Before dying in a police shootout, Roy McGrath called for an investigation into Gov. Hogan’s Korean covid test scandal
All in Maryland
Before dying in a police shootout, Roy McGrath called for an investigation into Gov. Hogan’s Korean covid test scandal
All Marc Elrich has to do to get fair coverage is lose.
In the Post’s coverage of a local Maryland race, an interesting word has gone missing, and not by accident. The word is “Republican.” And it refers to the former party of David Blair.
After Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the country’s third-most powerful democratic socialist may be a former elementary school teacher you might never have heard of.
Yet another Black elected official may be removed from office, and once again it’s at the hands of prosecutors, not voters. And for personal misconduct, not public corruption.
Despite being the governor of a small state, Larry Hogan secured coronavirus test kits from “13 time zones away,” thanks to “nearly a month of diplomacy talks” and “middle of the night” negotiations.
“Insane.” That’s what Marc Gunther thought as he looked out of the window of his downtown Bethesda, Maryland, apartment. Below him, cramped construction crews were building a headquarters and adjoining hotel for Marriott.
Republican Gov. Larry Hogan is attempting to implement a $9 billion plan to build 100 miles of toll lanes on Maryland’s traffic-choked highways. Rather than use public financing, Hogan is turning to the private markets.
How the Washington Post, Big Money and a bit of racism re-elected a GOP governor in Deep Blue Maryland.
“It’s not surprising that we’ve seen an increase of hate or racist incidents” in Anne Arundel County, says civil rights activist Carl Snowden.
In Maryland, Tuesday’s election saw widespread irregularities in heavily African American precincts in Prince George’s and Montgomery counties.