The results are in from Maryland’s June 26 Primary Election. While some races were close and may be changed by the as-yet uncounted absentee and provisional ballots, some things are clear.
In the state’s biggest contest, the race for governor, Democrat Ben Jealous will challenge incumbent Gov. Larry Hogan, who was unopposed on the Republican ticket.
With 1,974 of 1,991 wards reporting, Jealous took 220,145 votes (39.8 percent), while runner-up Rushern Baker took 161,995 votes (29.3 percent). Also on the Democratic primary ballot for Governor were Ralph Jaffe, James Hugh Jones, Valerie Ervin, Rich Madaleno, Alec Ross, Jim Shea and Krish Vingarajah. Ervin took the spot left open by the death of Baltimore County Executive Kevin Kamenetz. Only Jealous and Baker tallied more than 10 percent of the vote.
Jealous’s victory was viewed as a win for progressive elements in the Democratic Party. A former national president of the NAACP, Jealous was endorsed by Sen. Bernie Sanders and the Service Employees International Union. His platform included support for universal healthcare, free college tuition and legalized marijuana.
In the other important state-wide race, incumbent Sen. Ben Cardin surprised no-one in winning the Democratic primary over a field of seven candidates. Cardin’s vote total was more than 450,000, 80.5 percent of the vote. In second place was Chelsea Manning, with just over 32,000 votes, 5.7 percent of the total. Erik Jetmir, Marcia H. Morgan, Jerry Segal, Rikki Vaughn, Rica Wilson and Lih Young all polled below five percent. Cardin is widely considered unbeatable in the general election, but in an anti-incumbent climate, that cannot be taken for granted.
Opposing Cardin in November will be Republican Tony Campbell who defeated 11 rivals for the ballot slot. Campbell registered some 49,000 votes (29 percent), edging out Chris Chafee, who polled just over 40,000 (24 percent). Also on the Republican ballot were Christina Grigorian (17 percent), Evan Cronhardt, Nnabu Eze, John Graziani, Albert Binyahim Howard, Bill Krehnbrink, Gerald Smith Jr., Blaine Taylor, and Brian Vaeth.
Comptroller Peter Franchot and Attorney General Brian Frosh, both incumbents, were unopposed in quests for the Democratic line on the November ballot.
On the Republican side, Anali Reed Phukan will appear in the Republican ballot slot in the Comptroller race, and Craig Wolf will be the party’s candidate for Attorney General. Both were unopposed.
The most hotly contested race on the Eastern Shore was for the Democratic ballot slot to run against 1st District Rep. Andrew Harris. Political newcomer Jesse Colvin led a field of six contenders with more than 13,500 votes, 38 percent of the total. Allison Galbraith was in second place with 9,927 votes, or 28 percent, while Michael Brown, Michael Pullen, Erik Lane and Steven Worton trailed.
On the Republican side, Harris easily won his primary over two rivals, both from the Eastern Shore. Harris ran up 85 percent of the Republican vote, to 9.8 percent for Martin Elborn and 4.4 percent for Lamont Taylor.
In what some have seen as an ominous portent for Colvin’s chances of unseating Harris, Republican turnout in the First District primary was 55,438 to the Democrats’ total of 35,649. Considering that the Democrats had several interesting candidates while Harris had only token opposition, the 20,000-vote gap in turnout is not a good sign for Democrats though. On the other hand, the difference could be explained by other races, both local and statewide, attracting more Republicans than Democrats. But unseating Harris in a strongly Republican district was never expected to be an easy task.
With some 80,000 voters inadvertently removed from the rolls by a malfunction in the voter registration equipment at the Motor Vehicle Administration offices, provisional ballots and absentee voters could have an important role in close races. The final tally will not be official until Friday, July 6, when the absentee ballots and the provisional ballots from the MVA mixup should be counted. On that date, the county boards of election will certify and announce the official results.
For the complete state, county, and local election results in all races both state-wide and in the individual counties and districts see the list at Maryland Board of Elections website.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk