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NEW REPORTING: ā€œCandidate Hoganā€™s Words on Trump Donā€™t Match His Recordā€ [Baltimore Banner]

Sep 17, 2024

Republican Larry Hoganā€™s campaign rhetoric doesnā€™t match his real record of blocking efforts to hold Donald Trump accountable, according to new reporting from the Baltimore Banner.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT.

Baltimore Banner: Maryland Democrats Say Candidate Hoganā€™s Words on Trump Donā€™t Match his Record

By Brenda Wintrode

September 17, 2024

  • Former Gov. Larry Hogan paints himself as one of a few Republicans who never backed down to ex-President Donald Trump, but the Democratic attorney general who served during Hoganā€™s two terms disagrees.
  • The stateā€™s former top attorney recalled dozens of times where Hogan could have stood up to Trump but repeatedly chose to stand down. Instead, lawmakers had to change state law, giving Frosh the unilateral authority to sue the Trump administration and cutting Hogan out of the process.
  • During Trumpā€™s term, Frosh sued the federal government on behalf of Marylanders dozens of times. Among the reasons: to protect their civil rights, to preserve the Affordable Care Act used by hundreds of thousands of Marylanders, to guard access to contraception and access to food stamps and to keep offshore drilling away from the Chesapeake Bay.
  • The governor also withheld funding for Frosh mandated by the General Assembly.
  • ā€œHe is the antithesis of someone who stands up for something,ā€ Frosh said. ā€œHe was ducking and running.ā€

Legislature Cut Hoganā€™s Power

  • Days after Trumpā€™s inauguration, the 45th president ordered a travel ban, barring people from certain Muslim-majority countries from entering the United States.
  • Frosh wanted to sue on the basis of religious discrimination and on behalf of students and workers trying to come to Maryland. The quickest route to suing the federal government at the time was to seek the governorā€™s permission. But Hogan never answered Froshā€™s request, he said.
  • The attorney then went to the General Assembly for help, an alternative allowed by law, and the Democratic-led legislature acted. They changed state law to scrap Hoganā€™s authority, giving Frosh sole power to sue if the federal government threatened the public interest and welfare of Marylanders.

Hoganā€™s Balancing Act

  • The campaign ad that has Frosh vexed calls Hogan ā€œan early critic of Donald Trump, one of the few Republicans who never caved.ā€Ā 
  • If Hogan was truly disgusted, Frosh said there were far more opportunities to show it.

Put it in Writing

  • Now that Hogan is again running for public office, critics are comparing the former governorā€™s projected image against their recollections of his actions, or lack thereof, while in office.
  • The former governorā€™s record should face ā€œlegitimate public debate,ā€ said Baltimore Democrat Del. Sandy Rosenberg.
  • ā€œHereā€™s a commercial on the one hand, but hereā€™s what he [Hogan] didnā€™t do on the other,ā€ Rosenberg said.
  • ā€œIt is almost comical to me that itā€™s being framed as though he [Hogan] was not sort of doing the bidding of the [Republican] party at the time,ā€ Ferguson said.
  • ā€œI donā€™t trust him to stand up for Marylandā€™s values when It comes down to it in the United States Senate, because I saw what he did when he was governor.ā€

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