Dembrow's wife passes away, he files for Commissioner race ten days later
July 4th, 2006
No, I did not make this up. According to Kelsey Volkmann, writing for the Baltimore Examiner, Dana Dembrow, a trial lawyer from Gamber, filed as a candidate for the Carroll County Commissioners' race, ten days after his wife unexpectedly passed away.
Please, let there be "the rest of the story."
Otherwise, this is unbelievable. Ya gotta just shake your head at this one. Democrats, the family values people...
Read on, its gets better, if that were possible.
Meanwhile, our thoughts and prayers are with Mrs. Dembro's family.
Many of us could simply not serve as elected or appointed officials if it were not for the active or behind the scenes support of our spouses. For some of us, it would not be worth it if it were not for the support and help of our wives/husbands. Life is too short and a good marriage is far more important than being an elected official.
As for Mr. Dembrow, if this is representative of what the Carroll County Democratic party has to offer, and I must quickly add, it is NOT - then no wonder the plight of Carroll County Democrats is such that it is.
Many Carroll County Democrats must be muttering under their breath over this and those of us who like discussion, dialogue and different responsible ideas put forth in the best interests of the citizens we serve - - are muttering under our breaths with them.
Meanwhile, below please find posted, Kelsey Volkmann's entire article. Hats off and a big thank you for calling this to our attention.
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Lone Democrat files for race days after wife’s death
Kelsey Volkmann, The Examiner
Jul 4, 2006 5:00 AM
Westminster - Ten days after his wife of 18 years died, a sole Democratic candidate filed to run for Carroll County commissioner Monday, the last possible day.
Dana Dembrow, a Gamber attorney and former Montgomery County state delegate for 16 years, visited the county Board of Elections to register to run against the 10 Republican candidates already filed in the race.
His wife, Suzette, 43, died June 24 at Sinai Hospital in Baltimore as a result of a cerebral hemorrhage that occurred during a stroke she suffered two days earlier.
“I was bothered by the notion that there wouldn’t be an election,” Dembrow said, sitting with his two daughters, Crystal, 14, and Danielle, 7, in the hallway outside of the election office in Westminster. “And I decided that instead of moping in grief, I was going to run.”
But in a county where half of the active voters are Republicans and one-third are Democrats, according to statistics updated Saturday and provided by the Board of Elections, Dembrow acknowledged his chances of winning are unlikely.
“The current commissioners are doing an adequate job, but there is always room for fresh perspectives,” he said.
One such perspective, he said, would be a greater push to bring high-speed Internet access to all of Carroll County, where businesses and residents complain of patchy Verizon service and are forced to use dial-up.
“You need to have an ‘R’ next to your name to win in this county,” said Martin Radinsky, chairman of the county’s Democratic Central Committee.
Running as a Democrat in Carroll, he said, is like filing to run as a Republican for mayor in Baltimore City.
The majority of Carroll voters have been registered as Republicans since 1990, according to Board of Elections statistics.
But Democrats should still file as candidates so both sides can engage in dialogue about the future of the county, Radinsky said.
Dembrow was the original plaintiff in an April lawsuit against the Board of Elections that called for five commissioners elected by district rather than three elected at-large, as it had been.
Before he moved to Carroll County, Dembrow served four terms as a delegate to the General Assembly from Montgomery County.
In 2002, he was charged with hitting his wife, but she declined to testify against him and he was acquitted, according to the Associated Press. He lost the next election.
kvolkmann@baltimoreexaminer.com
Examiner
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