Former NAACP President Jealous Wins Dem Governor Nomination In Maryland

BALTIMORE, MD - JUNE 26:Ben Jealous wins the Democratic primary for Maryland Governor and addresses the crowd gathered at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African-American History & Culture June 26, 2018 in Baltimore, MD. Jealous is the former National President and CEO of the NAACP. (Photo by Katherine Frey/The Washington Post)
BALTIMORE, MD - JUNE 26: Ben Jealous wins the Democratic primary for Maryland Governor and addresses the crowd gathered at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African-American History & Culture June 26, 2018... BALTIMORE, MD - JUNE 26: Ben Jealous wins the Democratic primary for Maryland Governor and addresses the crowd gathered at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African-American History & Culture June 26, 2018 in Baltimore, MD. Jealous is the former National President and CEO of the NAACP. (Photo by Katherine Frey/The Washington Post via Getty Images) MORE LESS
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BALTIMORE (AP) — Former NAACP President Ben Jealous won the Maryland Democratic nomination for governor on Tuesday, giving him a shot at becoming the state’s first black governor and setting up a battle between the progressive candidate and a popular Republican incumbent.

Jealous beat Prince George’s County Executive Rushern Baker in the crowded primary.

In November, Jealous faces Gov. Larry Hogan, who hopes to become the first GOP governor re-elected in Maryland since 1954. Hogan was unchallenged for his party’s nomination.

Jealous said his goal is not just to win an election, but build a movement and lead into law a new agenda.

“I know there is skepticism that Larry Hogan can be beaten,” Jealous said. “Well, we’ve got a message for those who think this race is already over. Larry Hogan will lose in November because he is not ready to run against someone who knows how to build a true people-powered grassroots campaign.”

“Today we have come together, from all corners of Maryland, to send a message to the Republican Administration in Annapolis — that their time in power is coming to an end,” Jealous said.

Hogan campaign manager Jim Barnett said Maryland voters will have a clear choice in November, describing the governor as “a steady hand who has worked in a bipartisan way.”

“In Ben Jealous, they find a risky blend of ideological extremism and recklessness who would move Maryland in the opposite direction and toward the bitter partisanship and dysfunction that poisons Washington,” Barnett said.

Dan Lessard, a human resources manager of Kingstown, Maryland, voted for Jealous and said he brings youth and diversity to the campaign: “I like the fact that he was head of the NAACP,” the 56-year-old added.

Thomas Vail of Easton and his wife, Wanda, both voted for Jealous but didn’t rule out voting for Hogan in November.

“Hogan has stood up to the present administration in Washington,” said Vail, 68, who retired from the aviation industry. “He has an independent streak.”

Jealous supports tuition-free college educations and expanding Medicare to all. He advocates raising teacher pay by 29 percent and funding full-day, universal pre-kindergarten with tax revenue from his proposal to legalize marijuana for recreational use.

Jealous won support from leading liberals on the national stage, including Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who rallied with him in Silver Spring. Sens. Cory Booker of New Jersey and Kamala Harris of California also endorsed him. Comedian Dave Chappelle and Ben Cohen, a co-founder of Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream, made stops in Maryland to appear with him.

In 2008 at age 35, Jealous became the youngest person elected to lead the Baltimore-based NAACP, the nation’s oldest civil rights organization. After five years at the helm, Jealous was credited with improving its finances and donor base.

Jealous campaigned on plans to reduce the prison population to save money. One proposal includes ending cash bail.

Hogan is popular in the state, where Democrats control many other elected offices. He has kept President Donald Trump at arm’s length, not attending the Republican presidential convention in 2016 and writing in his father’s name in presidential voting that year. More recently, Hogan responded to the immigrant family separation crisis on the U.S. border with Mexico by ordering home Maryland’s four National Guard members deployed to the Southwest.

Jealous ran in a diverse primary that included nine candidates, including two all-female tickets. While crowded, the primary, for the most part, was a quiet one with the candidates agreeing on many issues and focusing criticism on the governor. However, the sudden death of one candidate, Baltimore County Executive Kevin Kamenetz, shook up the race in May.

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  1. “Hogan has stood up to the present administration in Washington,” said Vail, 68, who retired from the aviation industry. “He has an independent streak.”

    I am curious about people’s perception on this, living in Maryland, I have not seen this. What I have noted is that Hogan is reasonably good at remaining focused on state issues without Republican extremism. Maybe that is what they are saying, but I find that a low hurdle.

  2. I don’t live in MD. IMO, Jealous will lose because Hogan (much like Baker in MA) is seen as a sane Rethug and therefore worth preserving. I just don’t see enough Dem opposition to Hogan to make him really vulnerable.

    Jealous said his goal is not just to win an election, but build a movement and lead into law a new agenda.

    Personally, I don’t see this game plan as garnering a lot of votes in MD.

  3. Avatar for grokz grokz says:

    I’m also in MD. IMHO Hogan, like Paul Ryan, tends to avoid commenting on Trump when possible. He has pushed back here and there but he seems to do only the minimum (though he pulled National Guard troops from the border). I think by doing this he looks less like a typical partisan bomb thrower like an Andy Harris so Dems consider this to be moderate.

    I think it’s fair to compare him to Bob Ehrlich who spent his term whining and complaining and was in many high profile fights with the Legislature. Hogan is much more low key and I think basically flying under everyone’s radar.

    I wonder if he would be different in a second term.

  4. Avatar for paulw paulw says:

    IOKIYAR. These days they have managed to lower expectations so much that if they’re not actively corrupt and foaming at the mouth everybody considers them “reasonable”. And mostly without losing tribal loyalty in the general election.

  5. Ok, my additional two cents on this.

    Hogan is how some Republicans act when they are surrounded by Democrats in all the other positions (Maryland is a heavily Democratic state). In other words, with a lot of strong guard rails, sure some Republicans can stay on the road to getting things done and act civilly. But we should rightfully see that as an incredibly low bar.

    I wrote to Governor Hogan at the beginning of the Trump administration when it had become really clear that serious issues were developing in the new administration based on Trump’s choices in nominees. The Governor had nothing to contribute at the time as I remember. Clearly a moderate Republican, if Hogan is, had a responsibility and opportunity there. The only time to have any influence would be at the beginning of a new administration. As to pulling National Guard Troops, not participating in child kidnappings (government sponsored) again is a low bar in a Democratic state.

    That said, I understand why he has done little. Moderate Republicans have a precarious perch in the Republican party and are at best ignored. For Hogan to have any further path forward with Republicans, he will have to prove he is not a RHINO. So, I do believe that you are correct to question his second term because when does he prove his bona fides as a “Republican”?

    The problem for Hogan is that Maryland is a heavily Democratic state in a year where Democrats are mobilized. Off-year elections (like the Maryland Governorship) allow Republicans to slide into office because Democrats often do not participate in off-year elections. Also, while heavily Democratic, the Democratic voters here do not have much patience for low quality Democratic politicians. Our enthusiasm can wane very quickly.

    So this really depends on how good a candidate Ben Jealous turns out to be.

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