Montgomery
County Senate Race Features Party- Switchers
By Miesha Lowery
Capital News Service
Friday, Nov. 1, 2002
ANNAPOLIS - It's difficult enough to be a converted Republican in a
Democratic district, but as Sen. Patrick J. Hogan, D-Montgomery, faces his
first race as a newly minted Democrat, he has a world-class heckler as an
opponent.
Robin Ficker, the GOP challenger, is a party-switcher, too, but he's
better known as the former harasser-in-chief of the National Basketball
Association Wizards and sponsor of property tax limitation amendments.
Ficker has made a name for himself, but it remains to be seen if that
will translate into votes.
The infamous heckler of the Washington Bullets, before they were renamed
the Wizards, gained local and possibly regional attention for his outrageous
antics. He would taunt players and hold up rubber chickens and was even booted
out of his seats. The NBA said they moved his seats to comply with
disability standards, but Ficker said they just wanted to move his away from
the sidelines.
"I wouldn't be surprised that he is the better-known candidate, but I
don't think he is held in higher regard," said Hogan. "My opponent is known
for not getting any bills passed."
Three of Ficker's proposed amendments made it to the ballot -- to allow
the county to make regional telephone calls without long-distance charges,
which was later overturned; a prohibition on operating garbage dumps in
residential zones, and a halt to sewage sludge trenching in residential
areas -- and were passed by voters.
However, Ficker, a former state lawmaker, lawyer and West Point graduate,
is known more for his referendums that did not make it.
A proposed amendment to the Montgomery County charter to place term
limits on County Council members and the executive was rejected by 54
percent of voters in 2000.
A 1994 petition to cut property taxes failed by less than 1 percentage
point.
Hogan, a computer consultant, and Ficker do share one thing in common: a
rejection of their political parties. Hogan switched his party affiliation
midterm in early 2001 and Ficker became a Republican in 1975.
The Democratic Party was becoming too powerful and didn't
need him, Ficker said of his switch.
As for Hogan: "The Democrats are thrilled to have a man of this substance
on our side. I think he switched because the Republican Party left him
behind and became too right winged," said David Paulson, spokesman for the
Maryland Democratic Party.
Hogan, a former legislative aide to U.S. Rep. Connie Morella, R-Bethesda,
reformed the transportation Trust Fund and which allotted $14 million a year
for the county. He also sponsored a bill to provide statewide funding for
the county's mass transit system, he said.
His most significant achievements have been the establishment of the
University of Maryland at Shady Grove and establishment of the Maryland
prepaid college tuition program, Hogan said.
Ficker is a character of the grass roots.
Knocking on doors and waving to voters from busy intersections with his
banner displaying the Web site (www.endMDgridlock.com) is how Ficker reaches
out to his district, and he likes to say that his opponent is campaigning
from his back porch.
In District 39, campaign issues revolve around an important topic:
transportation.
Montgomery County has one of the worst transportation problems in the
state.
Three major projects have been touted as solutions: the Inter-county
Connector linking Interstate 270 to Interstate 95, the proposed Metrorail
Purple Line to connect Montgomery and Prince George's counties and extending
the Red Line to Germantown.
"Last month, I used 1,700 minutes, and I only use my cell phone in my car.
This proves that gridlock is the main problem in Montgomery County," said
Ficker, an ICC backer.
Hogan has unfinished business in office and his priorities are set on
transportation, specifically the ICC, and education, he said.
"Over the last eight years I have a record of working with other
legislators and delivering for my district and county. I've also had many
bills passed and gotten money for our schools and transportation," Hogan
said.
Hogan has not done enough to help Montgomery County's transportation
problem and the district needs fresh ideas, Ficker said.
"I think his reputation (Hogan) is what's in question. He should be
called 'Do-nothing' -- do nothing for education, do nothing for the ICC and
do nothing for a Potomac bridge."
District 39 is slightly more Democratic and many Republicans were moved
out when Gov. Parris N. Glendening's redistricting plans took effect in
February, according to the Montgomery County Board of Elections.
"This couldn't be a more perfect race for this Democrat," said Paulson.
Montgomery Village, Derwood, North Potomac, unincorporated Gaithersburg
and parts of Germantown constitute the district. Voter registrations list
25,282 Democrats, 16,057 Republicans and 11,340 independents as of
Wednesday, according to the Montgomery County Board of Elections.
"I think Robin's chances are good, because voters don't know P.J. Hogan
anymore than they know Robin Ficker. It all comes down to who touches the
most voters," said State GOP Executive Director Paul Ellington.
Hogan has held the Senate seat for eight years while Ficker is a former
delegate and unsuccessfully ran for the U.S. Senate against incumbent Paul
S. Sarbanes, D-Baltimore, in 2000.
"These two candidates both have political liabilities," said WTOP
political analyst Blair Lee. "P.J.'s liability is that he did the hardest
thing in American politics, and Ficker's liability is that he is Ficker,"
Lee said.
"In any other race Hogan would have a difficult time after his switch to
Democrat, but this race isn't even close."
Copyright ©
2002 University of Maryland College of
Journalism
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