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Politics

train tracks with power lines above them
Baltimore-area leaders tell Wes Moore’s administration transit cuts are going too far

A slate of Baltimore City and Baltimore County leaders took aim at Gov. Wes Moore’s administration Monday as they called the latest cuts to Maryland’s transportation plan an “existential threat” that must be resolved through a more aggressive state funding effort. In a pair of public meetings to give state officials feedback on a new six-year, $19 billion statewide spending plan, the list of almost entirely Democratic elected leaders and advocates from both jurisdictions spoke almost in unison.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Johnny Olszewski could finish his climb to Congress, but with some dents in his armor

For over a decade, Baltimore County Executive Johnny Olszewski Jr. has made it a point to engage with his constituents. He’s met them after panels at nearby colleges. He’s grabbed coffee with them at local senior homes. He’s knocked on their doors and chatted with them about the future of the region. His work has paid off.

Maryland’s Jamie Raskin says Trump hasn’t signed documents for ‘orderly transition’ if elected

Maryland Rep. Jamie Raskin said Wednesday that former President Donald Trump, who’s running again as a Republican, hasn’t signed key documents that other presidential nominees have adhered to in the past to assure an “orderly transition of power” if they are elected. Raskin, a Montgomery County Democrat and his party’s ranking member on the House Committee on Oversight and Accountability, wrote the former president Wednesday urging him “to put the public’s interest in maintaining a properly functioning government above any personal financial or political interests you may perceive in boycotting the official transition law and process.”

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Looking to vote early? View a map of Baltimore-area early voting centers.

Early voting is underway in Maryland and lasts until Oct. 31 from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. each day. The map below shows all early voting centers in Baltimore City and Anne Arundel, Baltimore, Carroll, Harford and Howard counties (click or tap the magnifying glass in the bottom left and search for an address to center the map on your area). Registered voters can vote at any center in their county of residence — as can those eligible to register to vote after registering at a center.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Alsobrooks stretches lead over Hogan in Emerson College poll

Maryland’s Senate race is one of a handful of federal races poised to decide which political party wins control over Congress. That means there’s plenty of polling, as the candidates and other interested parties search for indications of which way voters will go. Republican former Gov. Larry Hogan and Democrat and Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks are vying for the open seat, along with Libertarian Party candidate Mike Scott.

 

A guide to the 2024 Maryland general election: What to know before you vote

Early voting starts Thursday in Maryland, with former governor Larry Hogan (R) and Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks (D) competing for the state’s open Senate seat and all eight congressional district seats on the ballot, including three where the incumbents are not seeking reelection. In an election year where women’s reproductive rights have factored heavily into several races, Maryland voters will also decide whether the state should enshrine reproductive choice in the Maryland Constitution.

The United States Capitol Rotunda
Alsobrooks, Hogan preparing for final stretch of Maryland US Senate campaign

Maryland’s U.S. Senate race is not neck-and-neck, according to the latest polls, which give Democrat Angela Alsobrooks an edge over Republican Larry Hogan. However, given that Maryland’s registered Democrats outnumber their Republican counterparts by more than two to one, some political experts call the race to fill the open Senate seat surprisingly close. The leading candidates are taking nothing for granted.

Read More: WBALTV
Baltimore mayor says $1.8 million emergency request from BOPA was last straw

Mayor Brandon Scott said Tuesday that the $1.8 million request last month for emergency funds from the Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts convinced him to terminate the city’s contract with the quasi-governmental agency. “That was the straw that broke the camel’s back,” Scott told Tom Hall, host of “Midday with the Mayor” on WYPR-FM. “For me this was about responsibility. When I saw their fiscal situation and I knew how many taxpayer dollars were already being put into BOPA, this was the only decision that could be made.”

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Abortion is legal in Maryland. So why is there a ballot question about it?

Maryland has some of the strongest abortion protections in the country, a longstanding Democratic supermajority in the state legislature, and a governor who proclaimed the state a “safe haven” for the procedure. Now, voters will decide whether to add yet another safeguard. If Question 1 passes on a simple majority Nov. 5, it would enshrine a right to reproductive freedom in the state constitution.

A straight-on view of the Maryland state capitol in Annapolis, Maryland, at Christmas time.
Ferguson seeks to remove incinerators from state’s renewable energy subsidy program

The years-long effort in Maryland to cut waste-to-energy plants from a state green energy incentive program picked up a powerful ally last week. In a statement posted to social media, Senate President Bill Ferguson (D-Baltimore City) said he plans to introduce legislation in the upcoming General Assembly session that would remove waste incineration from Maryland’s renewable portfolio standard, which determines what energy sources the state can count to meet certain clean energy mandates.

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