Analysis: This is what democracy looks like - Maryland Matters (2024)

Analysis: This is what democracy looks like - Maryland Matters (1)

When 16 candidates for a congressional seat share a stage together, as happened in Annapolis Wednesday night, it’s hard not to think, as the old protest march slogan goes, “This is what democracy looks like.”

When a couple of hundred people attend this event —even if most have already decided how they are going to vote —it’s hard not to think that this fragile political system, which Winston Churchill once described as “the worst form of government, except for all others,” might actually endure for a little while longer. Also, that Democrats who live in Maryland’s 3rd congressional district have a pretty good menu of choices.

“We’ve been out on the campaign trail and we’ve heard inspiring stories from each of these candidates,” said one of the contenders, Del. Mark S. Chang (D-Anne Arundel). “This is going to be a night of encouragement for all of us up here.”

Looking at the tableau of candidates arrayed across several long tables covered with white tablecloths, Rev. Chris Broadwell, pastor of the Eastport United Methodist Church, where the Democratic candidate forum took place, conjured up a more Biblical image.

“When we set out the tablecloths, I truly didn’t intend for it to be that familiar looking,” he said of the unmistakable resemblance to the Last Supper.

Some of the candidates couldn’t help but joke about the size and spectacle.

“I’m running for the same seat as the 400 other people up here,” said Lindsay Donahue, an IT professional and one of several long shots in the race.

“This is the largest group [of candidates] I’ve ever seen assembled for a candidate forum,” one of the moderators, Dan Nataf, a political science professor at Anne Arundel Community College, observed.

The forum, sponsored by the District 30 Democratic Club and co-sponsored by the Annapolis Democratic Central Committee and the Anne Arundel Democratic Central Committee, featured 16 of the 22 Democrats seeking to replace departing Congressman John Sarbanes (D) in the May 14 primary.

Already, a narrative has developed about this unwieldy field, at least among political professionals, party activists and political junkies who obsess over these things. It goes something like this:

That there’s one genuine celebrity in the race, Harry Dunn, a hero cop at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, who has raised so much money — albeit from outside the 3rd District, where he doesn’t even live —that he automatically must be considered one of the frontrunners. So also are the two state senators in the primary — Sarah K.Elfreth (D-Anne Arundel) and Clarence K. Lam (D-Howard and Anne Arundel), in that order.

There are three other state lawmakers running — Chang and Dels. Terri L. Hill (D-Howard) and Mike Rogers (D-Anne Arundel), who, by virtue of their substantive records in the General Assembly, would probably make solid members of Congress. And then there are a couple of other candidates with distinct constituencies who have to be taken seriously — for their potential impact on the outcome of this race or their potential to be political players down the line — even if they probably can’t win now.

The race will be determined on the airwaves, in voters’ mailboxes and on the ground. Candidates with long-standing political involvement and contacts have obvious advantages. So do candidates who can afford to reach the voters and get their messages out. It is, for obvious reasons, a largely uneven playing field.

Analysis: This is what democracy looks like - Maryland Matters (2)

Signs wars outside the forum venue in Annapolis Wednesday. Photo by Josh Kurtz.

But for one night at least, all 16 candidates stood on equal footing —democracy on display. The sheer volume of candidates onstage meant that each was only able to answer two questions directly. All were asked to weigh in on eight issues by raising their hands or standing, and each was given two minutes for a closing statement.

The people running the show were so mindful of time constraints that when a few candidates went over their allotted two minutes, one of the two moderators, Keanuu Smith-Brown, would walk to the stage and begin to remove the microphone from their hands.

When Smith-Brown approached her, Hill, who had been talking about her support for voting rights legislation, stopped in mid-sentence and apologized because she hadn’t seen the card telling her time was up.

“That’s my red sign,” she said of Smith-Brown’s visit. “I’m out. Peace.”

Under the chaotic circ*mstances, it all worked out pretty well. Candidates largely got their talking points in. There was widespread agreement on most issues, like abortion rights, health care, economic injustice, climate change, gun safety, and the preservation of democracy, and a consensus that the real enemies are their Republican foes.

“Nobody up here is my opponent,” Dunn said at one point. “The opponents come in November.”

The candidates sought to distinguish themselves by talking about their political experience or their life journey, or some combination.

Malcolm Colombo, a civil engineer, described growing up poor and relying on food stamps to get by. “I fully understand what government means to working class Americans,” he said.

Several candidates talked about being immigrants or the children of immigrants. “This great country gave me everything, so this is the time to give back to this country,” said Aisha Khan, a day care center owner who came to the U.S. from Pakistan two decades ago.

Abigail Diehl, who runs a produce stand in Annapolis and has close ties to farmers and cannabis growers, began each of her three opportunities to speak in the exact same way: “Clean food. Clean water. Clean energy. Clean medicine.”

Gary Schuman, a former journalist and restaurateur who was clearly the oldest candidate on the stage, referenced the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the My Lai massacre during the Vietnam War, and the killings of students by the National Guard at Kent State University in 1970, to explain his distrust of government. At times he sounded like a Bernie Sanders lefty, and at other times like an old-line, Cold War Democrat, and at one point, he said, “oink oink.”

“From Harry Truman to Gary Schuman, the rhyme is only the beginning,” he said during his closing statement.

Rogers noted proudly that he was the only candidate who was a military veteran and a state legislator. And Elfreth too talked about her working class upbringing, working in a reference to iconic former U.S. Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) in the bargain.

“The kitchen table issues don’t get enough attention in this campaign,” she said, reminding voters that Mikulski referred to these as “the macro and the macaroni and cheese.”

How was an audience member supposed to evaluate what they heard — and how are voters going to decide who to support? Those are tough questions that will require research and discipline, and with less than a month to the primary — and mail-in voting already under way — there will be few opportunities to see all the candidates together again.

Every candidate seemed sincere about their views and background. Some of the more seasoned politicians were more on-message when it came to laying out their platform and trying to draw distinctions with their opponents. Some candidates were clearly more progressive and brought more passion to the table. Some offered an unconventional brew of policies.

It’s rare to hear Democrats espouse term limits for members of Congress, but at least two candidates did —businessman Juan Dominguez and sports complex CEO Matt Libber.

“We need to get the government’s house in order,” said Libber, who also embraced passing a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution — another anomaly for a Democrat.

Mixing it up

Given the format and the size of the field, it was hard for the candidates to attack each other to any great degree. Almost all said they wanted to get “dark money” out of politics, and in some cases, the candidates used that as an indirect swipe at Elfreth, who is benefiting from a six-figure independent expenditure campaign by a political action committee affiliated with AIPAC, the powerful pro-Israel group — though they never mentioned her by name.

John Morse, a labor lawyer who has articulated some of Sanders’ progressive policy positions, was also the candidate who was most vocally critical of Israel and the current war in Gaza.

“I’m here to fight for you,” he said. “I don’t accept corporate PAC money. The way you run your race reflects who you are.”

Later, Morse asserted that “nine of the top 10 donors to AIPAC are MAGA extremists.”

“We’re in the fight of our lives here,” he said. “With dark money flooding this race, it sullies your hope.”

At one point the moderators asked the candidates if they would swear off corporate PAC money. Only Elfreth stayed seated.

While Elfreth has called gun safety one of her top priority issues, and points out that she defeated “an NRA-endorsed Republican” to win her state Senate seat, Lam — also without naming her — said he voted against every GOP amendment seeking to weaken certain gun control legislation in Annapolis. That’s a point his campaign has amplified in news releases Wednesday and Thursday.

Dominguez took a subtle dig at Dunn for not living in the 3rd District — which is not a requirement for running for Congress. “I don’t have to commute from outside the district to campaign here,” he said, without naming Dunn. He also offered his campaign RV to out-of-district candidates for ease of getting around.

Dominguez was also disdainful of the state lawmakers on the stage, pointing out that they had just voted in favor of raising some taxes and fees in the recent General Assembly session, and said they would “pass a hundred more tax increases” after this year’s election (Dominguez also called for higher taxes on the wealthy).

Kristin Lyman Nabors, a nurse at Johns Hopkins Medical Center, noted that she was the only Democrat to enter the congressional race before Sarbanes announced his retirement last October. She called her desire to serve “a non-opportunistic campaign for this office,” because she had already identified problems in a male-dominated Congress that she wanted to address.

“You challenge the incumbent,” she said. “You don’t wait.” She later added that Congress “has a hormone imbalance,” name-checking Sigmund Freud, Albert Einstein and Mike Tyson along the way.

When it was all over, 64 members of the District 30 Democratic Club cast a straw poll for their favorite contenders. Using ranked-choice voting to list their top five favorites, the club members gave Elfreth, who represents District 30 in the Senate, the top slot, followed by Morse, Dunn and Lam.

“I know it’s a late night,” Lam said when it was all over, “but this is democracy at work.”

This story has been updated to discuss a question to the candidates on corporate PAC money.

Analysis: This is what democracy looks like - Maryland Matters (2024)

FAQs

What does the term democracy mean? ›

a. : government by the people. especially : rule of the majority. b. : a government in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised by them directly or indirectly through a system of representation usually involving periodically held free elections.

What are the criticisms of democracy? ›

The giving and receiving of bribes, the threat or use of violence, treatment, and impersonation are common ways that the electoral process can be corrupted, meaning that democracy is not impenetrable from external problems and can be criticized for allowing it to take place.

What is the theory of democracy? ›

Although democracy is generally understood to be defined by voting, no consensus exists on a precise definition of democracy. Karl Popper says that the "classical" view of democracy is, "in brief, the theory that democracy is the rule of the people, and that the people have a right to rule".

Why is democracy the best form of government? ›

Supporting democracy not only promotes such fundamental American values as religious freedom and worker rights, but also helps create a more secure, stable, and prosperous global arena in which the United States can advance its national interests.

What is the summary of democracy? ›

Democracy is government in which power and civic responsibility are exercised by all adult citizens, directly, or through their freely elected representatives. Democracy rests upon the principles of majority rule and individual rights.

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government by the people; a form of government in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised directly by them or by their elected agents under a free electoral system. a state having such a form of government: The United States and Canada are democracies.

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Problems like money politics, identity politics, wrangling between political parties, political polarization, social division, racial tension and wealth gap have become more acute. All this has weakened the functioning of democracy in the US.

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The Arguments against Democracy is that change in leaders creates instability. There is no room for morality because democracy is about political competition and power games. Consultation with many people delays the process and leads to corruption because it is based on electoral competition.

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The United States is a representative democracy. This means that our government is elected by citizens. Here, citizens vote for their government officials. These officials represent the citizens' ideas and concerns in government.

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The eponymous paradox of democracy that this collection of essays deals with is the internal conflict within modern liberal democracy that is created by the union of two separate strands of political thought: the tradition of classical liberalism and the tradition of democratic theory, forming the institution of ...

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In direct democracy, the people decide on policies without any intermediary or representative, whereas in a representative democracy people vote for representatives who then enact policy initiatives.

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Elite democracy is a model of democracy in which a small number of people, usually those who are wealthy and well-educated, influence political decision making.

Is the United States a democracy or a republic? ›

While often categorized as a democracy, the United States is more accurately defined as a constitutional federal republic. What does this mean? “Constitutional” refers to the fact that government in the United States is based on a Constitution which is the supreme law of the United States.

Who said democracy is a very bad form of government? ›

Winston Churchill once said that: “democracy is the worst form of government – except for all the others that have been tried.” His cynicism was perhaps justified after the British people voted him out from his position as Prime Minister within months of winning the Second World War.

Who created democracy? ›

Democracy is generally associated with the efforts of the ancient Greeks, whom 18th-century intellectuals considered the founders of Western civilization. These individuals attempted to leverage these early democratic experiments into a new template for post-monarchical political organization.

What does democracy mean for kids? ›

The. word democracy describes a form of government. The word comes from two Greek words that mean “rule by the people.” In a democracy the people have a say in how the government is run. They do this by voting, though there are usually rules about who can vote. Democracies are different from dictatorships.

What is the basic meaning of democracy quizlet? ›

Democracy. It is a form of government which is run by the population, usually through elected representatives. It can also be used as a more general term to describe a state which is governed by democratic principles, it is used to describe a classless society, one which has toleration.

What is the literal meaning of democracy quizlet? ›

Democracy. The word "democracy" literally means "rule by the people." In a democracy, the people govern.

What is the meaning of the word democracy quizlet? ›

Phrase. The word Democracy means "Rule by the people," and in greek it comes from the words Demos=people, Kratos=Rule. Examples.

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