Blog - This Reporter
Thursday, September 24, 2009
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Steele

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For the second time in two weeks I got “dis-invited” to a fundraiser for
a local candidate that featured Republican National Committee Chairman
Michael Steele. Boo hoo.

State government really has reached a new level of transparency with
the live webcasting of video from the Board of Public Works. The participants will clearly take some getting used to
the presence of robotic cameras and microphones which follow the sound
of speech. They picked up a number of personal conversations on today’s
webcast.

The weather was hot and humid, the crabs were warm
and spicy, and the politicians and their supporters were sweating
buckets. It was a typical annual Tawes Crab and Clam Bake. The big name politicos spend most of the time reaching out to
voters and posing for photos, rarely touching a crab or clam.
Passing the Double-T Diner on Route 40 at Rolling Road in Catonsville, this reporter did a double take Saturday. There was a sign for Republican Bob Ehrlich and a little distance away, a sign for Democrat Martin O'Malley, both hoping to go head-to-head for governor. On the same strip of right-of-way, there were large signs for Kevin Kamenetz and Joe Bartenfelder, two Democratic Baltimore County Council members running against each other for county executive. The diner manager was off duty, but a hostess and a waiter said the eatery had nothing to do with the signs in the right-of-way.
--Len Lazarick
Former Maryland first lady Kendel Ehrlich told a group of Republican women Wednesday that the campaign pitting her husband, ex-Gov. Bob Ehrlich, against Democratic Gov. Martin O’Malley “is going to be ugly.”

Before keynoting Thursday night’s GOP fundraiser, former
Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, a once and possibly future candidate for
president, stopped at an Arnold ball park where ex-Gov. Bob Ehrlich was
watching son Drew’s baseball game. “I’m just a scout for the Red Sox,” Romney joked, before endorsing Ehrlich's re-election bid.

Marylanders need better access to primary care doctors and more
information about their medical choices, according to a group of
doctors and nurses, insurance companies, and business groups advising
the state about how to implement federal health care reform legislation.

Economist Anirban Basu told members of the Maryland Economic
Development Association that he foresees what some Maryland Republicans
have been predicting for months. Taxes will go up next year, he said, and state aid to local governments will go down.
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