Hundreds of Maryland Democrats braved evening rush hour traffic in two metropolitan areas Thursday to salute one of their own, celebrate recent political victories, and look ahead to the campaigns of 2024.
Officially, the Maryland Democratic Partyās annual dinner at Martinās West catering hall in Woodlawn was a tribute to 84-year-old U.S. Rep. Steny H. Hoyer (D-5th), whose political career began in 1966. And the praise for the veteran lawmaker was effusive. But most people present ā including Hoyer himself āĀ were less interested in looking back than in mobilizing for the 2024 election.
Democrats in Maryland are still thrilling over their historic victories in 2022 ā taking back the governorās office, electing a diverse statewide ticket, maintaining supermajorities in the General Assembly, and dominating most large county governments in the state. But among most party stalwarts, there remain jitters about 2024, with President Bidenās popularity waning and polls showing him in a tossup race with former President Trump, despite Trumpās myriad legal troubles.
āWeāve got to wake up, folks,ā U.S. Rep. Kweisi Mfume (D-7th) urged the crowd. āWeāve got 16 months to turn this around.ā
Speakers during the three-hour program āĀ which ran almost twice as long as advertised, with a dinner break āĀ included Maryland DemocraticĀ Chair Yvette Lewis, U.S. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), U.S. Sens. Ben Cardin (D) and Chris Van Hollen (D), Gov. Wes Moore (D), and Hoyer himself.
But the speaking program was only part of the attraction. With an open-seat Senate election on tap in 2024, and the cascading political dominoes itās creating, schmooze and gossip were at a premium at the black tie-optional event. The three current leading Democratic candidates for Senate ā Prince Georgeās County Executive Angela Alsobrooks, U.S. Rep. David Trone (6th) and Montgomery County Councilmember Will Jawando ā were on hand, and Trone and Alsobrooks appeared in a video tribute to Hoyer, along with several other elected officials, including Biden.
Jawando, the least well known of the three contenders, said he was heartened about his prospects after pressing the flesh in a room full of 850 Democrats.
āIt confirms what I always knew āĀ that itās wide open,ā he said in an interview. āAnd this is insiders. So you can imagine how wide open it is with voters.ā
Adding to the nightās political intrigue, Hoyer has not yet said whether heās seeking a 22nd full term next year. And there is some speculation that Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger (D-2nd), 77, who was recruited to run for Congress by Hoyer two decades ago, might retire.
Anyone expecting political announcements out of Thursdayās event walked away disappointed. Hoyer hinted that heās ready to stay on the scene.
āDonāt write any obituaries,ā he told the crowd.
Still, the usually loquacious Hoyer spoke for just 13 minutes, and seemed a little embarrassed by all the attention.
āI was listening to this program going on and said, āIsnāt it a shame Steny died?’ā he joked. āIām just glad that I could hear it.ā
Mainly, Hoyer thanked everyone present for being part of his political journey. But he saved special praise for Cardin, who entered the Maryland General Assembly at the same time he did, in 1967, and Moore, whom he endorsed early in the 2022 Democratic primary. Hoyer compared the new governor to John F. Kennedy, whose appearance at the University of Maryland when Hoyer was a college student inspired him to get into politics.
āI like politics for what you can do,ā he said. āNot to just be. But to make a difference in peopleās lives.ā
Hoyer, who has been a widower for 26 years, introduced the crowd to his fiancee, Elaine Kamarck (the two are marrying on Saturday). As he finished his speech, Lewis, the party chair and a former opera singer, led the crowd in song, singing the popular 1960ās pop hit, āChapel of Love.ā
Jeffries, who heads a new House Democratic leadership team that took over this year after Hoyer and other senior leaders relinquished their leadership posts, offered the fieriest speech of the evening, comparing the Democrats and their agenda to congressional Republicans. He referred to the Democrats as āTeam Normal. Team Reasonable. Team Getting Stuff Done. Team Looks Like America.
āAnd what do you see on the other side?ā he continued. āTeam Chaos. Team Extremism.ā
Jeffries had the crowd leaping and cheering when he praised labor unions, calling them āan essential part of the American Dream. Itās who we are and what we represent.ā
Jeffries even managed to crack jokes about the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, noting his discomfort as higher-ranking congressional leaders were led away by security officers. But he used the story to make a political point.āI was waiting for somebody to come get me,ā he said. āBut, yāall, they never came. And I said to myself, āItās a good thing Iām from Brooklyn.ā Why do I say that? Because you have to be prepared to protect our democracy.ā
You could read more of this Maryland Matters article here.