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Ugly politics in Maryland's 4th Congressional District

February 08, 2008|By Thomas F. Schaller Thomas F. Schaller

To be fair, the 4th District is not a typical majority-minority district: It is one of the most affluent such districts in the nation, with a median income much higher than the state's other majority-minority district, represented by fellow Congressional Black Caucus member Rep. Elijah E. Cummings.

All caucus members should not be expected to vote in lockstep, of course. But on key issues, Mr. Wynn has exhibited greater concern for the agenda of Prince George in the White House than Prince George's in the people's House.

One must wonder if such votes have something to do with the fact that before 2006, he benefited from an unusual degree of electoral comfort. Safe in the knowledge that the overwhelming Democratic 4th District was noncompetitive in any general election, Mr. Wynn was licensed to vote with an expectation of impunity.

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Then along came Ms. Edwards. The former director of the ARCA Foundation, an organization that works for social justice issues, she has worked diligently to combat domestic violence and promote a living wage - and she dared to challenge Mr. Wynn in the 2006 Democratic primary.

Despite scarce resources and almost no initial name recognition, she parlayed a grass-roots movement and the endorsement of The Washington Post into a competitive challenge that came up a bit shy.

Ms. Edwards lost, but by only about 3 percentage points - a margin that is rare in general elections for Congress and even rarer in primaries when an incumbent is seeking re-election.

To his credit, Mr. Wynn had selflessly agreed to assume a bit more electoral risk this decade by accepting in 2001 a gerrymandering proposal by then-Gov. Parris N. Glendening that swapped some Democratic precincts from Mr. Wynn's district with the neighboring, Montgomery-based 8th District as a way to improve his party's hopes of unseating Republican Rep. Constance A. Morella in 2002. (The move worked: Then-state Sen. Chris Van Hollen defeated Ms. Morella.)

But, in whichever county his constituents reside, Mr. Wynn too often places his political power over the voters' interests. For that reason alone, he ought to be handed an electoral pink slip on Tuesday.

Thomas F. Schaller teaches political science at UMBC. His column usually appears on alternate Wednesdays in The Sun. His e-mail is schaller67@gmail.com.

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