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Green
Candidate Left to Challenge Hoyer, as GOP Backs Out of 5th
District Race
By ESTHER A. NGUONLY
Capital News Service
COLLEGE PARK - Republicans have failed to put forth a
candidate to challenge Democratic Rep. Steny Hoyer in a
congressional district that they have long said was drifting
toward the GOP.
At least two Republicans who filed for the 5th District
seat have withdrawn, leaving Green Party candidate Steve Warner
as the only challenger to Hoyer, a 13-term incumbent.
"I think that the candidates are looking at the race and
realizing that there was a better opportunity elsewhere," said
Audra Miller, a Maryland Republican Party spokeswoman.
She said Ron Miller, who reported raising more than
$50,000 to challenge Hoyer, withdrew from the race earlier this
summer and announced his candidacy for the District 27 state
Senate seat.
Another Republican, Marlon Alvey, had filed with the state
Board of Elections last September to run again Hoyer but has
since withdrawn.
Despite repeated attempts, neither Alvey nor Ron Miller
could be contacted to comment on their decisions to back out of
the congressional race.
Audra Miller said that the party was shifting its energies
to other races, such as re-electing Gov. Robert Ehrlich and
electing Lt. Gov. Michael Steele to the U.S. Senate.
But others pointed to the fact that a successful challenge
of an entrenched incumbent like Hoyer is nearly impossible.
"Why would a Republican get involved against some
incumbent who has all the advantage? They'd be crazy to," said
James Gimpel, a government professor at the University of
Maryland, College Park.
Hoyer, who currently serves as the House minority whip,
was re-elected in 2004 with 69 percent of the vote. He had
raised more than $1.6 million for this year's elections and had
almost $800,000 cash on hand as of June 30, according to his
report to the Federal Election Commission.
FEC records show that Hoyer gave $185,000 to the
Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and $20,000 to the
Maryland Democratic Party in 2006, and gave campaign cash to
dozens of Democratic congressional hopefuls around the country.
"It's not uncommon for a candidate to divvy up his war
chest for other candidates in need," Gimpel said, adding that a
candidate like Hoyer would still have enough on hand to run a
"positive ad or two" if needed for his own race.
But Hoyer's campaign funds have not deterred Warner, the
Green Party candidate.
"I don't think I need a lot of money to win," Warner said.
He said he has raised close to $1,500, mainly by rolling up his
sleeves and going out to actively get out the message that he
will "work hard for people in the district."
While Hoyer reported raising more than $1 million from
political action committees, Warner said his grassroots campaign
will not accept money from PACs or corporations.
"Our Congress was set up so that the representatives were
only supposed to be accepting money from the people," Warner
said. "Corporations are not people. They do not represent the
values and philosophies of their employees. Their employees are
the individuals."
Warner believes that campaign finance numbers do not tell
the whole story.
"I'm getting a good sense from the public that they are
ready for a change," he said.
While that may be, Gimpel said the odds are still long for
challengers.
"It would take some huge scandal," to unseat a member of
Congress, said Gimpel. Or the incumbent "would have to go out
and kill somebody!" |