Next Steps After Tuesday

On Election Night, I advised my 32-year old niece and nephew to concentrate on an issue they really cared about and to volunteer their time and money.  As a state legislator, I told them, I will be in a unique position to protect the people of Maryland against harmful  decisions in Washington.

I wrote that four years ago.

What advice would I give them and myself as the votes are still being counted on the Friday morning after Election Day?

If Joe Biden wins, we won’t have to worry about harmful decisions.

But Maryland can still serve as an example by enacting programs that are stalled by gridlock in Washington.  We can be the laboratory of democracy, as Justice Brandeis said of the states’ role in our system.

While doing that, we should bear this in mind.

Again, while Biden made small inroads with working-class voters, there seems to be no huge shift. Maybe because many working-class Trump voters not only feel looked down upon, but they also resent what they see as cultural censorship from liberal elites, coming out of college campuses. 

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/04/opinion/trump-biden-election-2020.html  (Tom Friedman)

The concerns of the working class are shared by the conservative religious community, I would add.

The electoral transformation of power was made possible by John Lewis, Lyndon Johnson, and millions of Americans exercising their sacred right to vote.

It is now up to all of us to follow Abraham Lincoln’s counsel to “bind up the Nation’s wounds.”

Joe Biden and Our Better Angels

We heard so many stories about Joe Biden taking time to talk and listen to people. 

Quite a few had lost a child or family member.  One stuttered. 

What does this tell us about the campaign ahead?  More importantly, what does it say about how Biden would govern and lead as President? 

There was empathy and a commitment to address the tough tasks that lie ahead.

“If you entrust me with the Presidency,” Biden said in his acceptance speech, “I will draw on the best of us.” 

He can appeal to the better angels of our nature, as did Lincoln. 

In the recorded segment on Biden’s faith, he spoke of the compassion of the family members who forgave the white supremacist killer at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston. 

No doubt there were quite a few elected officials at their funeral. 

But Biden returned the next Sunday. 

That was empathy.  That was profound.

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If you are registered to vote in Maryland, you can use this link to request a mail-in ballot, instead of waiting for the application to arrive in the mail.

I urge you to do so.

https://voterservices.elections.maryland.gov/onlinemailinrequest/InstructionsStep1

Now one. “He knows us.”

It is quite an accomplishment for the Biden campaign to get Buttigieg, Klobuchar, and Bloomberg to endorse Vice President Biden as they ended their candidacies.

That took some persuasion and skill on the part of Biden and his staff, but it was made possible by the prospect of another four years of President Trump.

As the returns came in from New Hampshire several political light years ago, I totaled the results for the three moderates (Biden, Buttigieg, and Klobuchar) and the two progressives (Sanders and Warren).

The moderates had more than 5 of the votes cast.

The moderates are now one.

What gave the Biden campaign its credibility and thus its momentum was the endorsement of Representative James Clyburn.

“Joe Biden has stood for the hard-working people of South Carolina,” Clyburn tweeted. “We know Joe. But more importantly, he knows us. In South Carolina, we choose presidents. I’m calling on you to stand with Joe Biden.”

“He knows us.”

That’s the standard that every elected official needs to meet and then convey to his constituents in a campaign year.

I’d like to think that I meet that test throughout my diverse district.

I did some thinking today about how best to get that message out.

  • My Key Issues:

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