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Ehrlich established a position in his cabinet based on providing affordable benefits to those who cannot afford them. {{facts}} In 2006, he vetoed the "Fair Share Health Care Bill," which required businesses with more that 10,000 employees in the state to either spend 8% of payroll on employee health care, or pay that amount to a state health program for the poor. [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/19/AR2005051900853.html]
Ehrlich established a position in his cabinet based on providing affordable benefits to those who cannot afford them. {{facts}} In 2006, he vetoed the "Fair Share Health Care Bill," which required businesses with more that 10,000 employees in the state to either spend 8% of payroll on employee health care, or pay that amount to a state health program for the poor. [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/19/AR2005051900853.html]


In 2004, Erlich signed the [http://www.mde.state.md.us/Water/bayrestoration.asp Chesapeake Bay Restoration Act,] which funds upgrades of water treatment plants to reduce pollution discharge by a surcharge on business and residential water and septic bills. The resulting reduction in pollution into the bay is expected to meet approximately one-third of Maryland's obligations under the 2000 [http://dnrweb.dnr.state.md.us/bay/res_protect/c2k/index.asp Chesapeake Bay Agreement].
In 2004, Ehrlich signed the [http://www.mde.state.md.us/Water/bayrestoration.asp Chesapeake Bay Restoration Act,] which funds upgrades of water treatment plants to reduce pollution discharge by a surcharge on business and residential water and septic bills. The resulting reduction in pollution into the bay is expected to meet approximately one-third of Maryland's obligations under the 2000 [http://dnrweb.dnr.state.md.us/bay/res_protect/c2k/index.asp Chesapeake Bay Agreement].


Ehrlich has appointed a cabinet-level [[Homeland Security]] advisor. {{fact}} He opposed [[President Bush]]'s 2006 approval for a [[United Arab Emirates|U.A.E.]] firm to take control of six U.S. port operations, including those at the [[List of North American ports#Atlantic_coast|Port of Baltimore]]. [http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,185479,00.html]. (See [[Dubai Ports World controversy]]).
Ehrlich has appointed a cabinet-level [[Homeland Security]] advisor. {{fact}} He opposed [[President Bush]]'s 2006 approval for a [[United Arab Emirates|U.A.E.]] firm to take control of six U.S. port operations, including those at the [[List of North American ports#Atlantic_coast|Port of Baltimore]]. [http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,185479,00.html]. (See [[Dubai Ports World controversy]]).

Revision as of 22:08, 11 May 2006

Robert Ehrlich
File:Robert L. Ehrlich.JPG
60th Governor of Maryland
In office
January 15, 2003 – present
LieutenantMichael Steele
Preceded byParris Glendening
Personal details
BornNovember 25, 1957
Arbutus, Maryland
Political partyRepublican
SpouseKendel Sibiski

Robert Leroy Ehrlich, Jr. (born November 25, 1957) is an American politician and the 60th and current Governor of Maryland. A Republican, he became governor on January 15, 2003 after defeating Democratic opponent Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, a member of the Kennedy family, 51%–48% in the 2002 elections. Prior to serving as governor, Ehrlich was a U.S. Congressman from Maryland's 2nd Congressional district and a member of the Maryland House of Delegates.

Early life, career, and family

Ehrlich was born in the small community of Arbutus, Maryland located southwest of Baltimore and was raised in a conservative Lutheran environment. After attending the Gilman School in Baltimore, he received degrees from Princeton University (1979), where he was the captain of the football team, and Wake Forest University Law School (1982). After he obtained his degrees, Ehrlich went to work for the Ober, Kaler, Grimes and Shriver law firm of Baltimore. In November 1986, Ehrlich won a seat in the Maryland House of Delegates, representing parts of Baltimore County from 1987 to 1995.

Ehrlich married his wife Kendel in 1993. They have two sons, Drew Robert Ehrlich and Joshua Taylor Ehrlich.

Congress

In 1993, 2nd district Congresswoman Helen Delich Bentley announced she would be vacating her seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. Ehrlich decided to pursue the seat and announced his candidacy in November of the same year.

Ehrlich won the seat by a substantial margin, making himself one of the few leading Republican figures in the heavily Democratic state. During his term, he introduced legislation aimed at helping disabled people maintain employment, and supported harsher gun violence penalties.

While in Congress, Ehrlich served on the U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committees, where he further served on the subcommittees on health, telecommunications and the Internet, and environment and hazardous materials; the Congressional Biotechnology Caucus, where he served as cochairman; and the Congressional Steel Caucus. Ehrlich has been an ardent supporter of President George W. Bush ever since Bush’s election in 2000, and he has supported several Bush initiatives, including the No Child Left Behind Act and the recent tax cuts.

2002 Gubernatorial Election

In 2002, Governor Parris Glendening’s (D) second term was coming to a conclusion. While Glendening had been reelected by a substantial margin in 1998, the final years of his term were plagued by a personal marital crisis, and a large state budget deficit. The rural areas of Maryland—largely Republican—had long criticized Glendening for what they perceived as overzealous environmental regulations as well as ignoring their budgetary needs (bridges, highways, etc.).

On March 15, 2002, Ehrlich announced his candidacy for the governorship. He attacked Glendening's record and his Democratic opposition, Lt. Gov. Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, and, if elected, promised to increase school funding, balance the budget, and to protect the Chesapeake Bay.

During the election, Townsend was criticized for her choice of running mate; she picked retired Admiral Charles Larson, a novice politician who had switched parties only a few weeks before. The Townsend campaign was also hurt by the unpopularity of Governor Parris Glendening, who had implemented a redistricting proposal that was overturned by Maryland's highest court. Townsend's popularity continued to fall when it was reported that much of her campaign money was given by out-of-state donors; Ehrlich remained quiet while the Lt. Governor's poll numbers declined.

Even though Maryland traditionally votes Democratic and had not elected a Republican governor in almost 40 years, Ehrlich won the race, becoming only the sixth Republican governor in state history, and the first since Spiro T. Agnew in 1967. Ehrlich won by 51.55% of the vote to Townsend's 47.68% and Libertarian Spear Lancaster's .68%.

Governor of Maryland

Governor Ehrlich speaking at the HealthierUS summit in late April 2004.

Ehrlich has styled "fiscal responsibility, education, health and the environment, public safety, and commerce" as the "Five Pillars" of his administration.

Ehrlich's stated policy opposes sales and income tax increases. However, critics have derided the state-wide surcharge on water and septic services imposed by the Chesepeake Bay Restoration Act, as a "flush tax." [1]. Maryland's budget has been balanced every year during his tenure, and the state forecasts a $1 billion surplus for the 2005 fiscal year. [citation needed] The $1.8 billion state budget deficit left by the previous administration has been eradicated during Ehrlich’s tenure. [citation needed] The unemployment rate has dropped slightly during this time, from 4.5% in 2003 to 4.1% in 2005, with a net increase of 76,000 jobs. [2].

Ehrlich has endorsed the Thornton Plan, which was passed by the Legislature in 2002 and named after Dr. Alvin Thornton. In part, this plan would grant extra money to poorer school systems and those in areas with a higher cost of living. [3] Despite his endorsement, Ehrlich's proposed budgets have never included funding for the Thorton Plan. He has previously made such funding contingent on passage of his unsuccessful proposals to legalize slot-machine gambling. [4].

Ehrlich established a position in his cabinet based on providing affordable benefits to those who cannot afford them. [citation needed] In 2006, he vetoed the "Fair Share Health Care Bill," which required businesses with more that 10,000 employees in the state to either spend 8% of payroll on employee health care, or pay that amount to a state health program for the poor. [5]

In 2004, Ehrlich signed the Chesapeake Bay Restoration Act, which funds upgrades of water treatment plants to reduce pollution discharge by a surcharge on business and residential water and septic bills. The resulting reduction in pollution into the bay is expected to meet approximately one-third of Maryland's obligations under the 2000 Chesapeake Bay Agreement.

Ehrlich has appointed a cabinet-level Homeland Security advisor. [citation needed] He opposed President Bush's 2006 approval for a U.A.E. firm to take control of six U.S. port operations, including those at the Port of Baltimore. [6]. (See Dubai Ports World controversy).

In 2004, Ehrlich effectively ended the moratorium on executions that instituted by his predecessor in May 2002. (See capital punishment in Maryland.) He is a member of the National Governors Association, the Southern Governors' Association, and the Republican Governors Association.

Controversy

Veto of the "Wal-Mart" Health Care Bill

In January, 2006, the Maryland Legislature passed the controversial "Fair Share Health Care Bill", over Ehrlich's also-controversial veto. The bill attracted national attention because it made Maryland the first state to require very large corporations to either spend 8% of their payroll on employee health care, or pay that amount to a state health-care fund. It became known as the "Wal-Mart Bill" because while it nominally applied to any corporation with more than 10,000 workers, in practice Wal-Mart was the only employer which met that threshold. [7][8] Critics of the international discount chain claim that Wal-Mart's low wages force employees and their dependents to rely on state healthcare assistance. (See Wal-Mart Employee and Labor Relations).

Supporters of the bill claimed that this veto showed Ehrlich, whose official biography describes him as "unapologetically pro-business," had sided with "big corporate interests rather than Maryland's working families." [9] For his part, Ehrlich called the bill the the "first step toward government-run health care" by "anti-jobs lawmakers." He claimed that it would hurt low and middle-income consumers and was unfair to Wal-Mart. [10].

O'Malley Rumors and the "MD4Bush" Incident

See Also MD4Bush Incident

In early 2005 Ehrlich fired an aide, Joseph Steffen, for spreading false rumors of marital infidelity about Baltimore mayor Martin O'Malley on the Internet. O'Malley, a Democrat, is running for governor in 2006 and, if he wins the primary, will likely face off against Ehrlich in the general election. The discussions in which Steffen posted the rumors were initiated by an anonymous user going by the name "MD4Bush," later revealed to be Maryland Democratic Party official Ryan O'Doherty. O'Malley and his wife had a highly publicized press conference to deny the rumors and accuse Republicans of dirty politics. [11]

Alleged Partisan Firing of State Employees

NIH Director Elias Zerhouni talks with Ehrlich following a speech by President George W. Bush in Bethesda, Maryland.

Steffen's role in the Ehrlich Administration later became the subject of a legislative investigation into hiring practices by the Administration. After leaving the administration, Steffen claimed that he had been "a political hit man in the Ehrlich administration," responsible for identifying career state employees to be fired and replaced with Ehrlich allies. [12] In September 2005 newly released e-mails showed that an aide in Ehrlich's appointments office personally authorized the dismissal of a mid-level state engineer, Vincent J. Gardina. Gardinia was a Democrat and an at-will employee of the Baltimore County Council who had worked for five months on dredging projects at the Maryland Environmental Service. Gardina, who earned $55,000 a year, had received a favorable work evaluation just weeks before being terminated.

After being dismissed, Gardina sued the governor, alleging that he was fired because of his political affiliation. The State settled the suit for $100,000 before trial.

Britney Spears

Ehrlich's wife, Kendal, commented on October 3, 2003, that she'd like to "shoot Britney Spears" because she felt the pop star was a bad influence on teenage girls. Mrs. Ehrlich said during a speech in Frederick at a conference on domestic violence, "You know, really, if I had an opportunity to shoot Britney Spears, I think I would. I hate to say that, but you know, like I said, I'm raising a boy ... and I think, 'Oh my goodness, what would I do if I had a daughter who is seeing these images and having peer pressure?"' After her remarks attracted national attention, she apologized and said her comments were a meant as a joke. [13]

Slot machines

In light of Maryland's budget deficit and Ehrlich’s staunch opposition to raising taxes, he has pursued slot machines as a means for raising revenue for the state. Ehrlich initially met with little success on the issue, and the House of Delegates continually voted down legislation. In early 2005, however, both the House of Delegates and the State Senate passed different sets of legislation allowing slot machines. Both bills varied too much for compromise, however, and died at the end of the legislative session.

Ehrlich cited his reasons for needing slot machines in Maryland by examining the surrounding states of West Virginia, Delaware and Pennsylvania, all of which have slot machines legalized. He claims that hundreds of millions of dollars are lost to those states that could be kept in Maryland. Furthermore, most of the money that was expected to be generated from the slot machines was earmarked towards education, although often the state reduces education funding from the amount it would have spent by the amount the lottery brings in, cancelling the lottery's purported goal [14]. Much of the remaining funds were intended to support the state horse racing industry and retain the Preakness at Pimlico racetrack.

State House speaker Michael E. Busch (D) has steadfastly opposed slot machines in Maryland and has regularly clashed with State Senate president Thomas V. Mike Miller, Jr. (D). These actions divided both chambers of the Assembly as well as the Maryland Democratic party. Busch permitted passage of a bill allowing 9,500 slot machines.[15]

Following the failure of the slots initiative, Ehrlich predicted that no further slots bills would be passed during the next legislative session, and that the issue will remain under the table until after the 2006 gubernatorial election. [16] Some legislators tried to call a special session of the General Assembly to address slot machines. A referendum has also been discussed.

Issues with the Baltimore Sun

Ehrlich was criticized for responding to critical articles in the Baltimore Sun by blacklisting the authors. The articles which incurred Erlich's ire criticized him for holding a fund-raising event at a golf club that had never admitted an African-American in its 127-year history. [17] A Sun columnist, Michael Olesker, advised Ehrlich to learn a lesson from Groucho Marx[18]. An editorial in the Sun implied that Ehrlich was using Lt. Gov. Michael Steele, who is African-American, for political purposes, and accused them both of endorsing the club's policy[19].

Ehrlich responded by banning all Maryland government employees from speaking with two Sun journalists. The Sun sued to overturn the ban, but lost when Judge William D. Quarles Jr. of the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland found that the Sun had demanded "special access beyond what is granted to the general public, and that the governor was within the law to deny that special access to two writers because he did not like what they wrote about him." [20][21] The Sun unsuccessfully appealed that decision to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in 2006.

2006 gubernatorial election

For more information, see Maryland gubernatorial election, 2006. Sectstub

Election history

Year Office Subject Party Votes Pct Opponent Party Votes Pct Opponent Party Votes Pct
1994 Congress, District 2 Robert Ehrlich Republican 125,162 62.74% Gerry Brewster Democrat 74,275 37.23%
1996 Congress, District 2 Robert Ehrlich Republican 143,075 61.83% Connie Dejuliis Democrat 88,344 38.17%
1998 Congress, District 2 Robert Ehrlich Republican 145,711 69.32% Kenneth Bosley Democrat 64,474 30.67%
2000 Congress, District 2 Robert Ehrlich Republican 178,556 68.56% Kenneth Bosley Democrat 81,591 31.33%
2002 Governor Robert Ehrlich Republican 879,592 51.55% Kathleen Kennedy Townsend Democrat 813,422 47.68% Spear Lancaster Libertarian 11,546 0.68%

References

  • Maryland Archives gubernatorial biography. [22]
  • Maryland Archives general biography. [23]
  • Congressional Quarterly election library. [24]
  • Ehrlich Firing Probe Advances [25]

See also


Template:Incumbent succession box
Preceded by U.S. Congressman, Maryland 2nd District
1995–2003
Succeeded by