The Capital

Debate to go ahead with panel restored

- GOVERNOR By Michael Dresser mdresser@baltsun.com twitter.com/michaeltdr­esser

The lone debate scheduled between Republican Gov. Larry Hogan and Democratic nominee Ben Jealous will go ahead as planned Monday after the Jealous campaign dropped its veto of a Western Maryland newspaper's statehouse reporter as a panelist.

Now, Tamela Baker of The Herald-Mail in Hagerstown is back as a questioner. And The Baltimore Sun, which had said it was reconsider­ing its participat­ion over concern about allowing candidates to choose the reporters who question them, will take part.

The Maryland-Delaware-District of Columbia Press Associatio­n, which objected Tuesday to the Jealous campaign's action, welcomed the reversal.

“Public officials — and candidates — need to be accountabl­e to the public,” the associatio­n said Wednesday in a statement. “That accountabi­lity creates strong government transparen­cy and builds trust for constituen­ts.”

Under the rules for the debate negotiated by the Hogan and Jealous campaigns, either side could veto the agreed-upon media outlets' choices of their representa­tives. The Jealous campaign moved to block Baker, a strike it declined to explain.

Sun editor-in-chief and publisher Trif Alatzas then said The Sun was reconsider­ing its participat­ion in the debate. In addition to Baker, Sun reporter Pamela Wood, reporter Ovetta Wiggins of The Washington Post and reporter/anchor Ryan Eldredge of WMDT-TV in Salisbury were on the panel.

With the reversal, the original panel members will question the candidates. Jake Womer, executive editor of the HeraldMail, said Baker would represent the paper rather than a reporter the paper had designated to replace her.

“I'm glad that the Jealous campaign corrected its course, and we appreciate the stance taken by The Baltimore Sun and the [Maryland-Delaware-District of Columbia Press Associatio­n], as well,” he said.

In a statement Tuesday night, Jealous senior adviser Kevin Harris said the campaign had no objections to Baker as a questioner.

The debate Monday will be hosted by Maryland Public Television, which will tape the debate Monday morning and air it that night.

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