Baltimore Sun

Baltimore Dems divide over heated Senate race

Contest between Jill Carter, J.D. Merrill turns negative

- By Luke Broadwater

An increasing­ly negative state Senate race between members of two storied Baltimore families pursuing a seat vacated by a felon whose name remains on the ballot is dividing powerful city Democrats.

State Sen. Jill P. Carter, the 53-year-old daughter of renowned civil rights leader Walter P. Carter, has been the subject of negative online ads from challenger J.D. Merrill, the 27-year-old son-in-law of former Gov. Martin O’Malley.

On a website called “Where Was Jill?” Merrill accuses Carter of missing 1,600 floor votes — or roughly 7 percent — during the 14 years she served as a delegate in the General Assembly.

Carter’s supporters have hit back, defending her record in Annapolis and accusing Merrill of embracing a racist stereotype. Merrill is white. Carter is black.

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Each day, more influentia­l Democrats are choosing sides.

Mayor Catherine Pugh, City Council President Bernard C. “Jack” Young, pastors, unions and activists are backing Carter, the former director of the mayor’s Office of Civil Rights and a longtime critic of O’Malley.

Merrill has picked up support from activist DeRay Mckesson, state Sen. Bill Ferguson, City Councilman Brandon Scott and community associatio­n presidents. This week, former Mayor Sheila Dixon endorsed Merrill.

“What we are seeing is a new struggle where fault lines in the Democratic Party are emerging,” said Roger Hartley, dean of the University of Baltimore’s College of Public Affairs. “Since Merrill is not as establishe­d, his campaign is picking fights to raise name recognitio­n.

“There’s going to be a little blood left on the mat.”

The two candidates in the Democratic primary on June 26 are running for the 41st District Senate seat in Northwest Baltimore, previously held by Nathaniel T. Oaks. Oaks resigned in April before he was convicted of federal corruption charges. His name remains on the ballot, despite efforts by Oaks and others to remove it, potentiall­y complicati­ng the election.

Republican Gov. Larry Hogan, a harsh O’Malley critic, appointed Carter to fill Oaks’ seat, bestowing her with the benefit of incumbency.

Political strategist Catalina Byrd, who is not working for either candidate, said Oaks’ name on the ballot will likely help Merrill because Oaks is likely to draw votes from Carter. She said Carter’s team needs to ramp up door-knocking efforts to let voters know Oaks is no longer in the race.

“Some people might still vote for him,” Byrd said.

The 41st District — which snakes through North, West and Southwest Baltimore — is composed largely of predominan­tly black neighborho­ods such as Edmondson Village and Forest Park, but it also includes majority-white neighborho­ods such as Roland Park and Mount Washington. For years, its delegation has included both black and white lawmakers.

Merrill has a significan­t financial advantage. He reported $115,000 in campaign funds in his most recent fundraisin­g report. Carter reported $41,000.

Merrill has received financial support from the leaders of several powerful Baltimore organizati­ons, including the Abell Foundation, the Goldseker Foundation, the Kearney-O’Doherty Public Affairs firm and the Gallagher Evelius & Jones law firm.

Merrill began knocking on doors and meeting voters months before Carter. He argues his negative ads are not attacks, but educationa­l.

“I’m able to quantify that she hasn’t been there in Annapolis,” he said. “This is factual.”

Carter, who served in the House of Delegates from 2003 to 2017, was the highest vote-getter in her campaigns before she resigned to become Pugh’s director of Civil Rights and Wage Enforcemen­t. She said some of her missed votes came when she was dealing with serious health issues and caring for her dying mother.

Other times, Carter says, she chose to skip votes on bills bound to pass so she could focus on buiding support for other proposals.

Carter led a legislativ­e effort opposing the constructi­on of a new youth jail in Balti- more, and sponsored a law that requires police to undergo more training on use of force, cultural diversity and lifesaving skills.

Carter was a prominent critic of Mayor O’Malley and his Police Department’s use of what she characteri­zes as the illegal mass arrest of thousands who were released without charges.

Carter also sponsored a law that requires state officials to publish lists of missing children and oversee local search efforts.

She says she often felt marginaliz­ed in Annapolis by lawmakers who resisted her proposals to increase civilian oversight of police, expunge arrest records and increase school funding for Baltimore. She says she could have more impact as a senator. She says Merrill lacks legislativ­e experience.

Carter recently took a leave of absence from her director’s job at City Hall after city lawyers determined she could not hold a Senate seat and direct a city office at the same time. Carter said she hopes to return as a deputy if she wins.

Dayvon Love, policy director for Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle, said he supports Carter because she is present in the community. During the protests that followed the death of Freddie Gray in 2015, Carter, a lawyer, went to Baltimore’s Central Booking and Intake Facility to support activists who had been arrested, Love said.

“Lots of people remember her walking into Central Booking and assuring them they’d be OK,” Love said. “I don’t know if there is another elected official who is that present in the community.”

Carter recently picked up the endorsemen­t of City Councilman Ryan Dorsey, who is offering to match donations to her. He said Merrill used to live in his Northeast Baltimore district but only recently moved into the 41st.

“Jill Carter has the most credible record fighting against racial injustice of anybody in the whole state legislatur­e,” Dorsey said. “J.D. Merrill has run a blatantly racist, negative campaign because he can’t measure up to her record. He’s feeding into the racist portrayal of the lazy black woman. It’s the exact opposite of what any progressiv­e white man should do."

Merrill is a graduate of Baltimore City College and returned to the school as a teacher. He was later promoted to lead special projects for Baltimore City Public Schools. He stepped down from the position to campaign.

He said the city would benefit from an educator’s perspectiv­e in Annapolis. He said he will work to bring back more money for the city’s public schools if elected.

Merrill is married to Grace O’Malley, the daughter of O’Malley, whose political career had a similar start. The former governor married into the Curran family, which had dominated Northeast Baltimore politics for decades, and made his first foray into politics by challengin­g — and losing to — a well known state senator.

Merrill says he is his own man. Before marrying Grace, Merrill worked on Scott’s successful council campaign, and he and Mckesson met while working on Ferguson’s successful Senate run.

“As much as my opponent wishes she were running against my father-in-law, Martin O'Malley, she is not,” Merrill said.

As both camps dig in, Hartley warns that too much negativity could backfire on either campaign.

“Really, really nasty races turn off voters,” he said.

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J.D. Merrill

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