Posts Tagged ‘Maryland politics’

Immigrants Press for Passage of Md. DREAM Act

Tuesday, March 8th, 2011
alan-marroquin-imm-rally-030711

Alan Marroquin, a student member of Casa de Maryland, at a meeting between state Sen. Jennie M. Forehand, D-Montgomery County, and pro-immigrant demonstrators in Annapolis. (Photo by Maryland Newsline's Maite Fernandez)

ANNAPOLIS – Hundreds of immigrants converged at the State House Monday to press legislators to pass the Maryland DREAM Act, a bill that would allow students to pay in-state college tuition regardless of their immigration status, if they graduated from a Maryland high school and attended that school for at least two years.

“This is the future of Maryland,” Gustavo Torres, director of the advocacy group Casa de Maryland, told the crowd. He added passage in Maryland could send a strong message to the nation. A similar proposal failed in Congress in December.

A preliminary Senate vote is expected this week.

Torres and others also said they opposed anti-immigration laws being considered by the General Assembly. State Del. Pat McDonough, R-Baltimore County, introduced more than a dozen different bills targeting illegal immigration.

McDonough said in a telephone interview he is opposed to the in-state tuition bill because it benefits people who don’t have a lawful presence in the state. He says it would be expensive.

The state Department of Legislative Services estimates it could cost taxpayers about $3.5 million by fiscal year 2016.

McDonough added that it could cause legal immigrants and Maryland students seeking acceptance to public universities to lose spots. “I think that’s utterly unfair,” McDonough said.

Casa de Maryland organized the demonstration, arranging for 38 buses to take demonstrators to the state capital.

Among the participants were students from several high schools, faith leaders and their congregations and small businesses and organizations, who met with legislators to express their concerns before rallying at Lawyer’s Mall in front of the State House.

Demonstrators said the Maryland DREAM Act is critical because the higher out-of-state tuition rates have kept many illegal immigrants who attended Maryland high schools from attending college.

According to the bill’s fiscal note, the difference between in-state and out-of-state tuition rates for full-time undergraduates averages more than $10,000 a year, based on proposed fall 2011 rates.

Advocates for the bill argue that it would give some undocumented students who would qualify as Maryland residents the chance to go to college.

“Yes, we can,” some of the students chanted in Spanish.

Carlos Hernandez, a volunteer at Casa de Maryland, told Montgomery County senators and delegates he opposed anti-immigration bills and the use of E-Verify, a program that allows employers to check the immigration status of potential workers.

One of McDonough’s bills would require all contractors working for the state to use the federal E-Verify program.

Hernandez said the state shouldn’t be using its resources to verify the legal status of workers who only want to bring food to their families.

“E-Verify is a proven, successful program,” McDonough said, and added that the federal government already uses it.

“The only reason anyone would be against is that philosophically they believe it’s OK to violate the law and be rewarded and receive a job,” he said.

Demonstrators also raised concerns about the Secure Communities program, which allows local police to check the fingerprints of detainees against immigration records to identify illegal immigrants. The program has already been implemented in 13 jurisdictions in Maryland, among them Prince George’s and Baltimore counties, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement data.

ICE officials said recently that the program is mandatory and the agency expects every jurisdiction in the country to participate by 2013.

Critics argue that the program can lead to racial profiling and that immigrants will refrain from reporting crimes to the police for fear of being deported.

The Senate Education, Health and Environmental Affairs Committee voted 7 to 4 last week to approve the Maryland DREAM Act. The bill is scheduled to be heard Wednesday in the House Ways and Means Committee.

More photos in slide show.

–By Maryland Newsline’s Maite Fernandez

O’Malley Says Tough Decisions Make Better Future

Tuesday, February 1st, 2011
Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley addresses a governing conference

Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley addresses states' immediate economic future. Capital News Service photo by Laura E. Lee

State governments have to make “tough choices” that include spending cuts and balancing budgets, said Gov. Martin O’Malley at the National Press Club on Tuesday as keynote speaker for the Outlook in the States and Localities conference hosted by Governing magazine.

“Constant streamlining, constant closings, constant consolidations have become the new normal of governing and I am sure that is true in all of your states,” he told the crowd of about 200 people.

The difficult decisions are necessary, he said, to improve the future for the next generation.

“No generation of Americans ever built monuments to their own comfort,” he said. The tough decisions are made because “we want our children to be winners in this change to a new economy.”

At several points in the speech, O’Malley echoed President Obama’s words from last week’s State of the Union about “winning the future.”

With 87 cents of every general fund dollar spent on public education, public safety and public health, there are limited resources for other areas of government like the judicial system, environmental protection and economic development, he said.

Part of the current economic struggle is the result of increased health care costs, O’Malley said. “I think one of the biggest drains on the innovative capacity of our economy in recent years has been the rapidly escalating, out of control cost of health care.” Businesses have difficulty investing in new hiring, marketing, expansion and skills development when health care costs are so high, he explained.

O’Malley warned that states that do not embrace health care reform risk losses in the long-term. “We believe that states that are slow to adapt and slow to embrace this will lose out in this new competitive, this innovation edge, that will come to those states that figure out how to control those costs,” he said.

All the economic news is not bleak. The state gained 26,000 net new jobs in the innovation economy last year– the best year of new job creation since the recession began, he said.

O’Malley praised the education system, noting that, unlike any other state, Maryland’s university system has avoided any tuition increase in the last four years.

He explained that Maryland governmental units track and monitor data to improve efficiency and reduce costs.

Governing magazine named O’Malley a 2009 Public Official of the Year for his “data-driven approach to policy and administration.”

The speech comes in advance of the governor’s fifth State of the State address scheduled for Thursday at noon.

-By Capital News Service’s Laura E. Lee

GOP Rival Hits Ehrlich on Credibility

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

Brian Murphy was one Maryland Republican who said he didn’t pay much attention to former Gov. Robert Ehrlich’s official gubernatorial campaign announcement Wednesday in Rockville.

Murphy was busy doing campaigning of his own, because he’s hoping to beat Ehrlich in the Republican primary for the chance to take on Democratic Gov. Martin O’Malley in the general election.

Murphy described himself as a “finance guy” Thursday at a Maryland GOP town hall meeting at the Leisure World retirement community in Silver Spring.

“Ronald Reagan was once a Democrat, we all know this. I was once a Democrat. I was a blue-dog, fiscal conservative Democrat. But the modern Democrat Party are people who are big-hearted and generous with other people’s money and, frankly, bad at math,” said Murphy.

He positioned himself as a moderate, dollars-and-cents type of Republican as he spoke to the group of about 50 senior citizens, but in an interview after his speech, Murphy turned his fire on Ehrlich.

“The numbers tell the truth. Ehrlich grew the government more than O’Malley did. And that’s not what Maryland blue-dog Democrats cross for,” Murphy said.

Murphy said Maryland needs a fiscal conservative to restore balance to Annapolis, and Ehrlich has already proven that he doesn’t fit the bill.

“If he did it when he was the governor, frankly, he might still be governor,” said Murphy. “He was a better governor than O’Malley, but that’s a pretty low bar.”

Murphy said he has a better chance than Ehrlich of getting moderate Democrats and independents to swing Republican, which is always important in a heavily Democratic state like Maryland.

A resident of Chevy Chase who grew up on the Eastern Shore, Murphy has an MBA in finance from the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School and is the founder of the Plimhimmon Group investment firm.

The day before Ehrlich’s long-awaited announcement, Murphy made some noise by winning the endorsement of former state GOP chairman Jim Pelura, who resigned the post in November after a rash of party infighting.

This year’s primary election is scheduled for Sept. 14.

–By Capital News Service’s Graham Moomaw

Dougherty Divided on Presidential Candidates

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

Party politics aren’t exactly crystal clear these days to the Democratic nominee in Maryland’s 6th Congressional District.

Though Jennifer Dougherty voted for Sen. Hillary Clinton last month in Maryland’s Democratic primary, she said she’s not sure which presidential nominee would help her more at the polls in November.

She’s glad she only had to make the decision once.

“I wasn’t asked to endorse anybody, and I’m happy about that,” said the former mayor of Frederick. “I’ve already cast my vote in the primary, I’m not a superdelegate — I don’t get to make another choice.”

Speaking at her campaign’s office above her restaurant, Jennifer’s, in Old Town Frederick, Dougherty said she’s mulled the merits of running alongside either Clinton, D-N.Y., or Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill.

She agreed she could stand to benefit from portions of the Democratic electorate both candidates are associated with. Obama has had strong support from young voters, while Clinton brings female voters.

Dougherty said she originally supported Clinton for the senator’s well-fleshed-out plans. But now, she thinks Obama’s strong speeches and apparent desire to stay above the fray will lead him to the nomination.

“I think the nod goes to the new-school guy right now,” she said. “Obama is inspirational — he makes people want to get involved in a positive way.”

In her first campaign since losing a bitterly fought primary for her mayoral seat in 2005, she said she’s learned a lesson about rough campaigns.

“Obama, which is why he’s so impressive, he stays out of that — the nasty side of politics — and I’m gonna try to stay out of that, too,” Dougherty said. “I don’t want to relive painful experiences.”

-By Capital News Service’s Ben Meyerson

Obama Wins Big in Maryland, But Clinton Takes 8 Counties

Tuesday, February 26th, 2008

Although Sen. Barack Obama beat Sen. Hillary Clinton convincingly in Maryland’s Democratic primary — 60.6 percent to 35.9 percent – eight counties denied the Illinois senator a clean sweep.

 

Allegany, Garrett and Washington counties in Western Maryland; Caroline, Queen Anne’s and Worcester on the Eastern Shore; Cecil County in northeastern Maryland and Carroll County in central Maryland each went for the New York senator, according to unofficial results from the Maryland State Board of Elections.

 

Clinton’s biggest vote margin came in Cecil County, where she beat Obama by 2,209 votes. Her smallest vote margin came in Caroline, where she beat Obama by 78 votes.

 

David Paulson, communications director for the Maryland Democratic Party, declined to comment on the county returns.

 

But he did have something to say about voter turnout. “Well over 800,000 Democrats were so inspired to go to the polls in the sleet, ice and dead of night,” Paulson said. “And we know that both candidates inspired the turnout.”

 

According to the Maryland State Board of Elections’ unofficial primary presidential results, 821,682 Democrats headed to the polls on Tuesday, well ahead of the 486,449 who voted in 2004 and the 514,653 in 2000.

 

–By Maryland Newsline’s Michelle Williams