Ruppersberger,
Townsend Have Little Use for Each Other on Campaign Trail
By Liz Boch
Capital News Service
Friday, Oct. 4, 2002
WASHINGTON - Kathleen Kennedy Townsend has focused much of her
gubernatorial campaign on Montgomery and Prince George's counties, leaving
fellow Democrat Dutch Ruppersberger to fend for himself in the 2nd District
race for Congress.
But that seems to be the way they like it.
Analysts say Townsend may be seen as too liberal for her coattails to do
any good for Ruppersberger in the moderate 2nd District. And there is little
for Townsend to gain by campaigning in the suburban Baltimore district that
is currently held by her GOP rival, Rep. Robert Ehrlich.
"Ruppersberger needs working-class moderate conservatives to win that
seat, and he knows it," said Tom Schaller, a political science professor at
the University of Maryland Baltimore County. "That's why they're playing
nice, but they won't be on the ticket together."
The only way that could change is if the race, currently a dead heat,
turns negative and Ruppersberger needs to tap Townsend to energize the base
Democratic vote, analysts say.
"If he's going to do it, he's got to do it in the next week or two," said
Richard Vatz, a professor of political rhetoric at Towson University who
moderated a debate between Ruppersberger and his Republican opponent, Helen
Delich Bentley.
During that debate, Vatz said, Ruppersberger responded cautiously when
asked if he endorsed Townsend.
"He only said he thought very highly of her. He said he won't use the
'E'
word," Vatz said.
Neither Townsend nor Ruppersberger has formally endorsed the other. While
Townsend attends numerous events in Baltimore City, she rarely visits
Baltimore, Anne Arundel or Harford counties, which make up the 2nd District.
Ruppersberger spokesman Rick Binetti said the two Democrats rarely
campaign together, but that is "not a problem."
"She's running for statewide office and even though the Democratic
message is the same, the issues aren't the same," Binetti said.
Ehrlich and Bentley, by contrast, embraced each other during the primary
campaign.
The 2nd District seat has been held by a Republican for 18 years and,
even though it was made more Democratic in this year's redistricting,
Ruppersberger still has a fight on his hands.
A poll released Tuesday by Potomac Inc. gave Bentley 44 percent of the
vote to Ruppersberger's 43 percent. Bentley held the seat from 1984 to 1994,
when Ehrlich succeeded her.
Schaller said lingering resentment over Ruppersberger's actions as
Baltimore county executive could create problems: Ruppersberger tried
unsuccessfully to condemn Dundalk-area housing to make way for a new
waterfront community, and he backed an unpopular expansion of the county jail
in Towson.
"There will be protest votes that, despite union leadership saying,
'Democrat,' behind that curtain Joe Six-pack will vote Bentley," Schaller
said. "Working-class white men will vote Ehrlich. If they vote Ehrlich,
they'll vote Bentley."
James Roberts, chairman of the political science department at Towson
University, said Ruppersberger could get around that by focusing on the
national importance of the race. The 2nd District is one of a handful in the
nation that could give control of the House back to Democrats.
"If he wants to erase the protest votes, he has to make it a national
vote and make it clear that this not only affects the district, but what
happens in the House," Roberts said. "Don't vote for me, vote for the party.
That's the way to get around it."
Townsend spokeswoman Kate Philips said Ruppersberger would be smart to
emphasize the national prominence of his race.
"His race is important. It would be wise to talk about this as a national
thing. It is a national thing," she said.
But Binetti said they will focus on getting Ruppersberger out on the
campaign trail and on educating voters about "Bentley's horrible, horrible
voting record in Congress" against working families.
"It's about Dutch out down there, knocking on as many doors and shaking
as many hand as possible," Binetti said.
Roberts said knocking on doors might not be enough against Bentley, a
veteran congresswoman, without an endorsement by Townsend.
"If there were anyone else running against Ruppersberger, I'd say he'd
win, but Bentley has name recognition and is a masterful choice," he said.
"He's not loved. He's well-known, but he's not loved," Roberts said.
"He's very visible, very powerful, but I'm not going to say he's very
popular."
Copyright ©
2002 University of Maryland College of
Journalism
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