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Alexander Pyles tracks news from the State House

The Eye on Annapolis Podcast

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The Podcast returns with a look back at the General Assembly’s session and look-ahead to an expected special session. Daily Record State House reporter Alex Pyles gives an eyewitness account of how legislators ran out of time on budget negotiations and what role gambling legislation played in the final outcome.

We also talk the logistics of a special session, where Gov. Martin O’Malley fits into all of this and some of the 800 bills the legislature did pass during its 90-day session. (Remember same-sex marriage?)

Enjoy.

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Category: Annapolis, General Assembly, Legislature, Politics

No rest for the (potentially) campaigning

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Gov. Martin O’Malley and Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell squared off on national television Sunday, the latest joint television appearance by potential future presidential candidates separated by party lines and the Potomac River.

O’Malley, head of the Democratic Governors Association and McDonnell, head of the Republican Governors Association, are both thought to have national ambitions. In their appearance on “Meet the Press,” the governors tried to keep the conversation’s focus on the nation’s economy and off the controversial legislation they were pushing in their home states, the Associated Press reported.

O’Malley has proposed a bevy of tax increases, including limits on the number of itemized tax deductions available to higher-earning Marylanders and an increase to the state’s gas tax. McDonnell, meanwhile, supported legislation that would mandate women seeking abortions first receive ultrasounds.

But both governors wanted to talk about just one thing: Jobs.

Here’s betting that, on the national stage, the two men (future candidates?) won’t be able to sidestep their history on taxes and social issues.

Category: General Assembly, Politics

The Eye on Annapolis Podcast

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Daily Record columnist and WYPR Senior News Analyst C. Fraser Smith joins me once again on a super-sized podcast to review the big news from Friday: the House of Delegates passing same-sex marriage legislation and the Senate unanimously voting to censure Sen. Ulysses Currie.

Fraser provides some big-picture perspective on both events and recalls the last day the General Assembly made so much historic news in one day. (Hint: It was in 1984.)

We also look at Gov. Martin O’Malley’s role in the gay marriage bill and how involved he might be in legislation throughout the rest of the session. Enjoy.

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Category: General Assembly, Government, Politics, Same-sex marriage

Hail to the chief? Not so fast

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For most of the nation, presidential campaign politics are playing out in far-away places like Michigan, Florida, New Hampshire and Iowa as Republican candidates take turns eviscerating one another and swapping leads in the polls.

But do not despair, residents of the Free State. We have a sideshow of our very own, which is taking shape daily in Annapolis. It’s about the 2016 presidential race and Gov. Martin O’Malley’s apparent ambitions in that regard.

For some time now, the governor’s attempts to burnish his national profile while serving as head of the Democratic Governors Association have been the topic of conversations over coffee and cocktails in state political circles.

A popular pastime has been speculating what cabinet post the governor might go for — Homeland Security seems to rank high among the speculators – if President Obama wins a second term.

But now that speculation is spilling into public view, often accompanied by barbed rhetoric.

After Comptroller Peter Franchot assailed O’Malley’s proposal to raises taxes on gasoline as “an absolute punch to the gut of the middle class,” the governor responded by calling fellow Democrat Franchot “kind of our version of Mitt Romney.”

Franchot retorted, ”I’m sorry if I’m getting in the way of his presidential efforts, but I’m doing my job as comptroller.” (Interesting words from a man who is presumed to be running his own campaign for governor of Maryland.)

O’Malley was also pummeled with the p-word when he testified before two House committees in favor of his same-sex marriage bill, a popular issue with Democrats nationally.

The Washington Post reported that Del. Emmett C. Burns Jr., D-Baltimore County, a leading opponent of the bill, “suggested that O’Malley must want to match New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a fellow Democrat who helped pass a same-sex marriage bill last year and who, like O’Malley, has been talked about for national office in 2016.”

“I would love to see our governor as president of the United States, but not on the backs of his own people,” Burns said. Ouch.

So there you have it — presidential politics, Maryland style. And it’s just beginning.

Category: Election 2012, Elections, General Assembly, Politics, Same-sex marriage

Md. business PAC attracts GOP lawmakers

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There were about 100 people on-hand for the first fundraiser to refuel the Business Leadership PAC, the political action committee affiliated with Maryland Business for Responsive Government and if the attendees were any indication, Republicans in Annapolis can expect to see a larger fundraising boost than Democrats.

MBRG is quick to tout its bipartisan mission — it is chaired by former Gov. Marvin Mandel, a Democrat, and Republican Ellen Sauerbrey, a former House minority leader  — but certainly has steered further to the right than the Maryland Chamber of Commerce.

The chamber PAC, in the last election cycle, actually gave to more Democrats than Republicans.

John Fund, the Wall Street Journal columnist and Fox News contributor, began his keynote speech with two questions: Who reads the Journal? And who watches Fox News? Read the rest of this entry »

Category: Politics

Maryland Dems hit Virginia’s McDonnell

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The sniping across the Potomac intensified Wednesday, with Maryland’s Democratic Party attacking the record of Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell.

This comes in response to the Virginia GOP’s attack on Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley on Tuesday. Nice symmetry, no?

The inter-state kerfuffle centers on budgets and taxes and the records of O’Malley, who heads the Democratic Governors Association, and McDonnell, who heads the Republican Governors Association, on both of those topics. The two men were on CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday, their first joint television appearance while leading their partisan governor’s groups.

David Sloan, executive director of the Maryland Democrats, wrote Wednesday: “McDonnell’s illusionary ‘surplus’ is the result of deferred bills, dismantled programs important to the middle class, budgetary obfuscation and federal stimulus spending. Rather than investing in Virginia’s future, McDonnell has slashed hundreds of millions of dollars from schools, colleges and universities, and cut funding by a third for EMTs, police officers and firefighters. No wonder Virginia has one of the worst track records on funding education and ranks 44th in job creation in 2011.”

That came after Virginia Republicans hit O’Malley using a blog post on the National Review Online.

“So of all those Virginia Democrats who might be considering a run for governor in 2013 – like Terry McAuliffe, Mark Warner and Ward Armstrong – we ask a simple question: Do you support the O’Malley model of governance, or the McDonnell model of governance?”

Category: Elections, Politics

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