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June 23, 2009

Batter Up: Lawmakers scored on various agendas

'Tis the season for scorecards. And I’m not talking about baseball. Around this time of year, after lobbyists and special interest groups have had time to regroup from the General Assembly session, they begin to assess how their agendas fared. Or rather, they rate how well state lawmakers did in enacting those agendas.

The Progressive Maryland Education Fund released its report Tuesday, scoring lawmakers using votes on nine bills, including public campaign financing, labor union service fees, mandatory shift breaks, and stronger regulation of energy markets. The fund is an offshoot of Progressive Maryland, a coalition of unions, community groups and clergy members that champions causes they deem important to working families.

Perhaps not surprisingly, the House of Delegates rated as more "progressive" than the Senate. But surprisingly, the group singled out Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller, considered a more conservative Democrat than some of his liberal colleagues, as a "hero" for throwing his support behind public funding for political campaigns. House Speaker Michael E. Busch fell just shy of the score needed to be a hero.

To see the scorecard, click here.

Other groups that have released similar rankings include Equality Maryland, the leading organization for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender rights, and the Maryland League of Conservation Voters.

Equality Maryland found the House of Delegates to be more gay-friendly on a range of legislation, from a bill to legalize same-sex marriage and a constitutional amendment banning it -- neither of which passed -- and other measures that confer certain spousal rights to same-sex couples. In the Senate, 14 of 47 members scored a zero, including one Democrat, Sen. James E. DeGrange of Anne Arundel County.

The gay-rights scorecard can be found here.

In keeping with the theme, the Maryland League of Conservation Voters also found the House to be a more receptive lot. A majority of delegates scored 80 percent or better, while a majority of senators scored less than that. The league tracked votes on a climate-change bill that passed and calls for 25 percent reduction in global-warming pollution by 2020 as well as measures that addressed stormwater runoff, septic tanks, energy efficient buildings and water pollution penalties.

That scorecard can be found here.

Posted by Laura Smitherman at 2:47 PM | | Comments (4)
        

Comments

Gotta love the source of this nonsense.
Could you have picked a more PARTISAN group of libtards?

so sad that fed up thinks that people who fight for the environment and civil rights are "libtards"

That was meant for Progressive Maryland jimmy.

But you know. All repubs want dirty air and water and for slaves to be back on the plantation right?

you said it...i didn't...

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About the bloggers
Laura Smitherman has been ensconced in the State House basement, writing about the governor, General Assembly and vagaries of Maryland politics for several years. An erstwhile business reporter, her interest in politics dates to her days in Washington when she covered Congress and national campaigns for another media outlet. She now follows a range of policy debates from slot-machine gambling to universal health care and energy regulation, while keeping an eye on the next election.

Paul West covers Washington for The Baltimore Sun, continuing a tradition that began the month the paper was born, in 1837. He hasn't been in the DC bureau that long--only since Ronald Reagan was president. He's covered Congress, the White House and presidential campaigns as the paper's national political correspondent and Washington bureau chief. He's on the lookout for news of significance to Sun readers at the other end of the B/W Parkway. That includes the activities of the state's congressional delegation and anything else that might shed some light on the inner workings of the nation's capital.

Julie Bykowicz's first days as a political reporter, in January 2009, coincided with Baltimore Mayor Sheila Dixon's indictment and the start of the Maryland General Assembly's 426th legislative session. She focuses on coverage of state agencies, such as social services, juvenile justice and prisons. During the session, she wrote about the death penalty, slots parlors and speed cameras, among other hot topics. Julie began political reporting after more than seven years on The Baltimore Sun's crime desk. She lives in Baltimore and works primarily in Annapolis.

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