Monday, September 16, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Politics

Montgomery plans to continue counting ballots into the weekend

Montgomery County election officials plan to continue counting ballots into the weekend, with thousands of mail-in and provisional ballots in the gubernatorial primary left to count before a winner can be named in the Democratic primary for county executive and other local races. Under Maryland law, each county has until the second Friday after the election, or two days after it completes its count, to certify and send local results to the state.

Wins, losses and close calls among Baltimore City and County General Assembly races

The statewide race for governor may have attracted the most attention this election season, but all 188 seats in the General Assembly also are up for grabs. Here’s a district-by-district look at where things stood as of Thursday among House and Senate races in Baltimore City and County, and a peek at who’s running in November. Neither the city nor the county counted votes Thursday, but they will resume Friday.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland state Del. Impallaria charged with theft, misconduct in office

Maryland state Del. Richard Impallaria, a Republican who has represented parts of Harford and Baltimore counties, has been charged with multiple criminal counts related to inappropriate use of state funds for a district office and office furniture, prosecutors announced Wednesday. The Office of the State Prosecutor charged Impallaria in Anne Arundel County Circuit Court on Wednesday with three counts of misconduct in office, two counts of fraudulent misappropriation of funds by a fiduciary, and one count each of theft between $25,000 and $100,000 and theft between $1,500 and $25,000.

Scott Shellenberger moves closer to nomination in Baltimore County state’s attorney race with about 3,000 ballots left to count

Baltimore County State’s Attorney Scott Shellenberger moved closer Wednesday to a win in the Democratic primary, with only a small portion of ballots left to count. The latest results show Shellenberger up 1,932 votes over challenger Robbie Leonard — with about 3,000 uncounted votes remaining. Vote-counting has dragged on for days due to the large number of mail-in ballots cast. While Leonard had a small lead on election night, Shellenberger gained ground as mail-in votes were tallied.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Provisional ballot count moves Anne Arundel County races closer to finish line; Jessica Haire extends lead for GOP county executive nomination

At a ballot canvass at the Anne Arundel County Board of Elections in Glen Burnie Wednesday, workers reviewed more than 5,700 provisional and mailed ballots cast in last week’s primary elections. While many federal, state and county races have been called, a few key races, including the Republican county executive primary, were still too close to call after the count finished around 6 p.m. About 7,500 ballots will be counted Friday, the last day of canvassing. Ballots will be accepted by mail until 10 a.m. Friday when counting begins.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
With one phase of ballot counting remaining, council president up by 21 votes in Frederick County

The Frederick County Council president has a narrow lead over a first-time candidate in the closest race of the 2022 primary election in Frederick County, unofficial results show. The Frederick County Board of Elections on Wednesday completed its fourth day of post-Primary Election Day ballot counting. Election officials processed and counted 1,062 ballots. The count included mail-in and provisional ballots, which voters use at the polls when there is a question about their eligibility or registration.

Md. lawmakers check in with new agency leaders on Bay cleanup progress

With a 2025 deadline looming for states to meet aggressive federal goals for cleaning up the Chesapeake Bay, members of Maryland’s congressional delegation met Wednesday on Capitol Hill with two women who will be integral parts of the public-private strategy for eradicating pollution in the nation’s largest estuary. Eight of the 10 members of the Maryland delegation held a wide-ranging conversation with Kandis Boyd, the new director of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Chesapeake Bay program, and Hillary Harp Falk, the new president and CEO of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation.

Addressing root causes of squeegee work is monumental task with ‘no silver bullet,’ Baltimore officials agree

After a deadly confrontation between a group of squeegee workers and a baseball bat-wielding driver earlier this month reignited a longstanding political debate about poverty, structural racism and public safety in Baltimore, officials expressed widespread agreement that addressing the root causes of panhandling is a monumental task — one the city needs to prioritize. Many of the young people who wash windshields for money at busy downtown intersections are there out of necessity. Before they can transition to gainful employment, their basic needs must be met, officials said Wednesday during a hearing before a City Council committee.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Political notes: City Council wants hearing on election issues, Raskin’s vegetarian option, Segal’s next delusion

The Baltimore City Council wants to meet with city and state elections officials to probe issues voters faced in casting ballots during the July 19 primary election. The council advanced on Monday a resolution to invite the city’s elections director, Armstead Jones, as well as leadership at the State Board of Elections, to a meeting to “detail the cause of voting irregularities during the 2022 primary election, potential impacts these irregularities had on election results, and solutions to ensure that such errors do not happen again.”

 

Baltimore City Council committee to hold hearing on ‘squeegee issue’

A Baltimore City Council committee will meet Wednesday afternoon with law enforcement agencies and members of Mayor Brandon Scott’s administration to hold a hearing on what city officials have dubbed the “squeegee issue.” The Public Safety and Government Operations Committee scheduled the hearing for 1 p.m. at City Hall. Squeegee workers, usually Black teens, are a mainstay of some of downtown Baltimore’s busiest street corners, offering to clean motorists’ windshields for a few bucks.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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