Compromised positions

 

Compromise is the order of the 90 days.

 

Some examples from the 79th day.

 

On the House floor, nobody raised concerns about my bill to criminalize certain conduct by either side of a referendum petition effort.

 

A Rosenberg bill on election law usually generates skeptical (but misguided) questions from my Republican colleagues.

 

This time, however, the bill had been amended to reflect the compromise reached by Delegate Parrott, a Republican, and myself.

 

I’m no scholar when it comes to the 4th Amendment and search warrants.

 

But I do know that prosecutors and the police will be one side, the Public Defender and the American Civil Liberties union on the other.

 

I played a supporting role in a meeting where we tried to find common ground on a bill dealing with cell phones and search warrants.

 

Lastly, even after your legislation is dead, a compromise may be possible.

 

Can you get the bill’s opponents, who opposed requiring them to do something, to agree to do so voluntarily?

 

The support of the chair of the committee that killed your bill can bring that about.

  • My Key Issues:

  • Pimlico and The Preakness
  • Our Neighborhoods
  • Pre-Kindergarten
  • Lead Paint Poisoning