1st District
Candidates Spend Little Money, Less Energy on Low-Key Campaign
By Kory Dodd
Capital News Service
Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2002
WASHINGTON - Ann D. Tamlyn said she has no complaints about 1st
District Rep. Wayne T. Gilchrest, R-Kennedyville, and even supports many
of his policies.
She just wants him out of office.
1st District
Candidate Bios
By Capital News Service
Wayne T. Gilchrest
Party: Republican
Age: 56
Education: Associate's degree from Wesley College in Dover,
Del., 1969; bachelor's degree from Delaware State College, 1973.
Experience: Vietnam veteran; high school history teacher in
New Jersey from 1973-1976, in Vermont from 1969-1979 and in Kent
County from 1979-1986 and in 1989-1990; elected to Congress in 1990;
chairman of the House Subcommittee on Fisheries, Conservation,
Wildlife and Oceans; member, House Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure, among others.
Issues: A strong supporter of the environment and the
Chesapeake Bay; supported military action in Iraq; voted for the
Medicare Modernization and Prescription Drug Act; opposed the No Child
Left Behind Act, which he felt would weaken local control of schools.
Family: Has three children with wife, Barbara; lives in
Kennedyville.
Ann D. Tamlyn
Party: Democrat
Age: 78
Education: Bachelor's degree from Barnard College, in 1984.
Experience: Member, Queen Anne's County Chamber of Commerce;
member, League of Women Voters of Kent County; member American
Association of University Women; and member of the Queen Anne's County
NAACP. Grassroots organizer to lobby State House on environmental
issues in the 1990s; Grasonville Community Center board member;
elected to Queen Anne's County Democratic Central Committee in 1998
and 2002.
Issues: Supports the preservation of natural resources and
the Chesapeake Bay; wants federal funding to upgrade antiquated sewer
systems; would increase federal funding for Social Security; would
increase funding for education; wants a prescription drug plan that
lowers costs for seniors; does not believe war with Iraq is merited.
Family: Lives in Centreville. Married; three of her four
children are still living.
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The 78-year-old Democratic nominee from Centreville said she has a simple
plan for ousting the six-term incumbent -- ride the coattails of the
Democratic Party and the lingering resentment over the 2000 presidential
election straight into office.
"I think people are determined to go to the polls and to show that there
is a Democratic majority in this country," said Tamlyn.
On paper, her strategy makes sense. Democrats outnumber Republicans 46
percent to 41 percent in the conservative 1st District, and Gilchrest is a
moderate coming off a primary that left him with little cash for the general
election.
But political analysts say it ain't going to happen.
"It's a fairly conservative district" where Democrats do not have a
problem supporting a Republican like Gilchrest, said Frank DeFilippo, a
political analyst for WBAL radio.
"He (Gilchrest) is understated, and he fits in pretty well on the Eastern
Shore," DeFilippo said.
Gilchrest himself does not appear concerned. Having survived a primary
against a conservative opponent who he said "had more money than brains,"
Gilchrest has been campaigning only sporadically for the general election,
spending weekdays in Washington and occasionally stumping through the
district on weekends.
"We have not gotten fully engaged in campaign activities," said
Gilchrest, who plans to campaign with GOP gubernatorial nominee Robert
Ehrlich in the next week or so.
Tamlyn is not deterred.
She views running for office as a way of educating people and sees the
election as a chance to do just that. She also sees it as chance to stop
Congress from "diverting our attention and our money and our efforts away
from the things that are important to the people in this country."
Tamlyn was not originally planning to run for Gilchrest's seat. Her job,
as a member of the Queen Anne's County Democratic Central Committee, was to
recruit Democrats to challenge Gilchrest. But his past challengers all said
no. Unable to find anyone else to fill the slot, she said she decided to run
herself.
"I thought somebody should run," Tamlyn said.
The differences between the two candidates are minuscule.
Tamlyn said Gilchrest did the right thing when he voted to give the
president authority to use military force against Iraq, for example, but
said President Bush has not provided proof that the situation in Iraq is
"different this year than 10 years ago."
She believes a war would "use up far more money than it should and
deprive the nation of things that are far more important to our domestic
economy."
One of those domestic items is the need to repair the country's aging
sewer systems, a major issue that she said Congress is ignoring. In both
rural and urban areas "the systems are antique, overused, neglected . . .
they all need to be renewed and there's not enough money in the world to fix
all of them," she said.
She opposes the president's No Child Left Behind education plan, saying
it is underfunded. Gilchrest voted against the plan, not over funding issues
but because he thinks it could weaken local control of schools.
Tamlyn said a House-passed prescription drug bill will help drug
companies but will do little to lower the cost of prescriptions for seniors.
Gilchrest, who voted for the bill, disagreed but also said more needs to be
done to bring down health costs.
Tamlyn also quibbles over what she sees as an erosion of Gilchrest's
environmental voting record.
DeFilippo said Gilchrest's defense of the Chesapeake Bay has allowed him
to win the hearts of the district's voters, and it has marked his tenure as
much as any other issue.
But Gilchrest has been slipping lately, said Tamlyn. The League of
Conservation Voters appears to agree, lowering his voting scores from 62
percent for the 105th Congress to 57 percent for the 106th Congress and 50
percent for this term.
A league spokesman said the drop probably reflects Gilchrest's challenge
in dealing with an "anti-environmental Republican majority" in Congress.
"He's been a great environmental leader in Congress," said Scott
Stoermer, the league's spokesman. "I don't think you find a stronger
advocate for the Chesapeake Bay."
While the league has endorsed Gilchrest in the past, it chose not to do
so this year, only because "he doesn't have very much of a race," Stoermer
said.
For Tamlyn, the challenge will be spreading her message and getting name
recognition in an enormous geographical district that genuinely favors its
incumbent, said Harry Basehart, chairman of Salisbury University's political
science department. And she has to do it all without much money.
Basehart a challenger would need a minimum of $500,000 and a political
office in one the district's larger counties to have the name recognition
that would give them a realistic shot at Gilchrest.
Tamlyn has neither. She chose to finance her campaign herself. In a
report to the Federal Election Commission, she reported having a total of
$17, 219 for the campaign, but only $1,956 on hand by the end of August.
Tamlyn said she was not worried and had plenty of money for the election.
Compared to Gilchrest, she might. Because he does not accept campaign
contributions from outside his district, Gilchrest has never raised much
money, and an expensive primary left him with only $22,291 in the bank as of
Sept. 30, according to his most recent FEC filing.
But Gilchrest is helped by high name recognition and the makeup of his
district, experts said. The district was made even friendlier to Gilchrest
in this year's redistricting, which packed in more Republicans.
"The Democratic leadership in the legislature has conceded the district
to the Republicans," said Brad Coker, a pollster for Mason-Dixon Polling and
Research.
The parts of the district that are new to Gilchrest -- sections of Anne
Arundel, Hartford and Baltimore counties -- have been represented by
Ehrlich. The popular outgoing congressman has endorsed Gilchrest, which
guarantees him the votes he needs in those new areas, DeFilippo said.
Political experts agree that Tamlyn has not been mounting a strong enough
campaign against Gilchrest.
"The primary was the only stumbling block that Gilchrest faced and it
wasn't much of a race," Coker said.
Though Tamlyn has been campaigning locally with Democratic groups and
will begin a radio campaign, Basehart said that will not be enough.
"You have to use the media, which in this case is pretty much paid
advertisement in television" and that should have started a while ago,
Basehart said.
But Tamlyn is positive that enough people know her from her campaigning,
her seat on the central committee and her days as a volunteer lobbying in
Annapolis in the 1990s. With that name recognition, Tamlyn said the
district's majority of Democratic voters and the national party's momentum
will get her into office.
"I'm depending on the Democratic majority and I feel the wind at my
back," she said.
Copyright ©
2002 University of Maryland College of
Journalism
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