Sunday, November 24, 2019

Ficker leads Red Maryland poll for 2022 MD gubernatorial race

Robin Ficker (center) is mobbed by
supporters after a 2017 speech in Rockville
Montgomery County attorney and activist Robin Ficker has won a Red Maryland poll that asked participants which potential Republican gubernatorial candidate they would vote for, if the 2022 GOP primary were held today. Ficker received 23.8% of the votes cast, beating current Lt. Gov. Boyd Rutherford, former Lt. Gov. Michael Steele and Congressman Andy Harris in the conservative website's poll.

Among other intriguing names on the ballot was Baltimore Orioles baseball legend Cal Ripken, Jr., who received only 0.3% as a write-in candidate. Other prominent potential candidates included State Senator Michael Hough, a highly-respected conservative who has raised his statewide profile with bipartisan efforts on sentencing and prison conditions; Brian Murphy, who excited many in the base with conservative bonafides on social issues when he challenged Gov. Bob Ehrlich in the 2010 primary - picking up a Sarah Palin endorsement in the process; and Maryland Commerce Secretary Kelly Schulz, a former state delegate who has been seen as a promising statewide candidate by many in the party for over a decade. Schulz managed a strong showing at 5.6% among a list of dozens.

Prominent names missing from the poll included Wheel of Fortune host - and Annapolis resident - Pat Sajak, former Maryland First Lady Kendel Ehrlich, and 2014 gubernatorial candidate Charles Lollar. Lollar, of Charles County, has a resume from central casting as a successful businessman and Marine veteran. One of the relatively few Maryland Republicans who can deliver a stemwinder of a speech, Lollar is one of several African-American GOP stars in the state who haven't received the support they should have from the party during election season.

Obviously, if Ripken or Sajak were to enter the race, they would instantly be frontrunners. Ripken in particular would have tremendous bipartisan appeal, but there's no indication he's even considering a run.

Ficker remains a force in Montgomery County politics, as the only figure to repeatedly defeat the MoCo political cartel in recent times, with ballot measures that have capped property tax increases and established term limits for County Executive and County Council. The Washington Post damaged Ficker's fortunes by entirely ignoring those triumphs. Instead of giving Ficker his fair paragraphs as a seasoned politician who would bring that same skill to addressing the County's many crises, and who had more impact on the County than his opponents, the Post bizarrely described him as a "heckler" through the entire campaign year.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Go Robin

Anonymous said...

If Robin runs for governor, the GOP will lose control of the Governor's mansion in MD.

Put up Rutherford instead.

Besides, Robin is currently 76, meaning he'd be serving into his 80's. Too old. Let Robin do what he does best -- ballot initiatives.

Anonymous said...

Shit, the headline made me spit out my coffee.

Anonymous said...

So Ficker got 85 votes? Wow!

(23.8% of 357 votes = 85)

Anonymous said...

Red Maryland...that’s a communist party, right?

Anonymous said...

How come your article doesn't include a link to the poll?

Skippy said...

Imagine if 10:15AM spent the same amount of time volunteering in the community, learning a new skill or spending time with his family as he does analyzing when Robert posts.

Anonymous could actually start adding value! Just a suggestion.

Woodmont said...

12:34 them fightin words! I'm sure Robert is quaking in his boots in response your scalding anonymous insults..lol

You are way too old to be posting stuff like that. I truly feel sorry for you. You must be miserable to be around.

Woodmont said...

Currently watching an anonymous man post 4 weird comments in a row. Get help. Soon.

Anonymous said...

I like Mr Flicker....but I dont think he can win statewide.

But you have to give the guy credit...for standing up for what he believes.

Which is a great deal more than most of the D's in MoCo.