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He Cared, Says Comptroller
After 51
Years, Voters Give Schaefer a Stinging Defeat
By DAVID J. SILVERMAN
Capital News Service
ANNAPOLIS-Refusing to admit that his
51-year political career was over, William Donald Schaefer
nevertheless conceded defeat to Montgomery County Delegate Peter
Franchot Wednesday after capturing just 30 percent of the
Democratic primary vote in his bid for a third term as state
comptroller.
With several of his supporters and
staffers on hand for a press conference in Annapolis, the
84-year-old Schaefer said that "the best man won" and wished
Franchot luck.
With 96 percent of precincts reporting,
Franchot's 36 percent of the vote narrowly topped Anne Arundel
County Executive Janet S. Owens' 34 percent in an upset that was
not decided until late Wednesday morning when totals from
Montgomery County were counted.
Franchot, a resident of Takoma Park,
will move on to the general election to face Anne M. McCarthy,
the former University of Baltimore business school dean who
captured the Republican nomination by garnering 43 percent of
the vote in a four-way race.
In other races at the top of the
ticket, a second Montgomery County politician, State's Attorney
Douglas F. Gansler, soundly defeated former Baltimore City
State's Attorney Stuart O. Simms in the contest to replace
retiring Attorney General J. Joseph Curran Jr.
He will face Republican Scott L. Rolle,
Frederick County state's attorney, in the general election.
Rolle and McCarthy will join the Republican ticket headed by
Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich and his running mate, Kristen Cox.
Franchot and Gansler will run with
Baltimore Mayor Martin O'Malley and his running mate, Anthony G.
Brown, a delegate from Prince George's County, on the Democratic
ticket. Neither Ehrlich nor O'Malley faced a serious primary
challenge.
The comptroller's race dominated
political news over the summer, largely because of Schaefer's
own erratic behavior and irreverent remarks, mostly directed at
Owens. He called her "Mother Hubbard," made fun of her hair and
suggested she was getting fat. He then blamed her for starting
name-calling.
Franchot, trailing in the polls
throughout the campaign, managed to stay out of the fray.
"I just went right to the Democratic
base and said, 'Please vote for me, because I share your
values,' and I always got a great response back," he was quoted
as saying Wednesday by the Associated Press.
Franchot also linked both his opponents
to Ehrlich, and cast himself as the only true Democrat in the
field. Owens, meanwhile, despite her lead in the polls, ran a
low-key, at times invisible campaign until the very end, when
Schaefer's continual baiting finally brought an angry response.
The defeat of Schaefer marks his first
since he entered elective politics in 1955 with a race for the
Baltimore City Council. His subsequent service as City Council
President, four-term Baltimore mayor and two-term governor made
him a political icon in the state and gave him virtually 100
percent name recognition.
But his stinging repudiation at the
polls -- he failed to get a third of the vote -- was a clear
message that he had stayed on the scene too long and that his
colorful, unpredictable behavior had worn thin.
Wednesday, Schaefer said he had no
regrets about his behavior.
"If they think I'm ever going to
change, and keep my mouth shut and try to be politically
correct," Schaefer said to applause from his aides, his critics
are wrong.
But Schaefer simply refused to answer
directly when asked if he would ever run for elected office
again, instead joking with reporters that he is mulling a bid
for mayor in Ocean City. More immediately, he said, he was
concerned with going to lunch.
He said that when people reflect upon
his career, he would want them to invoke two words: "he cared."
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