Politics & Government
Pot Debate, Gaffe Riot and O'Malley for President? 2013 Md. Politics
The year in politics in Maryland.

By Adam Bednar
There was no deficit of intrigue in political stories in Maryland in 2013, setting the stage for what can only be an evenΒ more interesting 2014.Β
Making it official
Find out what's happening in Arbutusfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Major candidates in the Republican and Democratic parties announced plans to run for governor.Β Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown,Β Attorney General Doug GanslerΒ andΒ Del. Heather MizeurΒ are the Democrats seeking their partyβs nomination. Β Harford County Executive David Craig, Del. Ron George, Charles Lollar and Larry Hogan, a former Cabinet official during former Gov. Robert Ehrlichβs term, also haveannounced their intentionsΒ to be Marylandβs next governor. Β Β
Early Gaffes
Find out what's happening in Arbutusfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Two of the top candidates on the Democratic side, Brown and Gansler, both have had to deal with embarrassing stories as they launched their campaigns.
Shortly after making his run official, Gansler faced allegations that he ordered state troopers to drive recklessly. He also garnered national attention when a photo ofΒ him at a partyΒ where underage drinking was allegedly happening, emerged.Β
Brown has recently had to deal with the blowback from the troubled roll out of the stateβs online health care exchange. Brownβs campaign had previously bragged about his oversight of the project, but then Ganslerβs campaignΒ began attacking Brownabout the glitches as issues with the website continued through December.Β
Fumbling Heath CareΒ
The fallout over the problems hampering Marylandβs health care exchange, which wasΒ created to comply with the federal Affordable Care Act (aka Obamacare), has dogged the administration of Gov. Martin OβMalley. Β Β
Although the governorΒ announced in DecemberΒ that most of the major issues withΒ www.marylandhealthconnection.govΒ were corrected, the early problems forced Rebecca Pearce, the woman in charge of establishing the website, to resign.
The problems also resulted in Rep. John Delaney, a Democrat,Β suggesting that Maryland scrap its website and instead use the federal governmentβs health exchange, which was also plagued by its own problems but apparentlyΒ fixed more quickly.Β
The delay even caused some lawmakers to question whether the minimum of 150,000 people needed for the stateβs health care exchange to function properly could be reached by the March 1 deadline.
βItβs a big mess and itβs not something we didnβt warn about,β Del. Just Ready, R-Carroll County, said.Β Β Β Β
President OβMalley?Β
Gov. Martin OβMalley has long been rumored to be interested inrunning for president, and the two-term governor and former Baltimore mayor has done little to suppress speculation about his White HouseΒ ambitions.
In November, OβMalley madeΒ a trip to New Hampshire, which hosts the nationβs first primary elections, to tout his record of success.
He was also the subject of profiles in The National Journal and The New Republic speculating about a possible presidential bid. But not all the news has been good for OβMalley. Polls consistently show OβMalley in last placeΒ among possible Democratic contenders, including former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Elizabeth Warren.
Legalize That
On the heels of states such as Colorado decriminalizing the use of marijuana, the idea is gaining acceptance in Maryland. A poll by Goucher College released this fall reported thatΒ 51 percent of residents want to legalize marijuanaΒ while 40 percent oppose legalization.
Gubernatorial candidateΒ Mizeur has also released a plan calling for theΒ decriminalization of marijuanaΒ and proposes using revenue from taxing its saleΒ to pay for universal pre-kindergarten.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.