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Tag: maryland senate race

  • Are national politics influencing voters in the Maryland senate race? A new poll suggests it’s possible – WTOP News

    Are national politics influencing voters in the Maryland senate race? A new poll suggests it’s possible – WTOP News

    Despite strong favorability ratings and stronger name recognition, a new poll out from the UMBC Institute of Politics finds Democrat Angela Alsobrooks leads Republican Larry Hogan.

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    It’s the most expensive U.S. Senate campaign the state of Maryland has ever seen, but a new poll suggests efforts to flip a seat from Democratic control may come up short.

    Despite strong favorability ratings and stronger name recognition, Democratic candidate and Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks leads Republican candidate and former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan by a 48-39 margin, according to a new poll released Wednesday by the University of Maryland Baltimore County (UMBC) Institute of Politics.

    “Both candidates are viewed favorably — more favorably than unfavorably,” said Mileah Kromer, the director of the UMBC Institute of Politics. “Forty-nine percent of Maryland likely voters have a favorable view of Angela Alsobrooks, 53% have a favorable view of former Gov. Larry Hogan.”

    But Kromer said only 4% of voters don’t know how they feel about Hogan, while 19% are still unsure about Alsobrooks.

    “I think that, in combination with the 20% of folks who said they could change their mind and the very small number now who are fully undecided, there is some room for fluctuation,” said Kromer. “But our poll does show that Angela Alsobrooks is up, and up outside of the margin of error.”

    A Republican hasn’t represented Maryland in the U.S. Senate since the 1980s, and the voter registration in Maryland is roughly 2-1 in favor of Democrats. That appears to be playing a big role in the outcome. During the survey, after voters expressed a preference for one or the other, they were asked why they felt that way.

    For Alsobrooks, 46% of voters backing the county executive “said something about how they liked her, or they had a positive view toward the Democratic Party or some of the Democratic policies,” said Kromer.

    But 26% of her support comes by the nature of having the letter “D” next to her name on the ballot.

    “They’re voting for Angela Alsobrooks because they do not want Republicans to take control of the U.S. Senate,” said Kromer.

    On the flip side, most Hogan voters are backing him because they like him so much, or because they have positive views of the GOP.

    “It is not an unusual thing that people vote based on party identification, because party does tell you a lot of things about what an individual candidate would do in office, or what they would care about, or what the issues they would advance and support,” said Kromer.

    “The big takeaway message is how important the control the Senate has become as an issue in this campaign,” she added.

    The poll also finds Hogan is only running about 4 points better than former President Donald Trump, who trails Vice President Kamala Harris by a 57-35 point margin in Maryland. Another 5% said they’re voting for a third party, and 3% are undecided.

    Also in November, Maryland voters will vote on whether to enshrine abortion rights into the state constitution. The UMBC survey found voters support “Question 1” rather broadly, by a 69-21 percent margin in Maryland.

    More than half (57%) of Maryland likely voters said abortion was a “critical issue” for them, Kromer said.

    “While ‘Question 1,’ perhaps as a stand-alone, hasn’t gotten that much attention, the issue of reproductive rights and the issue of abortion certainly has,” Kromer said.

    Most voters said the issue that mattered the most to them was the cost of everyday goods and services. Crime and public safety, as well as taxes and government spending, also rated high as issues voters cared about.

    The institute polled 863 likely voters over the final full week of September. The margin of error is +/- 3.3%.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    John Domen

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  • Vice president holds College Park abortion rights rally with all the trappings of a campaign event – WTOP News

    Vice president holds College Park abortion rights rally with all the trappings of a campaign event – WTOP News

    At the Monday campaign event doubling as an abortion rights rally, supporters held hundreds of “Biden-Harris” or “reproductive freedom” signs.

    This article was republished with permission from WTOP’s news partners at Maryland Matters. Sign up for Maryland Matters’ free email subscription today.

    COLLEGE PARK, MARYLAND – JUNE 24: U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris delivers remarks on reproductive rights at Ritchie Coliseum on the campus of the University of Maryland on June 24, 2024 in College Park, Maryland. Harris is speaking on the two year anniversary of the Dobbs decision, the Supreme Court ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade and struck down federal abortion protections. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)(Getty Images/Kevin Dietsch)

    Vice President Kamala Harris (D)  stood in Ritchie Coliseum at the University of Maryland, College Park underneath a blue banner that said “Trust WOMEN” in large white text.

    Just underneath, in significantly smaller text, was a disclaimer: “Paid for by Biden for President.”

    At the Monday campaign event doubling as an abortion rights rally, supporters held hundreds of “Biden-Harris” or “reproductive freedom” signs. In the upcoming general election, Democrats insist their candidates, not Republicans, will ensure that Marylanders and voters across the United States have access to abortion care.

    Harris wasted little time, telling the enthusiastic crowd that a second presidency for Republican Donald Trump would pose a threat to reproductive rights across the country. The rally came on the second anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision that overturned Roe v. Wade, which had guaranteed abortion access as a constitutional right for nearly 50 years.

    “Today, our daughters know fewer rights than their grandmothers. This is a health care crisis. And we all know who is to blame: Donald Trump,” Harris said.

    “He proudly takes credit for overturning Roe,” she said, noting that Trump appointed three justices who were key to reversing Roe. “My fellow Americans, in a court of law, that would be called an admission, and some would say a confession…. In the case of stealing reproductive freedom away from the women of America, Donald Trump is guilty.”

    The event also effectively functioned as a rally for Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks (D) in her run against former Gov. Larry Hogan (R) to represent Maryland in the U.S. Senate.

    Harris gave a shout out to her “dear friend” Alsobrooks, whose Senate candidacy the vice president endorsed earlier this month.

    If successful, Alsobrooks would be the first Black woman to represent Maryland in the U.S. Senate, a glass ceiling that would echo Harris’s historic election as the first woman, the first Black American, and the first South Asian American to serve as vice president.

    The question of abortion is expected to have an outsized role in the campaign for Maryland’s Senate seat, which has become an unexpectedly tough race in a state where Democrats outnumber Republicans by nearly 2-to-1.

    “Today is more than just an anniversary. It’s proof that we should never take for granted our liberties,” Alsobrooks said. “It is the confirmation that we must be vigilant in fighting for and protecting, with everything we have, our rights.”

    Alsobrooks took some jabs at her opponent, saying that Republicans hope Hogan is the key to securing a conservative majority in Congress.

    “They believe that Larry Hogan is the best opportunity that the Republicans have to get the 51st vote,” in the Senate, she said. “In fact, Donald Trump endorsed him because the two of them share something in common … they share the goal of handing the over the Senate to the Republican Party.”

    Trump has said in recent days that he believes the question of abortion restrictions should be left up to the states, a key part of the Dobbs decision. And Hogan, who has long said he is personally pro-life, has insisted that as senator he would defend Roe-style abortion protections.

    He reiterated that in a statement posted Monday on his campaign website in recognition of the second anniversary of Dobbs, saying that he would work in the Sentate “to codify Roe v. Wade, as the law of the land.”

    “A woman’s health care decisions are her own. Whether it be the decision to start a family with the help of IVF, or exercise her reproductive rights, nothing and no one—especially partisan politics—should come between a woman and her doctor,” according to the written statement.

    U.S. Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), who spoke at Monday’s rally, went to bat for Alsobrooks and said that she would be the best choice to protect abortion access in the U.S. Senate. He ridiculed Hogan’s recent promises to support Roe-style abortion protections.

    “Her opponent Larry Hogan is undergoing some election year conversion like none I’ve ever seen,” Van Hollen said. “This guy now goes around saying that he’s quote, ‘pro-choice.’ The problem is he has a record that tells us the exact opposite.”

    Democrats, including Alsobrooks, have criticized Hogan’s claims on abortion rights, pointing to his previous actions as Maryland governor.

    Hogan vetoed a measure in 2022 that would have expanded abortion access in the state. When the legislature overrode his veto, Hogan withheld state funding to train nonphysicians to perform abortions, funding that Gov. Wes Moore (D) released on his first day in office in 2023.

    “So now we see Larry Hogan bobbing and weaving. Zigging and zagging. Flipping and flopping,” Van Hollen said. “And as we watch this, we know one thing’s for sure: Marylanders just cannot trust Larry Hogan with this one.”

    Hogan’s campaign — which released a video Monday criticizing Alsobrooks’ record on crime as county executive — pushed back on the characterization that he has “flipped” on supporting Roe v. Wade.

    “Governor Hogan protected choice in Maryland for eight years as Governor, funding access to abortion in the budget every year and being the first governor in America to provide over-the-counter birth control paid for by Medicaid,” according to an email from the campaign. “In the Senate, Governor Hogan will work to reinstate Roe v. Wade as the law of the land.”

    Maryland Matters is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Maryland Matters maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Steve Crane for questions: editor@marylandmatters.org. Follow Maryland Matters on Facebook and X.

    Kate Corliss

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  • Hogan needed to make ‘pro-choice’ pledge in US Senate race, political expert says – WTOP News

    Hogan needed to make ‘pro-choice’ pledge in US Senate race, political expert says – WTOP News

    Former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican running for U.S. Senate, is leaning into the issue of abortion more than he ever has in his political career.

    Former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican running for the open U.S. Senate seat in the state, is leaning into the issue of abortion more than he ever has in his political career.

    In an interview with the New York Times, Hogan described himself as “pro-choice” and said that he supports legislation to codify abortion rights into federal law.

    Hogan also said that he, as a Marylander, would vote to enshrine abortion rights in the state’s constitution, a measure that will be on the ballot in November.

    “Seeing ballot initiatives regarding abortion do so well, even in red states, it does not surprise me at all,” said Todd Eberly, a political science professor at St. Mary’s College of Maryland. “In a blue state like Maryland, that’s just the reality of where that issue is right now.”

    Hogan historically has shied away from talking about abortion. But that has changed in a big way.

    “Hogan, for the most part, has done everything he could to try to avoid the issue,” Eberly said. “He was able to do that when he was running for governor because it was already settled in Maryland law.”

    After securing the Republican nomination in the Senate race Tuesday, Hogan even talked about abortion during his victory speech.

    “Let me, once again, set the record straight,” Hogan said. “To the women of Maryland: You have my word that I will continue to protect your right to make your own reproductive health decisions.”

    That hasn’t stopped Democrats from saying Hogan would vote for federal abortion limits in the Senate. In a post on social media on Thursday, the Maryland Democratic Party called Hogan a “wolf in sheep’s clothing.”

    “Larry Hogan has been against reproductive freedom his entire life,” the party said in its post.

    Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks, Hogan’s Democratic opponent in the race, made a similar statement earlier this week.

    “Larry Hogan has said he’s a lifelong Republican, and if he’s elected, he will give Republicans the majority that they need to pass a national abortion ban,” Alsobrooks said.

    Hogan and Alsobrooks are running to succeed retiring Sen. Ben Cardin.

    If Hogan were to win, he’d be the first Republican in more than 40 years to win a Senate seat in the blue state of Maryland, where Democrats outnumber Republicans by a 2:1 ratio statewide.

    “He knows that no matter what, he can’t win without Democratic votes,” Eberly said. “He wasn’t going to secure those votes without making this pledge.”

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Nick Iannelli

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  • Md. US Senate race causing division among Prince George’s Co. leaders – WTOP News

    Md. US Senate race causing division among Prince George’s Co. leaders – WTOP News

    The increasingly negative U.S. Senate primary race in Maryland between David Trone and Angela Alsobrooks is leading to greater division and hard feelings in Prince George’s County.

    The increasingly negative U.S. Senate primary race between David Trone and Angela Alsobrooks is leading to greater division and hard feelings in Prince George’s County, Maryland.

    Most of the elected leaders at the county and state level have endorsed Alsobrooks, but those who haven’t are increasingly vocal about it.

    The latest instance of that came Thursday morning at a union office in Lanham. Surrogates of David Trone held a news conference to tout his campaign and to take more shots at Alsobrooks, though she was rarely mentioned by name.


    Read More Election 2024 News:


    “We need someone who can be effective from day one,” said Prince George’s County State’s Attorney Aisha Braveboy.

    And there were repeated suggestions from Prince George’s County Council member Krystal Oriadha, an outspoken supporter of Trone’s, that Republicans were “trying to intentionally infiltrate” the race by throwing money at Alsobrooks because she was a weaker candidate than Trone.

    But Oriadha disputed the idea that the race has been “super negative,” in her words.

    “I think there’s some conversation around record, which is fair. There’s conversation about what people support and don’t support,” she said. “That’s fair to do.”

    She denied any of her comments have been personal in nature, though as one of the more liberal members of the council, she’s had frequent clashes with other colleagues as well as the Alsobrooks administration over policy.

    “My colleagues see that. They see the bills I put forward. They see things that I fight for. And they see that the county executive doesn’t align with those things,” Oriadha said. “So it’s not a far stretch that I wouldn’t be able to endorse her for Senate.”

    But those on the council who back Alsobrooks, including chair Jolene Ivey, believe it is personal for Oriadha and Ed Burroughs, whose suggestion that Alsobrooks would need “training wheels” initially appeared in a Trone commercial before later being edited out.

    “There’s only a couple of them who are not supporting Angela,” Ivey said. “But because David Trone has so much money he just puts it on TV all the time and it makes it look like there’s all these people supporting him from Prince George’s, but thank God the polls don’t show that.”

    Several former Democratic state party chairs have started putting out statements criticizing Trone for the tone of his campaign, including Thursday afternoon.

    “David Trone has cast disparaging comments about women, inadvertently uttered racial slurs, and has denigrated public service. He will be challenged in building the statewide unity that is needed to win in November,” said the statement signed by Kathleen Matthews, Susan Turnbull, Ike Leggett, Terry Lierman, Yvette Lewis and Peter Krauser.

    Ivey said the increasing negativity is coming from the Trone side because the race has become so tight in recent weeks. A new Emerson College poll actually put Alsobrooks up by 1 point this week, though the Trone campaign was critical of the methodology behind it. Nonetheless, internal polls conducted by both campaigns are in agreement that the election will likely be super close on Tuesday.

    Both Oriadha and Ivey were confident that the party would mend the disagreements once the primary is over.

    “There will be a healing but it’s going to take a lot of time,” Ivey said.

    “I have friends on either side and they’re still going to be my friends either way,” Oriadha said. “My hope and what we have to do is unify after the primary.”

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    John Domen

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  • Trone and Alsobrooks speak to WTOP about issues facing Maryland and the Senate – WTOP News

    Trone and Alsobrooks speak to WTOP about issues facing Maryland and the Senate – WTOP News

    In interviews with WTOP, Angela Alsobrooks and David Trone say they’re best equipped to defeat former Gov. Larry Hogan in November and protect abortion rights in Maryland, and each took nuanced views on the situation in Gaza.

    Visit WTOP’s Election 2024 page for comprehensive coverage.

    David Trone and Angela Alsobrooks, the two leading Democratic
    2024 candidates for Maryland’s open U.S. Senate seat. (Courtesy David Trone for Maryland and Angela Alsobrooks for Maryland via Canva)

    There’s less than a week to go before primary day in Maryland — and the top two candidates in a crowded Senate race to succeed retiring Sen. Ben Cardin could be locked in a closer race than many public polls indicate.

    And while early voting is already underway, both leading candidates — Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks and U.S. Rep. David Trone — acknowledge there are still many Democrats undecided about who they ultimately want to vote for. In part, that’s because on many of the issues, both candidates hold fairly similar positions.

    In interviews with WTOP this week, both candidates say they’re best equipped to defeat former Gov. Larry Hogan in November and to protect abortion rights in Maryland, and they each took nuanced views on the situation in Gaza.



    With so many Americans disenchanted with politics, and the two leaders at the top of the ticket in November, they both also acknowledged that there’s a growing suspicion about what gets done on Capitol Hill and its impact on regular people.

    The economy and government

    Alsobrooks, who is in her second term as executive of Maryland’s second-largest county, says she wants to raise the corporate tax rate.

    “My concern is that when we look at things like the corporate tax rate, where big corporations pay fewer taxes than hardworking Americans, this worries me,” said Alsobrooks. “It is the kind of thing that I will tackle as a senator — raise the corporate tax rate to allow again for there to be not only more equity, but to allow the economy to grow in a way that benefits more people in the middle.”

    Too many Americans feel the economy isn’t working for them, Alsobrooks said, citing issues like health care access and food deserts.

    “I understand this feeling that the system is not working, and people are not wrong about it,” she said.

    That answer came just a few moments after she was asked how she could help boost the economy in Maryland, where tax revenues aren’t able to cover rising costs, necessitating steep budget cuts.

    If elected, she vowed to continue to push for federal investment in projects that will make a difference in Maryland. As examples of what she can accomplish in the Senate, she cited her efforts to help bring the FBI’s new headquarters to Greenbelt and a major redevelopment project at the New Carrollton Metro station, which have occurred during her tenure as county executive.

    “I know not only what to vote for, but I know how to implement,” Alsobrooks said. “The implementation of this is what I will also bring to Maryland. It’s not just bringing back those dollars, but actually converting the dollars to real infrastructure in a way that will grow jobs.”

    For his part, Trone, who sits on the House Appropriations Committee, said that he has a proven record in Congress of doing the same thing already.

    “We’re going to focus on things that … can really make job growth — and that’s bringing home the dollars,” Trone said. “I brought home last year the sixth most dollars of any member in the Congress in the entire Democratic Party. That’s a big deal. Fixing Boys and Girls Clubs, creating centers for addiction control, mental illness centers, you know, really bringing change back and dollars back to our district. But we’ve got to drive jobs in Maryland. That’s key. And we’ve got to make Maryland more friendly to other states, other employers.”

    When Trone was asked why so many Americans don’t feel like the system has worked for them, the three-term congressman said it’s because too many members of Congress are looking out for themselves and their bank accounts — instead of regular Americans.

    “We need to put people over politics and that’s why I support term limits,” Trone said. He pointed to a measure to limit lawmakers to two terms in the Senate and six terms in the House and to limit Supreme Court terms to 18 years, with every president getting two appointees. In addition, Trone cited measures to ban stockholder trading by members of Congress and to stop them from becoming lobbyists.

    “We need to make big changes in politics if we want to get people taken care of,” Trone said. “We can’t let the same old politics by the same old career politicians continue.”

    Getting things done in the Senate

    Both candidates back the elimination of the Senate filibuster.

    Even when one party controls both chambers of Congress, a need for most legislation to clear 60 votes in the U.S. Senate makes it hard to pass too many big pieces of legislation. For Democrats, that means even if they had majorities in the House and Senate it would be almost impossible to codify the original Roe vs. Wade decision, make the District of Columbia the 51st state, or pass other legislation that might be popular with the left.

    On the flip side, it also means Republicans would have a hard time passing a national abortion ban or outlawing same-sex marriage, to go with other pieces of legislation that might be more popular on the right.

    But Trone and Alsobrooks both say that parliamentary procedure, requiring 60 votes to move things to a vote, needs to go.

    “We certainly need to eliminate the filibuster,” Trone said. “But at the same time, we’ve got to work on bipartisanship. And I was ranked the fourth most bipartisan member of Congress last year. We passed 26 bills on mental health and addiction alone, plus Pell Grants for returning citizens to give them jobs. So we can get a lot of stuff done if we work bipartisan, and we can get to 60 votes.”

    Alsobrooks said the filibuster has become “weaponized” in recent years, and that the exponential increase in its usage by senators in the minority party have hurt the “rights and freedoms of Americans” as a result.

    Asked whether she was concerned that Republican majorities would simply reverse some of those progressive gains as soon as they returned to power, she said no.

    “The history is that the filibuster has been used to block the kinds of legislation that would provide more freedoms,” she said. “And so it’s something that we’d have to look at how it’s done, but I support eliminating it and, at the very least, reforming the filibuster.”

    Asked in a follow up why it’s so hard for the Senate to ever find 60 votes, Trone said lawmakers aren’t doing enough to find common ground on issues that actually exists.

    “I take the time to get to know the other side of the aisle,” Trone said. “We need to sit down with the other side and find common ground. We can find common ground in education. We can find it on criminal justice. We can certainly find it on mental health and addiction. We can find it on business issues. But you got to take the time. The average career politician spends 30% to 40% of their time raising money. They don’t take the time to get to know the other side of the aisle. And that’s what you have to do to get stuff done for America.”

    Israel-Hamas war and campus protests

    Both candidates shared their views on the tensions around the world and America’s role in responding to them.

    The conflict in Gaza has divided the Democratic Party in ways that few other issues have.

    Both candidates took a nuanced stance on the situation there.

    “We’ve got to get a two-state solution,” Trone said. “That’s the only possible way to go. We’ve also got to support our ally Israel and eliminate Hamas. I mean, we have to eliminate Hamas. At the same time, we’ve got to get to a cease-fire with the hostages released. That can’t happen too soon. I’m the co-chairman of the Abraham Accords Caucus and we need to begin to rebuild Gaza after that and help give folks there a real chance to have a life.”

    Alsobrooks said she also still backs a two-state solution, though she acknowledged the “great complexity” of the situation.

    “We are in a moment now where we are really very hopeful that we can, first of all, get the hostages returned and, second of all, get to an immediate cease-fire,” Alsobrooks said. “We have so many concerns regarding the extreme need for humanitarian aid to get into Gaza right now and to stop the killing of civilians. I think we also are in need of a two-state solution, the two-state solution that would allow us to have peace and security for Israelis and peace, security and self-determination for the Palestinians in Gaza. Two states for two people. This is also supported by President Biden — I agree with him on this.”

    At the same time, she also criticized some of the sentiments expressed during protests that have erupted on college campuses around the country.

    “I agree, I’m sure, with every parent and people who are watching this, that we believe that there is no place for hate on any campus … nor should we see assaultive behavior,” Alsobrooks said. “Our kids should not feel fearful. And so antisemitism should never be tolerated in any place, nor should Islamophobia or hate of any kind. There should be no safe space for that to happen and our kids deserve to be safe on these campuses.”

    Trone took a slightly more critical stance, saying while he’s a big believer in free speech, “we can never allow the protests to erupt into violence, and we cannot let the protests impede others from going about their education, going about their job. That cannot be tolerated.”

    So, where do the candidates feel they differ?

    While there were some differences, both candidates took similar stances on the questions posed by WTOP. Asked what policy position they thought provided the most notable difference between the two, they each provided starkly different answers.

    “I think our record on choice is probably the most notable difference,” Alsobrooks said. “I have never compromised my values where choice is concerned and it is the case that Congressman Trone has given hundreds of thousands of dollars, both in his personal capacity, as well as through his business, to some of the most radical Republicans who have passed … very restrictive anti-choice policies across the country.”

    She pointed to Texas official Greg Abbot and Ken Paxton, plus Brian Kemp in Georgia.

    Alsobrooks added, “This is an issue that is of great concern to me, other women and families across the country, especially someone like me. I have an 18-year-old daughter, and I want to make sure that we have in the Senate a person who will fight vigorously, not only for abortion care rights, but reproductive freedom. This is a very personal issue for me.”

    Trone, who has spent tens of millions of his own dollars on the race already, criticized Alsobrooks for raising money from special interests to fund her campaign.

    “She takes special interest money from Exxon, who is not helping us with the environment; from Pfizer, who’s not helping us get low drug prices; from Cigna, who is not helping us on the mental health challenges,” Trone said. “It’s that special interest money. That’s where the biggest difference is.”

    Who can beat Hogan?

    Ultimately, while the race has turned negative in recent weeks, generating harsh feelings between the candidates and their supporters, neither candidate seemed willing to suggest those hard feelings will linger into the general election.

    In fact, both said they were willing to help the other defeat Larry Hogan or whoever else becomes the Republican nominee, though not before each of them expressed confidence that they would be the one who prevails in the primary.

    “I’ll continue fighting to make sure first, that we retain the seat, that the Democrats retain the majority in the Senate,” Alsobrooks said. “I believe I’m the person also to beat Larry Hogan in the general election because there has not been a single poll — after $57 million that David Trone has spent — there’s not been a single poll that has shown him ahead of Hogan. And so I will not only have the people in the general election, but will have the resources to beat Larry Hogan as well.”

    When asked the same question, Trone said: “We’re going to support the Democratic candidate as we move forward. But right now the polls look excellent. People are responding to our mission of people over politics. They’re responding to the fact that we’re not taking special interest money. And we have a record, a real record that nobody else has, for three terms in Congress of being on a mission. I don’t need this job. I’m here on a mission to get stuff done to make America a better place.”

    When each candidate was pressed about whether they would actually campaign for the other, they each said roughly the same thing.

    “I’m willing to support, yes. I will support if he is successful,” Alsobrooks said. “I will support him in the general election.”

    Trone gave almost the exact same answer.

    “We’re actually going to support the Democratic nominee,” he promised.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    John Domen

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