy the embryo.

8) Discuss your views on immigration reform, particularly with regard to undocumented aliens already in this country.

Congress’s unique inability to multi-task highlights our nation’s need for common- sense immigration reform. Until we see Congress take some real and immediate steps to secure our borders, we can hardly expect Americans to seriously consider proposals for dealing with those illegal immigrants already in our county and those employers who fail to adequately report them.

Nearly 1.2 million people were arrested trying to illegally enter the U.S. through the Mexican border last year alone, and an estimated 500,000 evaded capture. This is unacceptable. When a patient has a serious laceration, the doctor’s first priority is to stop the bleeding, and then they can decide if simple stitches or surgery is needed to fix the problem for the long term. First thing’s first: secure our borders and then we can deal with meaningful immigration reform.

9) Name two senators, one past and one present, whom you would most choose to emulate. Why?

In my opinion, Senator Charles "Mac" Mathias was a senator’s senator. He was a gentleman and a dedicated public servant who proved himself to be an independent thinker and consensus builder. He took difficult stands on issues even when it was unpopular to do so. Senator Mathias did not stand in the doorway of opportunity; he helped to create it by standing up for civil rights, voting rights, and inclusion for all Americans.

Of today’s sitting senators, I am especially inspired by Senator John McCain, who works above the partisan fray that is too often stifling progress in Washington. Like Senator McCain, I am not afraid of being an independent voice in Congress who calls it like he sees it. I am going to Washington to shake things up, work with both sides of the aisle, and build bridges over party nonsense to achieve results for Marylanders.

10) If you now hold public office or have in the past, briefly identify your top three accomplishments while in office.

The reform of the state’s Minority Business Enterprise Program is certainly one of my proudest achievements as Lieutenant Governor. When I took office, the state had a dysfunctional, fraudulent system that gave minorities hope with no sense of substance. Here are some of the significant changes we were able to make:
- Eliminated the 10-day waiting period for prime contractors to name their subcontractors.
- Established a small business reserve pool where ten percent of all the state’s procurement contracts are to be carved out for small businesses.
- Established a Mentor Protégé Program where large companies are partnered with small companies and they provide guidance and opportunities for small business owners.
- Led an historic trade mission to Ghana and South Africa where many small businesses got opportunities to expand their business on a global market.
- Lobbied for increased funding for the Maryland Small Business Development Authority which gives much needed capital to the state’s small business community.
- Worked to create a linked deposit program that allows banks doing business with the state to create a pool of money that can be accessed to provide capital for small and minority-owned businesses.

As Maryland’s Lieutenant Governor, I have led reforms in our education system to better educate our children by better rewarding our teachers, better equipping our schools and better involving parents. I headed the Commission on Quality Education in Maryland which proposed 30 recommendations to strengthen schools in our state and ensure every Maryland child has the keys to the door of opportunity – a quality education. I am proud to say the Commission has produced real results for Maryland students, and many of my 30 recommendations are being funded and implemented today.
- I worked to provide millions of dollars in funding for many of the recommendations in the Commission on Quality Education in Maryland, including $2 million for Professional Development Schools that advance the skills of Maryland teachers;
- $1.45 million to strengthen services for those with Autism and fund the launch of the Autism screening pilot program;
- And $2 million to create a Science, Technology, and Mathematics Academy to advance students' skills in the subject areas that will play a major role in the economy of the 21st Century.
- Made historic improvements to the Maryland Teacher Pension System. Through the passage of the State Employees' and Teachers' Retirement Enhancement Benefit Act of 2006, I worked with legislators to provide teachers and state employees hired after 1998 with a benefit equaling 54 percent of their salary after 30 years service (an increase over the current 42 percent of salary).

Additionally, I have worked to secure Maryland communities that are too often victims of gang violence, drugs, and crime.
- With the help of the Office of Crime Control and Prevention and the Maryland State Police, I worked to combat the proliferation of gangs threatening the well-being of Maryland communities and the safety of Maryland
- I convened a Statewide Planning Group to develop a strategy to both prevent and respond to gang activity.
- Though the Vehicle Theft Prevention Council, I also worked to provide more than $1.4 million to law enforcement agencies aimed at reducing car theft in our state.
children.

Monday, December 12, 2005

20051209 Is Curry ready to jump ship

Is Curry grinding an old ax or ready to jump ship?

Wayne Curry – 1971 Western Maryland College, now McDaniel College, graduate.

Friday, Dec. 9, 2005

Former Prince George’s county exec Wayne Curry has had a famously rocky relationship with Senate President Mike Miller.

The two have bloodied each another in the boxing ring that is Prince George’s County politics for more than a decade. Miller supported Curry’s opponent in 1994. Curry has recruited candidates to run against Miller.

Curry even told us during the redistricting debacle of 2000 that he wanted Miller out of the county altogether.

So when Curry took an on-the-record shot at Miller on Monday after a legislative breakfast hosted by Annapolis lobbying firm, Rifkin, Livingston, Levitan and Silver, it could be seen as not that big of a deal.

But Curry, a Dem, is being considered as a running mate for Gov. Bob Ehrlich, and when he decides to weigh in on Democratic Party politics or one of the party leaders like Miller, we take note.

Read the rest here: Is Curry grinding an old ax or ready to jump ship?

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Sunday, October 16, 2005

20051015 Mar-Va Theatre Pocomoke City Maryland – October 15 2005



20051015 Mar-Va Theatre Pocomoke City Maryland – October 15 2005

October 15, 2005 by Kevin Dayhoff

Former Pocomoke City mayor Curt Lippoldt, a member of the Mar-Va Theater Board and former Westminster mayor Kevin Dayhoff talk over the progress of renovations of the old theater in downtown Pocomoke City. © Caroline Babylon photo – October 15, 2008.

Former Pocomoke City mayor Curt Lippoldt, a member of the Mar-Va Theater Board and Caroline Babylon look over the old Pocomoke City Mar-Va Theater. © Kevin Dayhoff photo - October 15, 2005.

The Mar-Va Theater which opened in 1927, with 720 seats, for vaudeville and silent movies; is being renovated. Once it re-opens it is sure to be a cultural and entertainment showcase for the Delmarva Peninsula. For more details go to
http://mar-vatheater.org/.

Caroline and I visited the Pocomoke City to review the renovation of the old theater on October 15, 2005, in order to prepare for making a presentation on the economic benefits of art and culture venues and programming, February 25, 2006 at the annual famous chicken and dumplings membership dinner, at the Pocomoke Fire Hall.

Everyone has a role to play in “Setting Delmarva's Stage for a Brighter Tomorrow.” Bringing to life the 1927 art-deco Mar-Va movie theater as an arts and cultural center in Pocomoke City can play a key and critical role in economic development, revitalization, and attracting community employment and tax base to the lower shore.

Kevin Dayhoff
www.kevindayhoff.net October 15, 2005

20051015 Mar-Va Theatre Pocomoke City Maryland – October 15 2005

Sunday, July 17, 2005

20050707 Gazette article by Judson Berger: Bowie Councilman Dennis Brady to be appointed MML president

Gazette article by Judson Berger: Bowie Councilman Dennis Brady to be appointed MML president

by Judson Berger Staff Writer , July 7, 2005

Eleven years of involvement with the Maryland Municipal League will culminate this week for Bowie Councilman Dennis Brady (At-large), who after a week as first vice president will be named president.

The appointment comes as Havre de Grace mayor and recently-elected MML president David Craig is tapped for the County Executive seat in Harford County.

No longer a municipal leader, Craig will be forced to leave his MML position, and Brady will step in.

"This is a culmination of 11 years of being involved," Brady said Wednesday. He served as an at-large board member for five years, and was elected as first vice president at the end of June. "I feel I've got something to give to the group, and I think it benefits the city."

Brady said once in his role as president, he will start lobbying in Annapolis for municipal funding.

The MML is headquartered in Annapolis, and represents 157 municipalities in the sta


20050707 Gazette article by Judson Berger: Bowie Councilman Dennis Brady to be appointed MML president

20050700 2007 MML president Dennis Brady Bowie

People Maryland Craig – David Craig

Wednesday, May 15, 2002

20020514 Getty won’t seek reelection

Getty won't seek reelection
by Lauren King Carroll County Times

May 14, 2002

Del. Joseph M. Getty, R-Carroll, announced Monday that he would not run for re-election in an effort to honor the two-term limit promise he made during the last election.

Getty did say that he would like to run for state Senate some day, but not against Sen. Larry E. Haines, R-Carroll.

"I've waited to see how things were lining up as far as Larry Haines' decision," Getty said. "I really want to honor the term-limit pledge that I made, and it seemed like this was the right time to announce it."

He said that if Haines changes his mind about running for state Senate, he would run for the seat.

But for now, Getty said he wouldn't be dropping out of the political scene. He said that he plans to help with U.S. Rep. Robert L. Ehrlich's campaign for governor, and his petition against the governor's legislative redistricting plan is still going through the Maryland Court of Appeals process.

Getty said that he would not reconsider his decision about the House of Delegates even if the legislative redistricting plan were amended to give Carroll a district completely within the county. The current plan would pit the three Carroll delegates - Getty and Dels. Carmen Amedori and Nancy R. Stocksdale - against each other for two seats.

Under the governor's plan, Carroll's Fifth District will be shared with a portion of western Baltimore County, where Republican Del. A. Wade Kach is the current incumbent.