Every Wednesday, Maryland political analysts Len Foxwell and Clayton Mitchell discuss the politics and personalities of the state and region.
This week, Len and Clayton discuss the number one major issue in Maryland in 2025: its growing energy crisis. What began as a well-intentioned push toward renewable energy has left the state heavily reliant on out-of-state fossil fuels, driving up costs and sparking widespread voter frustration. This episode explores how we got here, what can be done in the short term, and why Eastern Shore residents are feeling particularly sidelined by Annapolis. Len and Clay also weigh in on land use battles, Senate Bill 1, and the political consequences for Governor Moore and others.
Len and Clay also note the winners and losers of the week.
This video is approximately 20 minutes in length.
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This series brings together two of the most experienced and respected voices in Maryland public life: Len Foxwell and Clayton A. Mitchell, Sr. Their mission is to explore Maryland’s evolving political terrain, from the State House in Annapolis to the communities of the Eastern Shore.
Foxwell and Mitchell may come from different corners of the public square—one a strategist and public communicator, the other a jurist and administrative law expert—but they share a lifelong commitment to the mechanics and meaning of public service. Together, they offer something increasingly rare in American discourse: thoughtful, informed, and good-humored conversation grounded in facts, history, and lived experience.
Len Foxwell, founder of Tred Avon Strategies, is widely regarded as one of Maryland’s most influential political strategists. A veteran of nearly three decades in public life, he served as chief of staff to the Comptroller of Maryland from 2008 to 2020, where he was credited with helping build one of the nation’s most effective and forward-looking tax enforcement offices.
During that time, the Comptroller’s office recaptured more than $6 billion in unpaid taxes and won national praise for combating tax fraud and unethical financial practices. But Foxwell’s public impact wasn’t limited to budgetary stewardship. He also played a pivotal role in modernizing Maryland’s craft alcohol industry, working to ease outdated regulations and encourage growth for breweries, wineries, and distilleries across the state.
A writer and educator at heart, Foxwell also teaches professional writing and crisis communication at Johns Hopkins University. As one veteran journalist once wrote, “There are plenty of operatives who are talented and indispensable to their bosses. But only Foxwell has actually changed the trajectory of Maryland politics.”
Clayton A. Mitchell, Sr., brings an equally deep and distinguished record of public service. A native of the Eastern Shore, Mitchell served on the Maryland Department of Labor’s Board of Appeals for nearly 30 years, including four years as its Chairman. Appointed in 1994 by Governor William Donald Schaefer and reappointed by four successive governors from both parties, Mitchell presided over the state’s highest appellate authority for unemployment insurance disputes, helping shape how fairness and due process are applied to tens of thousands of Maryland workers.
A magna cum laude graduate of the University of Baltimore School of Law, Mitchell has also worked to expand legal access through education. He founded the Student Attorney Advocacy Program at his law school alma mater to ensure indigent claimants could receive representation in appeals proceedings. In addition to his public duties, he has maintained a part-time legal practice focused on administrative, land use, and environmental law.
Mitchell is equally respected for his civic leadership. He has served on the Selective Service Board and the Maryland Attorney General’s Environmental Advisory Council, authored legal reference works, and endowed a scholarship to help Maryland students pursue legal careers. As he said in a recent reflection, “Public service isn’t just about policy. It’s about people—about making sure the system works for everyone, especially those who don’t have a lobbyist or a lawyer.”
Together, Foxwell and Mitchell represent two sides of the same democratic coin—strategy and structure, politics and process, insight and institution. With the Maryland Caucus, they’ll shine a spotlight on the issues shaping Maryland today: education funding, judicial reform, land use, regional economics, environmental priorities, campaign strategy, and more.
Expect each episode to be as frank as it is thoughtful. Or as Foxwell recently quipped, “It may be called The Maryland Caucus, but we’re not handing out talking points.”
Bil Anderson says
I am still amazed that the intriguing notion that solar and wind generated electricity were seen by too many as exciting ways of obtaining almost free power production. Nothing could be further from the truth, which is now becoming even more obvious than before. Worse yet, both are not reliable in that the wind velocity and the nature of the solar exposure are not sustainable elements. Solar power will fail every night, and to some extent in inclement weather conditions, and the wind turbines to be mounted atop ocean-located towers and their maintenance are not inexpensive. From everything I have seen, both wind and solar are going to not be less expensive forms of energy nor as reliable as fossil fuel burning generators. Therefore, may produce little if any real cost savings.
I have long wondered about Delmarva Power Co. having divested itself of its minority ownership interests in the two Salem (NJ) nuclear generating stations, the two Peach Bottom (PA) atomic power stations and the Indian River coal-fired power plant. Collectively they would not be the solution to the present costs of purchased power from other utilities, but they would reduce the quantity of power thus acquired for Maryland customers.
Chris Gordon says
Bill,
You and I will likely both be dead before this planet becomes totally uninhabitable. That doesn’t seem to interest you. Perhaps you have no descendants who would be affected. I have descendants but they’re not the only ones I care about. I want to do whatever I can to keep this planet livable for all God’s creatures. Money is your motivation. It’s not mine.
Chris