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Non-candidate Wendy Rosen’s 27% of Vote Causes Statewide Head-scratching

November 11, 2012 by Capital News Service

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Rep. Andy Harris handily won Maryland’s 1st District, but surprisingly lost 33 percent of the vote to an amalgam of a withdrawn candidate and several write-ins.
Despite dropping out in early September, well past the deadline to remove her name from the ballot, Democrat Wendy Rosen still received 27 percent of the vote.

“I don’t know if (voters) didn’t know that I dropped out, if they thought the allegations were petty, or if I shouldn’t have been pushed out.”

Concerns over voter fraud permeated the national discourse during the 2012 election cycle. So when news broke that Rosen had voted in both Florida and Maryland in prior elections, her withdrawal — with nudging from the Maryland Democratic Party — was inevitable. Receiving so many votes afterward was unexpected.

“It shows how strong partisan identification can be,” said Michael Cain, director of The Center for the Study of Democracy at St. Mary’s College of Maryland. “This is a strong behavioral tendency in a lot of voters.”

The Maryland Board of Elections reported that approximately 83 percent of voters are registered with a party, a fact that Cain says is “not trivial.”

Pundits and politicos agree that party affiliation produces an automatic reaction at the polls.

“I really wasn’t that surprised,” said Kathy Szeliga, Harris’ campaign manager. “I think that’s the base vote. The difference is between the ones that pay attention versus the ones that are just pulling the lever for the Democratic ticket.”

As strong a reason as party loyalty is, it seems unreasonable in light of the fact that John LaFerla, who narrowly lost the nomination to Rosen in the Democratic primary, stepped in as a write-in candidate. Voting for Rosen was essentially throwing away a vote.

“It shows how uninformed people are when they go to polls,” said LaFerla’s campaign manager, Erik Gulbrandsen. “I honestly don’t know what it is; I wouldn’t call it apathy, because they did go out and vote.”

With fewer than two months to run a write-in campaign, Gulbrandsen blamed time constraints and limited resources for the public’s failings.

“I think that with only a month and a half to do the campaign, there is only so many people you can reach,” said Gulbrandsen.

In total, there were three write-in candidates who won 5.3 percent of the vote — LaFerla was the only one with backing from one of the two major parties.

The Maryland Board of Elections is still tallying how many votes each got, so LaFerla’s total is unknown. But with all things considered, 33 percent of the vote going to the Wendy Rosen’s name and a few write-ins may illuminate a chink in Harris’ armor.

“For us, we see it as a question of ballot access,” said Matt Verghese, political and communications director for the Maryland Democratic Party. “If we had a Democrat with a great campaign, had the chance to debate the issues with Harris, I think we could clear 40 to 45 percent.”

The congressional redistricting map, which voters approved with Question 5, made District 1 significantly more Republican, making Harris all the more formidable. But with every Democratic congressman and senator winning reelection; Democratic challenger John Delaney unseating10-term-incumbent Roscoe Bartlett in District 6; and sweeping success of Democrat-backed ballot measures, the party is brimming with confidence for 2014.

“It’s a very Republican district, but the voters are pragmatic, said Verghese. “We need the time to organize on the ground; you can see our party did well, given time and preparation.”

But conventional wisdom suggests that the best time to unseat a congressional incumbent is after their first term. That coupled with the high voter support, suggests Democrats dropped the ball.

“I believe that there was an incredible opportunity this year that our party missed,” said Rosen.

By MATT FLEMING

Filed Under: Archives

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Letters to Editor

  1. Jojo Biker says

    November 11, 2012 at 5:36 PM

    I voted for Andy Harris and it popped up Wendy Rosen as if it were going to automatically cast her name. I voted again & the same thing occurred. I thought it was a bit odd. Human error I suppose, who really knows.

    • Karen Smith says

      November 12, 2012 at 4:27 PM

      It is a perfect illustration of how little attention voters pay to ANYTHING before they go to the polls and vote straight party line – pure stupidity!

      BTW, in this age of electronic savvy and immediate changes possible via computer, why does the state require more than 2 months to put anyone on or take anyone off the ballot? Even if vote-by-mail ballots had been mailed already, the changes could have been made for the vast majority of people who vote on Election Day (or even for those who voted the week prior at early voting sites). The State’s antiquated system needs to catch up to the 21st century!

  2. John Leek says

    November 11, 2012 at 5:51 PM

    I wonder if Ms. Rosen would be good enough to enlighten me and the many other head scratchers just how “our party” missed an opportunity to unseat Mr. Harris. (As if she had so little to do with it.) Any opportunity was messed up by her double FL/MD vote, petty or not, inadvertant or not, it just doesn’t fly in this time of vigilance for voter fraud. Maybe a bigger stink could have been made about Mr Harris claiming a technicality to sleazily avoid debating and giving wider recognition of Mr. LaFerla

    • Bob Kramer says

      November 12, 2012 at 2:04 PM

      John…

      Wendy Wendy beat Doc John not once, but twice. It seems to me that the Dems are the ones who should be doing some serious soul searching at this point in the game. The results speak for themselves.

      BTW, nice games today. 🙂

  3. Steven O'Melia says

    November 11, 2012 at 7:21 PM

    Given the fact so many cast a vote for a noncandidate I doubt any debates would have changed the outcome. The voters were just very uninformed or simply apathetic and just voted for the candidate who’s name was on the ballot. It was not a lack of information. I paid little attention to the local election and I knew she wasn’t running. It simply shows how little voters care in order to be informed on important issues.

  4. Lainey Harrison says

    November 12, 2012 at 1:42 PM

    Exactly what did Rosen mean by “I believe that there was an incredible opportunity this year that our party missed,”?
    Did she mean her new party of the dems or did she mean the party she told everyone she was “Reformed Republicans”
    Did she mean her party in Florida or her party in Maryland?
    Either way, I say Good Riddance to Wendy Rosen.

  5. Charles Ferry says

    November 14, 2012 at 12:41 AM

    Uninformed partisans most likely

Trackbacks

  1. State Roundup, November 12, 2012 | Maryland News & Things to Do Blog says:
    November 14, 2012 at 5:11 AM

    […] writes, in the Chestertown Spy, that U.S. Rep. Andy Harris handily won Maryland’s 1st District, but surprisingly lost 33% of the vote, 27% of it to drop-out candidate Wendy Rosen. […]

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