WASHINGTON - After 6th District congressional challenger Scott Rolle spoke
to the Frederick Kiwanis Club in late January, club President Jerry Jenkins'
mind was made up: He would vote for Rolle in the March 2 Republican primary.
He also expects Rolle to lose.
Incumbent Rep. Roscoe Bartlett of Frederick will win, Jenkins said. "He's
too ingrained in the political mind."
That sentiment seems to be shared by many Republicans across the
district. For them, Rolle (rhymes with "volley"), 42, is a rising star in
state Republican circles, but Bartlett, 77, is too well-known and too
well-liked to be unseated in his bid for a seventh term.
"I think the voters will be receptive to a young Republican who is
capable and can serve, but they also don't want to unseat a sitting
congressman," said John Bambacus, an associate professor of political
science at Frostburg State University.
Especially one like Bartlett, who Bambacus said has done "a careful study
of the district, so he knows what people are interested in, and then pursues
those interests."
Rolle, the three-term state's attorney from Frederick County, is not
deterred.
"I've had many people say, 'I voted for Bartlett because I never had a
choice before, and now we have a choice with you,' " he said.
Rolle has been taking that message throughout the district, which
stretches from Garrett to Harford County, campaigning so far in Accident,
Oakland, parts of Allegany County, Hagerstown and Frederick.
He is also running -- literally -- through parts of the district, usually
jogging a couple of miles around town centers with campaign staff and
supporters.
Despite a sprained foot suffered during a family volleyball game, Rolle
ran up and down Main Street in Westminster on a recent sunny but windy
Saturday with seven supporters, while others stood at a busy intersection
and held up signs.
After the run, Rolle talked with voters in local businesses, but not
before asking the owners how business is faring. His campaign is focused on
small business, in part because he comes from a family of small-business
owners, including his own daughter, who runs a traveling sno-cone stand.
On the campaign trail, Rolle is both open and personable, moving easily
from Baltimore Ravens chatter in a barbershop to music talk with teen-agers
at a nearby music store, where he also sat to briefly play a guitar.
Despite the energy he brings to campaigning, Rolle is far behind in fund
raising. Forms filed with the Federal Election Commission show Rolle had
almost $23,000 on hand at the end of 2003, while Bartlett had more than
$280,000.
Rolle also does not have the endorsement of one of his highest-profile
friends, Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. The governor is backing Bartlett, saying
in January that Rolle has a bright future in state politics, but that he is
running "wrong race at the wrong time."
Rolle shrugged off the endorsement. "To a certain extent, the incumbents
support the incumbents," Rolle said, adding that he would work with Ehrlich
if elected.
With both candidates staking out similar, conservative stands on the
issues, Bambacus said the campaign could become more of a "generational
election" between Rolle and Bartlett.
But Bartlett, who called Rolle an "aggressive young man," said he still
feels like he did at age 50, bounding down steps on Capitol Hill instead of
taking an escalator. He said his age helped him make friends early on with
contemporaries who are now full committee chairs, including Reps. Henry
Hyde, R-Ill., and Don Young, R-Alaska.
"One of the advantages of being older is that the friends you make
frequently have seniority," he said.
Aides said Bartlett's wide range of experience -- farmer, scientist and
small business owner -- gives him credibility and institutional knowledge
that helps the district in Congress. His down-home and folksy demeanor
belies a sharp mind and a resolve to adhere to a strict interpretation of
the Constitution; he is sponsoring a bill to repeal part of the campaign
finance reform laws because he believes it restricts free-speech rights.
Bartlett said "only the Lord knows" when he will retire.
"The truth is, the longer you're here the more effective you are," he
said. "I want to continue serving my constituents. It's very rewarding."
Many observers agree that the seat is Bartlett's until he decides to
leave.
"Definitely Roscoe," said Beatrice Crosco, president of the Southern
Garrett County Republican Women's Club. "The public knows him, and he hasn't
really made a big mistake yet."
Crosco said Bartlett is in the county at least four times a year for
parades and political events. She has seen Rolle on television a few times,
but said most people do not know him in Garrett County, where a personal
touch is appreciated.
"He needs to appear more. We like candidates who know where Garrett
County is," Crosco said.
Bambacus found it "unusual" that Rolle would throw his hat into the ring
against an incumbent like Bartlett: In two of the last three GOP primaries
Bartlett ran unopposed and he took 78 percent of the vote in the 2000
primary, when he was challenged.
But Allegany County Republican Central Committee Chairman Bud Willetts
said Rolle may be looking beyond the "uphill battle" in this election.
"He is not hurting himself at all if he's unsuccessful," said Willetts,
who came away impressed after Rolle met with the central committee.
"One of the smartest things he is doing is showing respect for Bartlett,"
said Willetts. "He talked about their differences, not bashed them. He's
running a positive campaign, not burning bridges."
That positive campaigning also attracted Jenkins of Frederick.
"He didn't want to throw dirt," Jenkins said of Rolle. "He only wanted to
talk about what he wanted to do. It was refreshing."
Copyright ©
2004 University of Maryland Philip Merrill College of
Journalism