Message from the Chairman: Tell the Baltimore Sun - Even ATMs Run Out Money
Earlier this week a Baltimore Sun editorial crit icized Montgomery County Executive Ike Leggett for warning Governor Martin O'Malley not to treat Montgomery County as the "ATM machine for the rest of Maryland."[1] The Sun's own headline nicely sums up their conclusions: " Our view: If Montgomery County is treated as a cash cow, it's only because that's where the "milk" is found." According to the Sun, " If Montgomery is hit harder than others, it's because they have more to hit."
While it may seem odd for the Montgomery County Republican Chairman to take up the defense of the Montgomery County's Democratic County Executive, the Sun's attacks on Leggett seem especially over the top in its personal nature.
In speaking up for his own county's interests, the paper says Leggett has adopted "the inflammatory language of a raging parochial." "Raging parochial," though, seems a much better description of the Sun's continuing editorial stance in defense of its hometown. The Sun remains consistent in their longstanding view that State of Maryland exists primarily to serve what the paper regards as Baltimore's interests.
Calling Leggett a "raging parochial" may seem harsh, but the Sun goes still farther. In attacking Leggett, the Sun pulls out one of their perennial rhetorical ploys, the race card:
"Mr. Leggett, a child of the Jim Crow South, should know better than to play the "feel sorry for the rich" card."
The Sun's apparent conclusion is that because Leggett is "a child of the Jim Crow South," heought to behave differently as our CountyExecutive because of his race. The paper is not subtle. They are saying that as a black man, Ike Leggett should not to engage in independent political thought that departs from the ideological orthodoxy that the Sun advocates for. In the Sun's world view, any debate about government spending and taxing policy is primarily about race - period. This is true even when those who disagree with the paper are black.
The newspaper reflected this same approach last July when it endorsed the NAACP's criticism of the Tea Party as racists.[2] At the time the paper's editorial scolded Tea Party leadership for bothering to defend itself from the NAACP's charges of racism:
[T]he reaction....of several high-visibility tea party members to a unanimous resolution by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People calling on the movement to disassociate itself from the intolerant rhetoric and thinly veiled attacks on minorities by its extremist fringe was a painful reminder of why tea party supporters now find themselves embroiled in charges of racism.
The Sun's heated racial rhetoric about tax and spending issues usually lets it sidestep economic considerations. This week's Sun editorial specifically criticizes Leggett for opposing the state's "Millionaires Tax."
After Maryland imposed its "Millionaires Tax" in 2007, the number of Marylanders with more than $1 million in taxable income fell from 7,000 to 4,900 - a 30% drop. Out of the people who filed as millionaires in 2007, 542 of them did not submit a full-year return in Maryland in 2008 - a drop of 8%. A continued exodus will result in the "Millionaires Tax" costing the state more in tax revenues than it would have theoretically gained from higher tax rates.
The consequences of the state's tax policies have hurt our county. Montgomery County lost $4.6 billion in taxable personal income from tax years 2007 to 2008. More than 82% of that drop came from taxpayers with income of $1 million or more.
Fairfax County and the rest of Northern Virginia have consistently outpaced us in attracting new jobs. The top personal income tax rate in Montgomery is currently 64% higher than it is in Fairfax, 9.45% compared with 5.75%. Although Fairfax has only 60,000 more residents than Montgomery, Fairfax has 200,000 more jobs.
What the Baltimore Sun never appreciates is that Maryland -- and Montgomery County - depends on a robust, competitive private economy in order to support Maryland's higher than average government spending levels. After World War II, BaltimoreCity was still the state's economic engine. Its residents enjoyed a higher median income than the nation as a whole. However in time the city has became an economic basket case, in part, because the city's elected officials too often followed the Baltimore Sun's advice.
Ike Leggett deserves credit for recognizing that his spending depends in part keeping a very tiny group of high income taxpayers in the county. He is fortunate too, as are we, that no Montgomery County official ever paid a political price for ignoring the Baltimore Sun's advice.
Mark Uncapher
Montgomery Republican Chairman
[1] http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bs-ed-budget-atm-20101215,0,6321417.story
[2] http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2010-07-15/news/bs-ed-tea-party-racism-20100716_1_tea-party-grass-roots-movement-minorities
|
Maryland Republicans elect Senator Alex Mooney as new chairman
This afternoon, 265 enthusiastic members of the Maryland Republican State Central Committee overwhelmingly voted to elect Senator Alex Mooney as their next Chairman. According to newly elected Maryland Republican Party Chairman Alex Mooney, today's election ushers in a new era for Republicans in Maryland.
"A new day for Republicans in Maryland starts now," said Mooney. "Under my watch, the Maryland Republican Party will focus on our core principles while building the necessary grassroots infrastructure to push GOP candidates at all levels to victory in 2012 and 2104."
Alex Mooney, the son of a Cuban immigrant, is a three term state senator from Frederick, Maryland. Prior to holding public office Mooney worked for Congressman Roscoe Bartlett as well as the incoming speaker of the House of Representatives John Boehner. Mooney has extensive experience working in the conservative movement. He currently serves as executive director of The National Journalism Center, a program of Young America's Foundation.
"I look forward to bringing my experience as a state senator, conservative organizer, and prolific fundraiser to Republican Party of Maryland," Mooney said. "I'm confident our Party is more united and focused than ever and I look forward to launching the Maryland Republican resurgence today."
http://www.mdgop.org |
|
Happy Holidays from the Montgomery County Republican Party
"Health, Peace, and sweet content be yours."
- Shakespeare |
Originally published in the Herald-MailIs a civil war brewing within the Tea Party?
by Thomas A. Firey
"God forbid we should ever be 20 years without such a rebellion," Thomas Jefferson wrote to William S. Smith in 1787 - the same letter that observed the natural manure of the tree of liberty is "the blood of patriots & tyrants." Thirteen years later, the Virginian found that rebellion need not require blood. His defeat of John Adams in the presidential election of 1800 - the "Revolution of 1800," Jefferson called it - peacefully removed a sitting government from power. The election showed that in liberal democracies, dramatic change in governance can come from ballots, not bloodshed. This republic has experienced revolution not once, but three times in the past 20 years. In 1994, voters decided they had enough of Democratic business as usual on Capitol Hill and handed Congress to Republicans. Between 2006 and 2008, voters punished Republicans for their military-adventurous and spendthrift neoconservatism by handing both the White House and Congress to Democrats. And just last month, voters decided that the change Democrats promised in 2008 was not the change the country needed. In each case, voters revolted with just cause. The next revolt - a civil war, actually - might not be for control of government, but for control of a political movement - the Tea Party. What happens inside the Tea Party over the next several months will shape the nation's political course for the next 20 years. Let's dispel a couple of myths about the Tea Party and the 2010 election. First, the movement did not inspire as many voters who oppose it as those who support it. Exit polls show that voters who claimed to support the Tea Party significantly outnumbered opponents last November. More importantly, 2010 independent voters had a more favorable view of the movement than either major political party. The polls dispel a second myth: The Tea Party is not an "Astroturf" operation ginned up by corporate interests. It is a legitimate, large grass-roots movement. And like other grass-roots movements, it is not a unified, homogeneous organization under a central leadership and with a single political philosophy. It is a loose affiliation of people with significantly different political philosophies. However, that heterogeneity could provide the battle lines for a Tea Party civil war. Polling data indicate that Tea Party members divide roughly equally into two distinct groups - libertarians and small-government conservatives who worry about fiscal imbalances and government overreach at home and abroad, and neoconservatives and social conservatives who want government to actively pursue certain cultural and national goals. What allowed those two groups to unite and succeed in November is their shared opposition to President Obama and Capitol Hill Democrats' "new progressive" agenda. The small-government crowd objected to new progressivism's cost and government intervention into matters they consider private, while neoconservatives and social conservatives want government to undertake a very different set of interventions. What happens now, when the Tea Party can no longer simply oppose the country's political leadership, but instead must provide some of that leadership? It will be difficult to maintain its internal alliance if neoconservatives and social conservatives start pushing their own activist agenda while small-government conservatives and libertarians demand less government. Civil war can be averted if the Tea Party's two factions find common cause on a policy agenda. Returning the federal government to fiscal sustainability is a goal of both factions. A government focused on its core duties would please small-government conservatives while satisfying neoconservatives' concern for national security. A renewed commitment to civil liberties would delight libertarians while protecting social conservatives' freedom to (privately) follow their conscience. A policy agenda focused on those goals would maintain the Tea Party alliance and be highly attractive in an increasingly diverse nation. There is also opportunity for alliances between the left and some Tea Partiers. New progressives and neoconservatives could join together, resulting in a movement akin to original progressivism with its heavy-handed government interventionism both at home and abroad. Or the left could abandon progressivism and rediscover liberalism (that is, advocacy of civil liberties and concern over the concentration of power - foremost in government), finding common cause with libertarians and small-government conservatives. The Tea Party's success means that it must now change - either through internal conflict and division or by uniting around a commonly embraced agenda. The course it chooses will determine the long-term viability of the movement and its effect on American politics.
Thomas A. Firey is senior fellow for the Maryland Public Policy Institute and a Washington County native |
Volunteer Spotlight:
Rex Reed
Rex got his first taste of politics at the age of 9 when he served as sidekick door knocker to former Maryland State Delegate and Senator, Jean Roesser. By the time he was in his teens, he was leading the local 'Students for Bush' organization, and he maintained his active participation throughout the 1992 and 1996 elections. Rex has served in Executive positions in the Montgomery County Young Republicans, the Maryland Young Republicans, the Young Republican National Federation, and the Montgomery County Republican Central Committee. In 2006 he was elected to serve a 4-year term as Secretary of the Maryland Republican Party, and in 2008 was elected as an alternate delegate to the National Convention. His term as Secretary expired last Saturday, December 11th, at the State Republican Convention when he decided not to run for re-election. Rex was born in D.C. and grew up on a horse farm in Gaithersburg, Md. He and his wife Denise, 5 year old son Liam, and 3 month old daughter Clare live in a house that adjoins the same farm where he grew up. Rex, a small business owner, started his own company in 1994, while still a senior at Randolph-Macon College. His company is Amberlea Photography & Design, LLC, which specializes in photography, marketing and printing. He also has served in many organizations in pursuit of his other passions - horses, fox hunting, antique tractors and land & historical preservation. In 2008 he was elected President of the Potomac Bridle and Hiking Trails Association, a 501c-3 that maintains a large trail network from Potomac to Darnestown and promotes trial riding and hiking. He has served on the Board of the Potomac Hunt Club since 2009, and as President of his HOA since 2005. Last month he was elected President of Friends of the Agricultural History Farm Park in Derwood, a 501c-3 that assists M-NCPPC in running the working farm park, and educating people about the rich agricultural history of Montgomery County.
Looking ahead to 2014, Rex said there is a possibility of a State House run in his future! |
2010-14 Montgomery County Republican Central Committee
Executive Board 16 Mark Uncapher - Chairman 15 Mike Gibble - First Vice Chair 20 Jeanette Radford - Second Vice Chair 20 J. David Cotter - Treasurer 16 Lisa R. Neuder - Secretary 15 Sylvia J. Darrow - 2nd VP, MD NFRW 18 Vincent F. DeCain - General Counsel 18 Kurt Osuch - Organization Chair At-L Moshe Starkman - MD YR Chair
*** Executive Committee 17 Glenn E. Abrams 19 Tom Beck 16 Carol G. Bowis 39 Dave Caldwell 14 Patricia A. Fenati 20 Joe Gillin At-L Rachael R. Gingrich 14 Rick Hansen 17 Jim Herz At-L Ryan McCullough 39 Al Phillips 19 Martha Schaerr At-L Bruce Stern 20 Deanna Stewart
*** 16 Marcus Alzona 14 Terry Bork 39 Jeff Brown 18 Katja Bullock At-L A.J. Cooke 39 Matthew J. Focht At-L Stella Green 15 Benjamin Green 19 Don Irvine 14 Anne Koutsoutis 15 Lorraine Kuchmy 14 Larry Lauer 16 Larry Lesser At-L Meyer F. Marks 18 John Midlen 39 Colleen S. Ott 18 Jennifer Pasenelli 17 Nelson R. Ring 17 David Roseman 19 Sheldon E. Sacks At-L Daniel Vovak 17 Josephine J. Wang 20 Anna Yevropina
|
Hold the Date:
Montgomery County 8th Annual Republican Convention
Saturday February 26, 2011
9am-12n at the Universities at Shady Grove
Auditorium, 9630 Gudelsky Drive, Rockville.
The keynote speaker this year is Alex Mooney, Chairman of the Maryland Republican Party.
Don't miss out on this dynamic event. You will be inspired by the speakers, meet candidates for office, learn how to engage Republicans in your precinct, and network with fellow Montgomery County Republicans.
The Convention is a great way to meet other Republican activists and candidates. |
|
|
|
Renew Your Republican Party Membership for 2011 Online
MCRP MEMBERSHIP LEVELS:
SUSTAINING MEMBER -$25 per year
BUILDER MEMBER -$50 per year
CENTURY CLUB MEMBER -$100 per year
LEADERSHIP COUNCIL - $250 per year
FINANCE COUNCIL -$500 per year
TRUSTEE COUNCIL -$1000 per year
CHAIRMAN'S CLUB -$2500 per year
( ) OTHER AMOUNT -___
|
Upcoming Events
Please also check events listings at www.mcgop.net and www.mdgop.org
Monday, Dec. 20
9:30 AM
Leisure World Republican Club Holiday Event
Location: Leisure World
Silver Spring Clubhouse One
Tuesday, Dec. 21
7:30 PM
MCYR Membership Meeting
Location: Growlers of Gaithersburg
Contact: Mike Gibble
president@mcyr.org
Wednesday, Dec. 22
12:00 noon
Chevy Chase Women's Club Pot Luck Lunch
Contact: Joan DeCain
301-946-5129
Sunday, Jan. 2
5:30 PM
MCYR Happy Hour
Location varies
Contact: Mike Gibble
president@mcyr.org
Tuesday, Jan. 11
6:30 PM
Let's Talk Politics
Location: Home of Nancy Griffin
Contact: 301-762-2852
Tuesday, Jan. 18
7:30 PM
MCYR Membership Meeting
Location: Growlers of Gaithersburg
Contact: Mike Gibble
president@mcyr.org
Thursday, Jan. 27
1:30 PM
Chevy Chase Women's Club Lunch Bunch
Location: La Madeleine Restaurant on Rockville Pike
Sunday, February 6
5:30 PM
MCYR Happy Hour
Location varies
Contact: Mike Gibble
president@mcyr.org
Montgomery County Annual Republican Convention
Saturday February 26, 2011
9am-12n at the Universities
at Shady Grove Auditorium, 9630 Gudelsky Drive, Rockville.
The keynote speaker this year is Alex Mooney, Chairman of the Maryland Republican Party.
|
Thank you to our 2010 Financial Supporters:
Trustees Council
Michael Phillips
Charles Stansfield
Mark Uncapher
J. David Cotter
Leon Snead
Finance Council
Catherine Baker
Doris Criswell
Nancy Dacek
Michael Dobridge
Joseph Gillin
Todd Gold
Anne Koutsoutis
Jacqueline Phillips
Joseph Reyes
Mary Ellen Roberts
William Roberts
Gene Schaerr
Carol Trawick
Leadership Council
Victoria Aubinoe
Richard Badwey
Terry Bork
Katja Bullock
Patricia Ceppos
Robert Clark
Neil Cohen
Joan Decain
Vincent Decain
Patricia Donnelly
Douglas Egan
Craig England
Michele Forzley
William Grant
Stella Green
MarthaHale
Lorraine Kuchmy
Verle Lanier
Albert Lauer
John McConnell
Marlene Mitchell
Jayne Plank
Catherine Rasmussen
Linda Rawls
Sheldon Sacks
Murray Simpson
Bruce Stern
Deanna Stewart
Josephine Wang
Maurice Ward
Jennie Chow Yuen
Century Club
Joshua Abbott
Michael Abramowicz
Glenn Abrams
Stephen Allen
Anne Allera
Everett Alvarez
Ann Amling
John Andervont
Anne Angstadt
Mary Emma Armstrong
Richard August
Heinz Bachmann
Priscilla Baker
Beulah Bateman
Thomas Beck
SharonBegosh
Herman Belz
Ben Borchelt
Angela Bouma
Catherine Boyce
Fred Brand
Ronald Bubes
Oliver Carr
Charles Colby
Rosemary Colston
Jane Corrigan
Leroy Cottrell
Diane Crawford
Daniel Cuda
William Cumberland
Andrew Dalton
Sylvia Darrow
Howard Denis
Ross Dymond
Todd Eskelsen
Osvaldo Espada
Jason Fabritz
June Farrell
Maria Faustino
Pat Fennti
Adam Feuerstein
Robin Ficker
Marlies Flicker
Audrey Flieger
Henry Frain
Douglas Frechtling
Judith Gallagher
Charles Gebhardt
Rachael Gingrich
Daniel Goelzer
Frederick Graboske
Ann Griffin
Catherine Gustafson
Lew Hages
Edna Halstead
Scott Halsted
Ingelborg Hanbauer
Richard Hansen
J K Hargett
Richard Hertling
George Hesterberg
John Hewitt
Audrie Hinerman
Roland Hirsch
Terrell Hoffeld
John Horner
James House
Michael Ivan
Barbara Johnson
G. Kathryn Johnson
N Prasad Kadambi
Robert Kammer
Mary Kane
William Kaupert
Joseph Kempf
Issa Khozeimeh
Ralph Kirby
Robert Kneisley
Mary Elizabeth Kuck
Lisabeth Lawrence
William Lehfeldt
Gertrude Lerch
Carola Lewis
Carolyn Lundelius
Reynaldo Maduro
Nancy Mattson
Barbara McCracken
Cheryl McDonald
Dorothy McIntire
John Midlen
Craig Miller
A. Wallace Moore, Jr
Allen Murray
Bruce Myles
Lisa Neuder
Kurt Osuch
Patricia Painter
Robert Painter
David Pappert
Robert Parsons
Ruth Paul
Rachael Peabody
Michael Perez
Tamara Pilch
Louise Pinckernell
Claudia Pleasants
Joan Pleiman
Louis Pope
Allen Prettyman
Audrey Prichard
William Ritchie
Linnette Rivera
Yeeleng Rothman
Fred Rueter
Jack Rutner
David Sams
John Saveland
Charles Schaub
Raymond Schmidt
Joseph Schmitz
Frederick Seelman
Steven Shriver
Lorri Simmons
Albert Small
Deborah Smith
Robert Smith
David Sobeck
Bradley Stubbs
Alan Swendiman
Michael Taylor
Christine Thron
Cheryl Tiedman
Catherine Titus
James Verme
Michelle Vricella
William Werber
John Whitaker
John Whitney
Charles Wolff
Myra Wormald
Elizabeth Wright
|

Also: Our Organization Committee - which recruits for our precinct organization is looking to fill these volunteer positions:
Newsletter Co-Editor: Help prepare the MCGOP newsletter which is put together on a Constant Contact template. The co-editors coordinate and review major news items of MCGOP interest and gather stories and photos which are easily plugged into the layout of the newsletter. To get an idea of the features and information included, take an overall look at this newsletter and
click on some of the archived copies listed below. Volunteer Welcome Chair- Responsible for contacting new volunteer prospects, identify activities for them to get involved with, communicate with volunteer contacts, follow-up up to make sure the volunteer "hand-off" to committee chairs and other leaders has been completed.
Contact Mark Uncapher Mark@uncapher.net |
Past Party Line
Newsletters December 4, 2010 November 20, 2010November 1, 2010 October 23, 2010 October 16, 2010 October 2, 2010 September 18, 2010 September 4, 2010
April 24, 2010
January 9, 2010 December 19, 2009 December 5, 2009 November 21, 2009 November 7, 2009 October 24, 2009 October 3, 2009 September 19, 2009 September 5, 2009 August 22, 2009 August 8, 2009 July 25, 2009 July 4, 2009 June 20, 2009 June 6, 2009 May 23, 2009 May 9, 2009 April 25, 2009 April 2009 March 28, 2009 March 14, 2009 February 28, 2009 February 3, 2009 January 2009
|
|