Newcomer Nice Guy Challenges Career Nice Guy in 3rd District
Congressional Race
By Heather Coppley
Capital News Service
Thursday, Oct. 24, 2002
3rd District Candidate Bios
By Capital News Service
Ben Cardin
Party: Democrat
Age: 59
Education: Bachelor's degree with honors, University of Pittsburgh,
1964; juris doctor, first in class, University of Maryland School of Law;
honorary honorary degrees from the University of Baltimore School of Law,
University of Maryland at Baltimore, Baltimore Hebrew University and Goucher
College.
Experience: Member of the Maryland General Assembly, 1967-1987, served
as chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, 1974-1979, Speaker of the House,
1979- 1986; elected to Congress 1986, serves on Ways and Means Committee, is
ranking member on Human Resources Subcommittee.
Issues: Homeland defense, health care, environmental protection,
education, congressional ethics, social security, welfare reform and Baltimore.
Family: Married to Myrna Edelman Cardin; grandfather.
Scott Conwell
Party: Republican
Age: 38
Education: bachelor's degree, Johns Hopkins University, Whiting School
of Engineering, 1987; MBA, Loyola College, 1992; juris doctor, University of
Maryland School of Law, 1999.
Experience: Engineer, Department of Defense, 1988-2000; lawyer in
private practice, 2000-present.
Issues: Education, transportation and homeland defense.
Family: Divorced, 9-year-old son.
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WASHINGTON - What kind of Boy Scout would take on a career politician
who has a reputation for balancing his progressive politics with
bipartisan consensus building?
Eagle Scout Scott Conwell thinks he is that man.
A lifelong resident of the 3rd District, Conwell, 38, has
worked as an engineer and lawyer, and has a master's in business
administration to go with his Eagle Scout badge.
The Republican newcomer said he will pit the experience of "a
Maryland life" against Baltimore Democratic Rep. Ben Cardin's 35
years of state and federal legislative service.
"Cardin's never run a tough race. I think he's gotten out of
touch with the people," Conwell said.
"If you were at the parades this summer, you'd wonder who the
incumbent was. There were 'Vote Conwell' stickers everywhere," he
said.
But while Conwell may know the 3rd District, Cardin has spent
the past 15 years in Congress serving its interests. Before that,
he spent 20 years as a lawmaker in Annapolis, where he rose to
become speaker of the House.
Since running for Congress, Cardin has routinely received more than
70 percent of the vote in his re-election bids. Political analysts
expect much the same this year, even though redistricting took
away some of Cardin's core constituents.
"When Cardin retires, the 3rd District could become a
competitive district," said Carol Arscott of Gonzales/Arscott
Research and Communication Inc.
Montgomery Journal columnist Blair Lee said the redistricting
was retribution by Gov. Parris Glendening, whom Cardin considered
challenging in 1998.
"Glendening punished him with redistricting and took away part
of his Democratic base, but it is still Democratic enough," Lee
said. He put Conwell's chances of unseating Cardin at "about
zero."
But Conwell maintains he is the perfect candidate for the
district, which now snakes from central Baltimore County, through
east Baltimore and into eastern Howard County before curling back
to cover large chunks of northern Anne Arundel County.
His campaign bio promotes the fact that he was an Eagle Scout
and, at 38, he still looks the part. He is of average height, with
baby-fair blond hair and blue eyes sunk into a bearish face. His
youthful ambition has taken many paths along the way to
congressional hopeful.
After earning an engineering degree from Johns Hopkins
University, he spent 12 years working as an engineer for the
Defense Department. During that time, he took night classes that
led to an MBA and then a law degree.
The law interest took, and he switched careers two years ago.
But his parents knew better than to think their son had settled
down when he joined a Washington law firm.
"My parents said, 'What's next -- med school?' and I said,
'No,
politics.' "
Conwell was eyeing the governor's race until Rep. Bob Erlich,
R-Timonium, announced his candidacy for that office. So he turned
his attention turned to the newly re-drawn 3rd District. It seemed
a natural fit for someone who has made his home in Anne Arundel,
Baltimore and Howard counties and Baltimore City.
"I thought, 'I know this whole district,' " Conwell said.
But he readily concedes that the race is not easy for a
first-timer.
"I don't have half a million in the bank, which is probably
what it takes," he said.
The actual numbers are closer to $12,000 for Conwell, most of
it from his own pocket, against Cardin's $765,000, much of it from
political action committees, according to the latest reports with
the Federal Election Commission.
Their take on the issues are as different as their bank
accounts.
Conwell sees transportation as the top priority for the
district. The former engineer hopes to draw on his experience to
develop a "real core of transit" within Baltimore.
"You have to make carless city living feasible," he said.
He has underlined his opposition to the proposed high-speed
maglev train from Baltimore to Washington, which he considers
overly expensive and misdirected. Conwell is exploiting Cardin's
support of the maglev plan, and the absence of transportation from
the incumbent's list of key campaign issues.
"I know he hasn't even thought about it," Conwell said.
But Cardin cannot help but think of traffic: His average day
involves multiple trips between Washington and Baltimore.
Cardin points to his record of earmarking resolutions to assure
"hundreds of millions" in federal funds for local transportation
projects, such as the Route 32 and Reisterstown interchanges. He
talks of helping communities foster smart growth and building
hiker-biker paths.
Conwell also hits Cardin on his decision to oppose the
resolution that gave the president the authority to take military
action Iraq.
"President Bush has brought together a bipartisan coalition.
Voting against this resolution doesn't give Bush the support he
needs," said Conwell, who said he was shocked by Cardin's vote.
Cardin said he would have supported a resolution that clearly
said that any U.S. action be part of an international effort or a
response to a grave risk to the country. He said it is
"unfortunate" that the resolution did not go as far as the
president's own statements in assuring consultation with the
United Nations.
While Cardin is comfortable with his record on international
policies, it is local issues that matter most to him. The
incumbent is perhaps best known for his work to protect Social
Security and pension programs but said the Chesapeake Bay "is the
absolute most important issue." Cardin said he hopes to build on
gains he has already made in protecting watersheds and streams.
Education is a key issue for both candidates.
Conwell wants to ease teacher certification through a
month-long or summer course suited to those moving to teaching
from other fields. His proposal assumes federal funding and
federal standards.
Cardin, who seeks more federal funding for schools and
decreased class sizes, sees Conwell's call for federal standards
as misguided. While he said he has not seen a specific proposal,
he opposes involving the federal government in teacher
certification on principle.
"States are already taking care of this issue," Cardin said.
Despite their differences, the two have run a respectful race.
Accusations, if any, are usually met with a smile from both men.
Cardin has a laughing smile. It draws up in a crescent to his
bespectacled eyes, while he lifts his button-small chin. His
snow-white hair suggests a grandfatherliness beyond his 59 years.
But he is a proud grandfather -- granddaughter Madeline is
featured prominently on the 'kids' zone' page of his House Web
site.
While he has lost some old voters to a new map, Cardin has
spent time going out to areas like Towson and parts of Anne
Arundel County to meet new ones. He is not content to sit back in
Congress and wait for election numbers to come in.
"I've conducted every campaign with the same philosophy," he
said.
Conwell, in his first bid for office, is campaigning the same
way, pressing as much flesh as he can before the election.
He acknowledges that running for Congress is hard on family
life -- the divorced father has had to balance campaigning with
coaching his tow-headed 9- year-old son, Brandon.
At the ribbon-cutting for another Republican's campaign office,
Conwell and other GOP candidates stood in the parking lot
discussing redistricting and the race. Conwell had one eye on the
campaign and one on Brandon, who was getting wound up over a
radio-controlled Battlebot-style vehicle that a couple of kids
were playing with.
"Now he's going to tell me that he wants to make one," Conwell
said, looking over at the mini-monster of Plexiglas and fat tires,
"and I'll say, 'Let's see after Nov. 5.' "
Copyright ©
2002 University of Maryland College of
Journalism
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