If you read Andy Harris’ campaign website, you’d think that he actually supports workers, has helped businesses grow, and has created job opportunities. But if you look at his
voting record, you’ll see that "Dr. No" is an apt nickname.
Andy Harris claims to have helped lower unemployment rates in every county in the 1st District. He claims to have been working to make America more competitive by helping U.S. industries adapt and grow, hire new employees, and invest in research and development.
But he has actually voted No in the past two years on most legislation that benefits workers and employers. Harris has voted No on legislation:
• Providing assistance to child care providers during covid-19 closures
• Increasing the tax credit for child care
• Guaranteeing rights for TSA workers
• Extending protections to labor organizers
• Protecting workers against age discrimination
• Establishing a certified agricultural worker immigration status
• Improving the H-2A temporary worker program (that provides workers for Eastern Shore crab processing facilities)
• Requiring the U.S. Department of Labor to address workplace violence in the healthcare and social services sectors
• Prohibiting forced arbitration of employee workplace grievances
• Protecting coastal and marine economies from oil leases
• Supporting pensions
• Increasing the federal minimum wage
• Guaranteeing equal pay for equal work
• Increasing federal civilian workers’ pay for 2019
Harris voted Yes on:
• The first three coronavirus relief packages (but No on the fourth and fifth)
• The United States–Mexico–Canada Trade Agreement (USMCA)
• Granting shutdown pay for federal employees
Harris did not sponsor or co-sponsor any legislation at all that came to a vote in the last two years.
His ratings by labor unions range from 0 percent to 33 percent.
It is hard to look at Andy Harris’ record and see any real accomplishments for business, the economy, or labor. He claims he will continue to advocate for reduced government regulations and support tax cuts for businesses and workforce development.
Mia Mason is the Democrat running against Andy Harris. She has no voting record to scrutinize, but her positions to protect workers and promote economic growth are clearly laid out on her
website:
• Provide a living wage and workers' rights for everyone
• Support unions and better compensation plans for workers, including higher pay for teachers
• Provide incentives for manufacturers to bring new opportunities to the lower Eastern Shore
• Aid businesses and promote economic growth by providing improved transportation and commerce routes on the Eastern Shore
• Create jobs in the renewable energy industry and through the building of sustainable infrastructure and manufacturing on the Eastern Shore
• Build our future through new infrastructure and advancing new technologies
• Provide access to affordable broadband internet for the entire district, including rural communities
• Guarantee farmers a universal basic income
• Ensure corporate agriculture doesn’t buy out debt from family farmers to make them fold
• Provide farms with better access to technology and automated systems and services
This election is important. The 1st District requires representation in Congress that will address the needs of the country and the district in the 21st Century. Will that be two more years of "Dr. No," or will we elect someone with a real plan to bring prosperity to the Eastern Shore workers and economy?
Jan Plotczyk
spent 25 years as a statistician with the federal government, at the Census Bureau and the National Center for Education Statistics. She retired to Rock Hall.