The inauguration of Wes Moore (D) as Governor of Maryland was a slightly more star-studded affair than those of his outgoing predecessor, Larry Hogan (R). For starters, Moore was introduced by Oprah Winfrey. Behind her in the grandstand seating area overlooking Lawyers' Mall in Annapolis was Chelsea Clinton. But Moore made a point of recognizing Hogan. Turning to the former governor, Moore said, "we are grateful and thankful for the kindness that you and your team have shown throughout this entire transition period. Thank you for eight years of great service to a state that we both love." Moore then paused deliberately, and the crowd stood to give Hogan a standing ovation.
Calling one-time Baltimore TV news anchor Winfrey a "Maryland girl at heart," Moore thanked her "for always being in my corner." He also recognized his wife and children. And then Moore became the first African-American to deliver an inaugural speech as governor of Maryland.
The historic nature of the moment could not be ignored. Moore took an oath of office earlier Wednesday with his hand on a bible belonging to Frederick Douglass. Noting that he was speaking blocks away from the Annapolis city docks where African slaves once arrived, Moore recalled the "uneven and unimaginable progress" African-Americans have made since then.
But Maryland is also a state "where anything is possible," Moore added in welcoming his Jamaican immigrant mother and the Indian immigrant mother of his Lieutenant Governor Aruna Miller to another standing ovation. On her own history-making road to the second-highest statewide office in Maryland, Miller was sworn in with her hand on a copy of the Bhagavad Gita, the most-revered of Hindu texts.
Shifting his focus to the present and future, Moore said "this journey has never been about making history. It's about marching forward. Today is not an idictment of our past. Today is a celebration of our collective future." Nodding to the balancing act he will have to perform between the many interest groups making expensive demands of his new administration, and maintaining the state's relatively-solid fiscal standing, Moore spoke of being "disciplined" and "making hard choices."
The new governor asked how it could be that a state with such revenue could also be a state where one in eight children live in poverty, and 250,000 people lack health insurance. In a zero-sum perspective of winners and losers, "we've come to expect that the people who have lost will keep losing," Moore said. "We must refuse to accept that," Moore declared, punctuating each word with a strike of his palm on the podium.
Moore spoke of the need to improve the state's business climate, and to attract aerospace, clean energy, and cybersecurity firms. Hogan was successful in bringing a Hitachi rail car factory to Hagerstown, a Greenland Technologies electric vehicle plant to White Marsh, and a United Safety Technology medical supply factory to Baltimore. But Montgomery County hasn't attracted a major corporate headquarters in over 25 years, and has lost several of the few Fortune 500 companies it had during that time.
Such economic growth needs to be balanced with higher wages and security for workers, Moore argued. "Maryland can be the best place in America for employers and employees," he said.
Noting rising crime across the state, Moore said "many Marylanders have grown weary in their faith that governments can actually keep them safe." But he vowed, "we cannot and will not militarize ourselves to safety," and pointed to the fact that "Maryland encarcerates more black boys than any other state in this country." He said he is a governor who "knows what it feels like to have handcuffs on my wrists...I felt that when I was 11 years old. I also know what it's like to stand with families and mourn the victims of violent crime. We do not have to choose between being a safe state and a just one."
Moore promised Maryland will run on 100% clean energy by 2035, and create thousands of jobs in the process, by focusing on wind power. He said not every child needs to go to college to be successful, citing his path of military service and community college. "I think things worked out pretty well," he added.
Like many inaugural speeches, Moore's was short on actual policies and expense numbers. One specific plan he identified was creating a service year option for high school graduates. He also promised to be successful despite skeptics who say he will be unable to overcome "toxic partisanship." There is no such obstacle in Annapolis, however, as Democrats control every office and chamber of state government. Moore's actual challenge will be to reign in the aspirations of his own party, after eight years of the Hogan administration. And even Hogan was unable to block much of the Democrats' agenda during that time.
Recognizing that position of near-total power, Moore promised that "we have a unique place and space to do something special." Moore is in a unique and powerful position himself, to leverage a successful gubernatorial term and sparkling resume into not-so-distant future presidential campaign conversations, in a party that has had difficulty finding the next John F. Kennedy or Barack Obama in its youthful ranks since 2016.
"Now is the opportunity we have to march forward, and to march together," Moore concluded. "And let us march on 'til victory is won. Today is not the victory. Today is the opportunity. It is our opportunity to lead with love. It is our opportunity to create with compassion. It's our opportunity to fight fearlessly for our future. Maryland, our time is right now. Our time is now to build a state that, for those who came before us, that they fought for, and it's a state that leaves no one behind. This is not a slogan. It is the fulfillment of a hope. Maryland, it's time, let's lead, and let's do it together. God bless you all, and thank you so much."
That campaign slogan made me laugh. No one left behind except traditional values voters, Conservatives, Republicans, Libertarians, folks who do not believe that a boy can suddenly become a girl, etc, etc.
ReplyDeleteThe inauguration was 'star studded'. Yup, that's what we need in MD right now. smh.
ReplyDeleteI'd be happy with a State that leaves nobody on the ground due being beaten or murdered. Hope he cares about that.
ReplyDeleteI'd be happy with a State that leaves nobody without a car because they just got carjacked with a gun. Hope he cares about that.
Everything about this man is an identity checkbox and it's sad that the most important accomplishment to his supporters is that he's the first of something.
He's either going to solve the rampant crime problem in his State or it's going to get massively worse. I'll just standby, pay my taxes and watch.
You're on the clock Wes. Impress me beyond the hype and hope about you so far. Deliver by getting those crime numbers down. If you don't with the full control you have from your Party in the State, you're all talk.
100% clean energy by 2035 is a recipe for blackouts, higher electricity costs, poverty and death from cold and heat. Thank God I moved out of MD last year. Wind and solar energy is also an ecological disaster because of the wide areas that have to be covered by wind and solar farms to compensate for intermittent, low-density forms of energy, and the extensive mining of metals needed for battery storage. Killing the planet to save the planet. Imagine living in one of those high-rises that have littered the Bethesda landscape in recent years without electricity, except for what can be provided by a backup generator. Without electric power to keep the pumps working, good luck flushing your toilet.
ReplyDeleteI moved from MD to Florida and am glad I did. Every time I look at the news from up there it is a virtue signaling extravaganza. Good luck to you all.
ReplyDeleteMoved from Bethesda to DE last year and I couldn't agree more.
Delete@8:54AM "Moved out of MD last year..." To where, I might ask? Austin, TX perhaps? You Lie like a rug. Good day to you sir!!
ReplyDeleteMaryland is on track to become the wind energy leader IAW a lot of hot air in the forecast.
ReplyDelete@8:40 PM: None of your business. Taxes are much lower here, that's for sure, but that is a low bar relative to MoCo MD. And I'm not a sir. Not all of us women are lefty loons.
ReplyDeleteWhat the hell took you MAGA midgets so look to whine. Nevertheless, here your are.
ReplyDeleteThat being said, Governor Wes Moore is brilliant in business and he will be brilliant as a public servant. He will make Youngkin (his DMV counterpoint) look like the looser that he is. Yes, Maryland is different than Virginia but the needs of the citizens are the same. People need opportunities, not everyone in Virginia lives in the fancy zip codes, a great deal of poverty flourishes in the old south, that their governor ignores.
As Youngkin pretends he is going to the WH with the support of the religious right the real educational scandals are in front of him. He institutes 1 800 snitch on your teacher, Mr. Moore will be doing the public servant job as governor taking care of everyone and identifying solutions not slogans.
Make all the fun you want of the stars in ceremony, the real star will be Gov Moore himself. If you think the crimes of society will be left on the ground, tell me what saint Hogan did to solve the problem, nada. For those of you who left the state and now whine about the ecology, good luck getting that doorknob out of your rear, and don't think you're immunity from the impending environmental fate in your future. As for the other mover/none shaker I'm so glad you are happy in the dictator state of Floriduh, were your brat in charge, loves to emulate the powers of communism. Enjoy!
All the best Governor Moore, may you clear the house of all those backward thinking, racist, conservative, hatemongers in your path to success.
@10:57 Seriously needs emotional help. Trump lives in your mind rent free.
ReplyDeleteI for one hope that Moore can overcome the doubt he built up during the campaign relating to not correcting the record regarding the Bronze Star he never earned or his childhood in Baltimore that never happened.
Unfortunately lying seems to be bricks the democrats have used to build their walls and with religious zealots like 10:57 and the MSM, there doesn't seem to be any interest in reality.
Hey 10:57, Florida is the place where folks come to escape Communism. That's why so many here including most Cubans, Venezuelans, etc. are conservative and/or Republican. You think Moore is going to be the next Obama but I wager the odds are much better that DeSantis and Youngkin will be POTUS in that order. If anyone is mongering hate it is you unfortunately. You should also take a course in English so next time you won't sound quite so dumb.
ReplyDeleteFormer MD resident back again. Agree that 10:57 needs to take a remedial course in the English language. As usual with the GOP, Hogan didn't do anything to reverse the decline, but he did act as a brake on the spending and other suicidal policies of the Donkeys. With a Democratic governor and a majority Democratic legislature, that brake is gone, and the Dems will floor the gas pedal and run MD into a ditch. Moore will probably be much worse than O'Malley was. Disagree with 5:23 -- thanks to ballot harvesting and mail-in ballot shenanigans in key urban precincts, it may be virtually impossible for any GOP candidate to get elected President in the future, no matter how corrupt, incompetent or demented the Democratic candidate is.
ReplyDelete@10:10 - My grammar is fine, there maybe a typo or two, it's your delusion regarding ballot harvesting that has infected your colon or is that your brain. You can't remedy that crap. You should have stayed away, but I guess Floriduh was more than you could handle.
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