Baltimore Sun Sunday

State’s top Republican stays above the fray

Hogan endorses sparingly, largely avoids fundraisin­g for fellow GOP members

- By Erin Cox

HAGERSTOWN — Republican Gov. Larry Hogan is the most popular political figure in Maryland, but this election season he has largely kept his star power to himself.

In a polarizing election, Hogan has eschewed a governor’s traditiona­l role as de facto head of his political party. He has endorsed just four candidates, headlined a handful of fundraiser­s and made few public appearance­s with candidates on the campaign trail.

“I don’t think I have an obligation to elect Republican­s,” Hogan said during a recent swing through Western Maryland. “I’m going to help the people I think are doing a good job.”

In less than a month, Maryland will elect a new senator to succeed retiring Barbara A. Mikulski, eight members of the House of Representa­tives and new mayor, City Council and comptrolle­r for Baltimore.

Hogan’s judicial, low-key approach to the first political season of his tenure as governor reflects his reluctance to appear partisan and his desire that voters see him

first as a leader, second as member of a political party.

“I’m the highest elected official in the state, who happens to be a Republican,” Hogan said.

With Hogan’s approval rating over 70 percent in a state dominated by Democrats, his endorsemen­t is a prize coveted by many and bestowed on very few. After Hogan publicly backed Senate candidate Kathy Szeliga, the Republican state delegate’s campaign prominentl­y affixed “Hogan endorsed” to her yard signs.

“He’s not blanketedl­y going around giving endorsemen­ts,” Maryland Republican Party executive director Joe Cluster said. “He’s picking and choosing the candidates he agrees with.”

Cluster sees Hogan deploying a longterm strategy that has more to do with keeping his office in 2018, when the state elects a governor who will have considerab­le influence over redrawing legislativ­e and congressio­nal districts. The once-in-adecade opportunit­y would allow Hogan to propose altering political boundaries to give Republican­s an edge.

“The most important election for the Maryland Republican Party is getting Larry Hogan getting re-elected,” said Cluster, also a state delegate.

Maryland’s Republican­s, outnumbere­d more than 2-1 on the voting rolls, expect to make few gains in November. Polls have Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton leading Republican Donald Trump in Maryland by more than 30 percentage points, a circumstan­ce likely to hurt downballot candidates. Hogan aims to maintain a broad appeal. “We’d like to have the support of everybody,” Hogan said. “We could not have possibly been elected — or possibly be as successful as we are — without the overwhelmi­ng support of independen­ts and the unbelievab­le support of crossover Democrats.

“They used to be called Reagan Democrats. Now they’re Hogan Democrats.”

Hogan has neither endorsed nor campaigned for the state’s lone incumbent Republican congressma­n, Rep. Andy Harris, whose Eastern Shore district is considered safe. Hogan has also withheld endorsemen­t of the Republican vying to be the next mayor of Baltimore, where Democrats outnumber Republican­s tenfold.

“His popularity could be useful to me,” said Republican mayoral candidate Alan Walden, who hopes Hogan’s staff will call with an endorsemen­t soon. He believes it would boost his fundraisin­g numbers against better-financed Democrat Catherine E. Pugh, a state senator.

Baltimore County Del. Pat McDonough also wanted a boost from Hogan’s popularity, but he said the governor won’t return phone calls about an endorsemen­t. McDonough is running against incumbent Democrat Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersber­ger in the 2nd Congressio­nal District.

“We’re on borderline selfishnes­s here,” said McDonough, in describing Hogan’s inaction.

“I voted for his legislativ­e agenda. I was on talk radio when nobody thought he could win. I worked very hard for him,” McDonough said. “One of the things about political parties is something called loyalty.”

McDonough predicted an “upset” win for himself even without Hogan, but said it is the governor’s duty to help his party. “If he’s not working for the Republican candidates, he’s working for the Democrats,” McDonough said.

Ruppersber­ger won re-election for the sixth time in 2014 with more than 60 percent of the vote.

Republican­s in Maryland also aren’t united behind Trump at the top of the ticket. McDonough is backing the New York businessma­n, while Hogan said in June he would not vote for his party’s presidenti­al nominee. A recent Washington Post-University of Maryland poll showed that Hogan’s decision helped buoy his support among Maryland Democrats.

Hogan’s choices during this campaign season show “he sees the path to a pretty easy re-election,” said Melissa Deckman, chair of the political science department at Washington College.

“Why go out of your way to endorse candidates who have some sort of link to Donald Trump?” Deckman said, adding that Hogan has “avoided, scrupulous­ly, anything partisan.”

Candidates who receive Hogan’s support have brandished it.

The governor endorsed Republican Matt McDaniel last month in a City Council race against Democrat Zeke Cohen to represent Southeast Baltimore. While Hogan lost in the city two years ago, he carried that particular district.

The governor issued the latest of three congressio­nal endorsemen­ts on Tuesday, backing physician Mark Plaster’s underdog campaign against incumbent Democratic Rep. John P. Sarbanes in the 3rd Congressio­nal District.

When a reporter asked why the governor’s popularity hadn’t rubbed off on other Republican­s, the governor blamed the media for those candidates’ poor name recognitio­n among voters.

“If you folks in the media would pay more attention to these folks who are out there running, they might know them better,” Hogan said.

Hogan made his first congressio­nal endorsemen­t — of Szeliga — in July. She has campaigned on it ever since.

The “Hogan endorsed” addition “reminds Marylander­s that Kathy Szeliga is of the exact same mold as Larry Hogan,” said Leslie Shedd, Szeliga’s deputy campaign manager.

Szeliga’s fundraisin­g lags far behind that of her opponent, Democratic Rep. Chris Van Hollen, but a fundraiser Hogan headlined for Szeliga took in more than $60,000. Shedd said it was one of the most lucrative events of Szeliga’s campaign.

This weekend, Hogan campaigned in Western Maryland with Szeliga and 6th Congressio­nal District candidate Amie Hoeber. Hogan endorsed Hoeber last month.

“He charms everyone, and that’s obviously a help to me,” Hoeber said, adding she thinks a Friday fundraiser with the governor was her most successful yet.

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 ??  ?? Larry Hogan
Larry Hogan
 ?? JOSHUA MCKERROW/BALTIMORE SUN MEDIA GROUP ?? Gov. Larry Hogan, center, has only endorsed four candidates in this election cycle. Third District congressio­nal hopeful Mark Plaster, right, is one of them.
JOSHUA MCKERROW/BALTIMORE SUN MEDIA GROUP Gov. Larry Hogan, center, has only endorsed four candidates in this election cycle. Third District congressio­nal hopeful Mark Plaster, right, is one of them.

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