'Up For Grabs' Comptroller Race
Hinges On Schaefer
By Chris Yakaitis
Capital News Service
Thursday, Sept. 7, 2006
ANNAPOLIS - Maryland voters decide Tuesday if William Donald
Schaefer will remain in public life or go loudly into the night,
after a state comptroller's race that has been dominated by the
two-term incumbent's unpredictable behavior and cranky
commentary.
Analysts who have watched usually sleepy campaigns for
comptroller in past years said the three-way battle in Tuesday's
Democratic primary has evolved into a tight race among Schaefer,
Anne Arundel County Executive Janet S. Owens and state Delegate
Peter V. Franchot, D-Montgomery. The election, they said, will
be less a vote for a state office than a referendum on Schaefer
himself.
"If you asked 90 percent of the voters what's important in
the next comptroller, people would be struggling to define those
qualities and characteristics. The election's really about
William Donald Schaefer. Or not," said Keith Haller, president
of Potomac Inc., a firm that conducts polls for the media. "It's
about a larger-than-life persona who's teetering on
inappropriate behavior, certainly for a statewide politician."
Haller said most of the races in Schaefer's 51-year political
career have been a "big yawn," with the iconic former governor
and Baltimore mayor rolling over opponents. But that has changed
in recent weeks, as Schaefer has targeted Owens - and to a
lesser degree, Franchot - with personal attacks for which he
remains unapologetic.
"His political livelihood is on the chopping block in a way
no one would have anticipated several weeks ago," Haller said.
Recent polls suggest that Maryland voters may have grown
weary of Schaefer's quirky personality. A Gonzales Research &
Marketing Strategies poll conducted Aug. 18-25 on behalf of the
Owens campaign showed Schaefer leading Owens by a mere 4 points
(34 percent to 30 percent). Franchot held 15 percent of the vote in the
poll.
Political analyst Frank A. DeFilippo said the most telling
number in the poll is the 21 percent of undecided voters, which
he interpreted as people who are "pretty much decided that
they're not going to vote for Schaefer."
But some experts said none of the candidates should approach
next week's vote with any degree of certainty.
"This is one of those contests where a pundit who pretends to
know is merely spinning himself. It's totally up for grabs,"
said Herb Smith, a political science professor at McDaniel
College. "I would not be surprised by any outcome."
In challenging a politician whose name is as synonymous with
Maryland as a steamed crab, Owens and Franchot have faced an
uphill battle.
"It's tough operating from a limited geographic area," Haller
said. "You have to hope for widespread attention by the media."
Much of that attention, however, has been dominated by
Schaefer's colorful criticisms, particularly his recent
description of Owens as "Mother Hubbard" and a
"great-great-grandmother." Meanwhile, Franchot has more quietly
reeled in endorsements from The Baltimore Sun and The Washington
Post, as well as several environmental, labor and Democratic
groups.
For her part, Owens has campaigned with the slogan "It's
time," suggesting to voters that Schaefer should finally exit
Maryland politics. Her campaign Web site emphasizes her
"conservative approach to fiscal management" and "smart growth"
policies that have preserved open space during her two terms as
county executive.
Though Schaefer contends that Owens started the name-calling
by referring to him as a "grandfather," Owens has tried to stay
out of the verbal fray. She released a statement this week
saying: "I have no intention of responding to Schaefer's coarse
and insulting remarks . . . I will conduct myself as I have
throughout the campaign and continue to run on the issues I
think are critical for the citizens of Maryland. And one of
these issues will be to restore integrity to the office of
Comptroller and to treat everyone with dignity and respect."
The duties that come with being the state's chief tax
collector - especially a seat on the three-member Board of
Public Works panel - are what drew Franchot into the race.
"The major issue is getting the state back on the right
track," Franchot said at a gathering of about 25 supporters
Wednesday night in Silver Spring. He said Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich
has used Schaefer's vote on the Board of Public Works to push
through his "failed Republican agenda," resulting in higher
college tuition, attempts to sell public parks to private
developers and cuts in health care.
Franchot said his competitors have run "content-free
campaigns," but he has stressed his commitment to state funding
for education and health care and his opposition to slot
machines, a platform consistent with his 20 years in the House
of Delegates.
"Those are issues that are very central to the Democratic
values and party, and I look forward to being a real Democrat on
the Board of Public Works, either as a check and balance to
Ehrlich or as a positive partner for Governor O'Malley," he
said.
While Schaefer has lumped Owens and Franchot together as
nobodies, Franchot's campaign has lumped Schaefer and Owens
together as Ehrlich cronies. One Franchot television ad depicts
the heads of Schaefer, Owens and Ehrlich as three peas in a pod.
His campaign has named him "The Only Democrat for
Comptroller," a tag that Franchot said will carry him to
victory.
"There's a choice between Franchot or, if they like Bob
Ehrlich, it's their lucky year - they get to pick between
Schaefer or Owens," Franchot said. "We'll win because Democrats
want a real Democrat as comptroller, not a pro-slots,
pro-sprawl, pro-Ehrlich Democrat like Schaefer or Owens."
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