Maryland voters embrace rare chance to help determine US Senate control
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[October 30, 2024]
By BRIAN WITTE
CHESTER, Md. (AP) — Republican Jon Michael hasn't always been a fan of
Larry Hogan, who has been one of the GOP's sharpest critics of Donald
Trump, but he voted for Hogan for U.S. Senate. Democrat Diane Stokes
crossed party lines to vote for Hogan to be Maryland's governor, but
she's not supporting him this time.
Both are quick to point out the high stakes in the race between Hogan
and Democrat Angela Alsobrooks in a deeply blue state.
As early voting began on a breezy autumn day last week, Marylanders
began sorting through a swirl of conflicting sentiment. On the Eastern
Shore, a rural part of the state that is more conservative than
Maryland's larger population centers, some Trump-loyal Republicans
wrestled with their unease about Hogan, while others voted for him with
enthusiasm. On the other side of the Chesapeake Bay, some Democrats in
Annapolis weighed their fondness for Hogan against their fears of
contributing to a Republican Senate majority.
Michael, who describes himself as a far-right voter, was unhappy about
Hogan's write-in vote of former President Ronald Reagan instead of Trump
for president in 2020. He didn't agree with Hogan's COVID-19 policies,
either. But Michael said he believes Hogan is good for Maryland overall,
especially compared to the alternative.
“I think the Republican Party needs to be in power," Michael, 54, said
at an early voting center on Kent Island on the bay, a gateway to the
Eastern Shore. "While I’m not a fan of Larry Hogan in all respects, he’s
our best option.”
On the other side of the Chesapeake, Democrats in the state capital of
Annapolis were keenly aware of how important the Senate race is this
year. While a Republican hasn't won a Senate seat in Maryland in more
than 40 years, Hogan was a popular governor who won enough Democratic
votes to prevail in statewide races in 2014 and 2018.
On Monday, some Democrats who supported Hogan for governor attended a
news conference with Gov. Wes Moore, a Democrat, to emphasize how it's
different this time.
“Many of my friends and I — many of whom did vote for Larry Hogan for
governor — are deeply concerned about the Senate majority," said Stokes,
of Hyattsville. "Kamala Harris needs Maryland to deliver a Senate
majority, and that’s exactly what we want to do.”
The potential for the race to determine Senate control has weighed
heavily on the minds of many voters, who don't see this much in a state
where Democrats outnumber Republicans 2-1.
Democrats currently hold a 51-49 Senate advantage, including independent
senators who caucus with Democrats. And Democrats are defending 23 of
the 33 Senate seats on the ballot around the country this November.
If Hogan wins Maryland’s open Senate seat, Republicans will have a clear
path to a majority.
Both major parties have invested heavily in advertising on the race,
according to AdImpact, which tracks campaign spending — with neither
side establishing a clear advantage. Between the May 14 primaries and
Tuesday, the two campaigns and partisan groups supporting them had spent
more than $35 million apiece on the race, data shows, with roughly
two-thirds coming from outside groups.
Democrat Paula Dickerson, 70, said she gave Hogan a lot of thought. The
stakes of Senate control, however, made it too hard for her to support
him.
“It did, because without the Senate going in the Democratic way, it
would change policy," Dickerson said after voting for Alsobrooks and
Vice President Kamala Harris for president on Kent Island. "It would
make it so much harder for the candidate on the top.”
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Democrat Angela Alsobrooks, right, the county executive of
Maryland's Prince George's County who is running for U.S. Senate,
talks to students at the University of Maryland in College Park,
Md., during a campaign stop, Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. (AP
Photo/Brian Witte)
Republican Liza Hamill said she voted for Hogan, because she
believes he was the best governor Maryland has had for “a very, very
long time.” Hamill, who also voted for Trump, said Hogan's criticism
of the former president didn't bother her.
“Larry Hogan was saying the truth: Donald Trump is an ass," Hamill,
who is 68, said after voting on Kent Island. "He does stupid things,
and he says stupid things, but his overall objective is much better
for our country in my opinion than the Democratic Party.”
About 40 miles away, in the suburbs of the nation's capital in
Prince George's County, Bonnie Hadley was volunteering at a phone
bank for Alsobrooks, after voting for her and Harris on Maryland's
first day of early voting. The 69-year-old said she was volunteering
for a political campaign for the first time ever because she
believes so much is riding on this election, including democracy
itself.
“In my lifetime, it’s the most important election," Hadley said,
noting that Barack Obama's 2008 victory also was huge. "But this is
even more important to me, because democracy is so much at risk at
this point.”
Alsobrooks, chief executive of majority-Black Prince George’s
County, would be Maryland’s first Black senator. Making a campaign
stop with retiring Democratic Sen. Ben Cardin in her home county
last week, she noted palpable energy at early voting centers.
“They’re fired up about, many of them, electing a woman to the
Senate, and some of them just feel that I represent their values,
but it’s also keeping the Senate blue,” Alsobrooks said.
At the University of Maryland, College Park, the state's flagship
university, students gathered to hear Alsobrooks at a campaign stop.
Peyton McDonald, a 19-year-old sophomore from Cumberland in western
Maryland, said she planned to vote by mail for Alsobrooks.
“I think having a Black woman senator from the state of Maryland
would be a good representation for the state, and I think she’s done
good work as the Prince George’s county executive that we’ve been
able to see being students in Prince George's County," McDonald
said.
About 20 miles away in Millersville, Hogan told supporters he's used
to being an underdog. He noted that he was behind in polls when he
won his first race for governor.
“You know, they say lightning can’t strike twice. We’re going to
make lightning strike three times,” Hogan told a cheering crowd.
Republican Virginia Umberger, 72, who was in the audience, said
she'd be voting for him. She cited Hogan's leadership during the
COVID-19 pandemic and his willingness to be independent.
“I love that he stands up to anyone that he doesn’t agree with,
because he’s more about principle than about getting along,"
Umberger said.
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AP's Leah Askarinam of the Decision Desk in Washington contributed
to this report.
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