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Maryland gubernatorial election, 2006

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November 7, 2006
  
2010 →

52.69%
  
46.16%

942,279
  
825,464

Maryland gubernatorial election, 2006

The Maryland gubernatorial election of 2006 was held on November 7, 2006. It was a race for the Governor and Lieutenant Governor of Maryland. The winning candidates -- Martin O'Malley and Anthony G. Brown, who defeated the incumbent Gov. Robert Ehrlich and running mate Kristen Cox—were elected to serve from 2007 to 2011.

Contents

Candidates

  • Martin O'Malley, Mayor of Baltimore
  • Campaign

    Martin O'Malley, the Mayor of Baltimore, and Doug Duncan, the Montgomery County Executive, emerged as the two Democratic candidates for governor in late 2005. Early polling indicated that O'Malley would have the upper edge in both the Democratic primary and the general election, with a solid lead over Duncan in the primary and a several point lead over Ehrlich in the general.

    As the gubernatorial campaign intensified, Doug Duncan dropped out of the race, citing the fact that he had been diagnosed with clinical depression. In the same announcement, Duncan threw his support behind O’Malley and declined to seek another office in the fall. O'Malley then became the presumed Democratic nominee for governor, as no other candidate opposed him in the primary election.

    Mayor O'Malley selected Anthony G. Brown, a black State Delegate from Prince George's County and a veteran of the Iraq War, as his running mate.

    Candidates

  • Bob Ehrlich, incumbent Governor of Maryland
  • Campaign

    Governor Ehrlich opted to seek a second term as governor, and did not face any opposition at any point in the Republican primary. When Lieutenant Governor Michael Steele opted to run for Senate instead of seeking a second term on Ehrlich's gubernatorial ticket, Ehrlich named Maryland Secretary of Disabilities Kristen Cox, who is blind, as his running mate and was renominated by his party for a second term.

    Candidates

  • Martin O'Malley, Mayor of Baltimore (D)
  • Bob Ehrlich, incumbent Governor of Maryland (R)
  • Ed Boyd, temporary employment agency recruiter (G)
  • Christopher A. Driscoll (P)
  • Campaign

    Elected to his first term in 2002, incumbent Republican Governor Bob Ehrlich ran for a second term as governor, opposed by the Democratic nominee, Martin O'Malley, the Mayor of Baltimore. Both candidates emerged from uncontested primary elections and a contentious election season began.

    Early in the campaign, Ehrlich boasted decent approval ratings from Maryland citizens, with a Gonzalez Research poll taken during October 2005 showing him with a 49% approval rating. and a Baltimore Sun poll from November 2005 giving the Governor a 50% approval and a 33% disapproval. However, the unpopularity of the national Republican Party and President George W. Bush dragged Ehrlich's re-election chances down.

    Ehrlich launched attack ads that hit O'Malley on crime in Baltimore under his tenure as Mayor, calling the murder rate in Baltimore "awful" and "an embarrassment to the state of Maryland." O'Malley countered with one television ad that featured testimonials from local community leaders, Howard County Executive James N. Robey, Baltimore County Executive James T. Smith, Jr. and another ad that attacked Ehrlich for breaking his promise to end parole for violent criminals.

    The Washington Post and The Washington Times both endorsed Ehrlich in his bid for re-election, with the Times praising Ehrlich's "brand of moderate conservatism that offers a refreshing contrast" to the state's historically Democratic leanings and the Post called him "a generally proficient, pragmatic governor" and praised him for "successes on transportation, the environment and education."

    In turn, the Baltimore Sun endorsed O'Malley, saying, "the progress under the mayor's tenure is clear and irrefutable", and that he addressed "rising crime, failing schools and shrinking economic prospects." O'Malley also called upon the praise given to him by TIME Magazine when they named him one of the country's "Top 5 Big City Mayors."

    References

    Maryland gubernatorial election, 2006 Wikipedia