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To: fieldmarshaldj; kabar; Impy; GOPsterinMA

Living in nearby Maryland’s Howard county I can appreciate what kabar observes in VA.

I have seen exactly the same thing happen in this county, endless development and lots of immigration lured by high paying jobs.
I barely recognize this place from my memories

This county was conservative in 1994 when Dems got beat(I recall that election a black Republican was in line ahead of me ), by 2004 it voted Dem now it is solid DEM, and they keep on building and coming,

Obama being a educated smart sounding brown definitely resonated with our newer members, especially compared to McCain and Romney. .


27 posted on 01/14/2014 7:59:48 PM PST by sickoflibs (Obama : 'If you like your Doctor you can keep him, PERIOD! Don't believe the GOPs warnings')
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To: sickoflibs

Howard County went to the dark side well before that. It hasn’t voted Republican for President since 1988. Given that it’s wedged between the Baltimore/DC morass, it’s amazing it lasted that long. I’d probably say the most horrific example of decline is Prince Georges County. It went from 41% Republican in 1984 to 9% (!) in 2012. Even more Democrat than the city of Baltimore.

Maryland has always been a difficult state for the GOP. Some statewide offices have been continuously Democrat since the 19th century. Since after 1958, it has only elected a Republican twice (1966 with Agnew, and that was because the Democrats split the vote in a 3-way race and Agnew ran to the left of the Dem nominee, George Mahoney; and 2002 with Bob Ehrlich) — or three times if you count Glendening’s pretty glaring theft in 1994 of Ellen Sauerbrey’s victory.

It also hasn’t voted for a centrist Republican for Senator since 1970 (Glenn Beall, Jr.) or for a bonafide Conservative since John Marshall Butler in 1956 (note I don’t count the execrable leftist Chuck Mathias, who was all but planning to switch parties if he ran again in 1986). My former Senator from TN, Bill Brock, even ran in 1994 against Sarbanes, and fared about as well as could be expected.

Add to that the very weak presence of the GOP in the legislature, even in decades past when the party was carrying the Presidency. It just simply has never been a competitive two-party state below the federal level, and even that is gone. It’s also curious that Black Democrats in MD have gone along with Whites in keeping them from winning more offices (with more racially-drawn lines, the GOP would up the number of wins, especially in Congressional seats). It will be curious to see if MD Dems give the Gubernatorial nod to Anthony Brown, seeing how hesitant they’ve been towards Black candidates statewide.


28 posted on 01/14/2014 8:27:02 PM PST by fieldmarshaldj (Resist We Much)
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