Martin O'Malley

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For the journalist, see Martin O'Malley (journalist).
Martin O'Malley

Mayor (Governor-Elect) Martin O'Malley
Governor-Elect of Maryland
Term in office begins:
January 17, 2007
Lieutenant Governor: Anthony G. Brown
Succeeeding: Robert Ehrlich
Born: January 18, 1963
Washington, D.C.
Political party: Democratic
Profession: Lawyer
Spouse: Catherine Curran O'Malley
Religion: Roman Catholic

Martin Joseph "Marty" O'Malley (born January 18, 1963) is a Democratic politician from Maryland, who has served as Mayor of Baltimore City since 1999. He attended Gonzaga College High School graduating in the Class of 1981. He is currently the Democratic Governor-Elect of Maryland.

O'Malley won the 2006 Gubernatorial Election over Republican Governor Robert Ehrlich, who conceded at 10:30 AM on November 8, 2006, the day after election day [1] [2].

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[edit] Political development

In December of 1982, O'Malley, while still in college, signed on with the Gary Hart for President campaign. In late 1983, O'Malley volunteered to go to Iowa. He phone-banked, organized volunteers, and even played guitar and sang at small fundraisers and other events. Hart was the surprising runner-up in the caucus, and O'Malley headed to other states such as Pennsylvania and Oklahoma. Initially polling at 1%, Hart rose to become the biggest challenger to Walter Mondale. Hart became the “new ideas” candidate, but eventually lost the nomination.

O'Malley finished college at The Catholic University of America in 1985. Later that year he enrolled at the University of Maryland School of Law in Baltimore, earning his JD in 1988 and passing the bar that same year.

In 1986, while in law school, O'Malley was named by then-Congresswoman Barbara Mikulski as her state field director for her successful primary and general election campaigns for the U.S. Senate. Later he served as a legislative fellow in Senator Mikulski’s office from 1987-1988.

In 1988, he began dating his future wife, Catherine Curran, the daughter of the State's Attorney General. Later that year, O’Malley was hired as an Assistant State's Attorney for the City of Baltimore. He would hold that position until 1990.

In 1990, O'Malley ran for the Maryland State Senate in District 43. He lost the Democratic Primary to incumbent John A. Pica Jr. Although he was winning by five votes on the morning after Election Day, the subsequent absentee ballot count handed the election to his opponent by just 44 votes. A year later he ran for a vacant Baltimore City Council seat to represent the 3rd District and was elected for the first time to political office. He served from 1991 to 1999. As Councilman, he served as Chairman of the Legislative Investigations Committee and Chairman of the Taxation and Finance Committee.

[edit] Mayor of Baltimore City

O'Malley announced his campaign for Mayor of Baltimore in 1999. He won the Democratic Primary with over 50% of the vote. He was then elected Mayor of Baltimore in the General election with 91% of the vote. In 2004, O'Malley was re-elected in the general election with 88% of the vote, defeating Republican challenger Elbert (Ray) Henderson.

In O'Malley's first year in office, he adopted a statistics-based tracking system first used by former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani for the New York City Police Department and called it CitiStat. O'Malley expanded its use across all government services and linked it with a personnel performance rating system to grade the performance of government employees. O’Malley and CitiStat won the 2004 "Innovations in American Government" award from Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government.[3]

As one of O’Malley’s top five accomplishments, his administration says that he has “cut property taxes to new 30 year low” [4]. On the other hand, "he sought and won an income tax increase which was enacted in 2001".[5]

O'Malley made public safety the foundation of his campaign for Mayor and it continues to be listed as his number one priority on his web site [6]. During his first Mayoral campaign, O’Malley’s most prominent campaign promise was to bring down Baltimore’s murder count to 175. O'Malley claims that Baltimore “has brought about nearly a 40% reduction in violent crime, which leads the nation” [7]. Baltimore remains however, a dangerous city. In 2006, Baltimore was ranked the twelfth most dangerous city. This ranking represents a substantial improvement from the previous year, when it was ranked the sixth most dangerous city. [1] Baltimore’s murder rate continues to be five times that of New York City, which has the lowest crime rate of America's large cities.[2] To the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Unified Crime Reports for 2000 and 2003, violent crimes -- which include murder, forcible rape, robbery, and aggravated assault -- in Baltimore (that were reported to law enforcement officials) declined from 16,003 in 2000 (O'Malley's first year in office) to 13,789 in 2003. There were 261 murders in Baltimore in 2000; 256 in 2001; 253 in 2002; and 270 in 2003, and has increased to 276 murders in 2004. [8]

[edit] Controversy

However, the crime statistics from Baltimore are disputed. [9][10] Members of the Democratic controlled Baltimore City Council as well as the Washington Post and Baltimore Sun newspapers have questioned the crime statistics released by the O'Malley administration since they differ with official FBI crime reports. They claim that crime in Baltimore is seriously underreported. The Washington Post, however, characterizes these accusations as coming from "O'Malley's political foes -- Democrat and Republican alike" and says that "[t]o date, no evidence has surfaced of a systemic manipulation of crime statistics."[3]

O'Malley lauds many of his achievements in the Baltimore City Public School System, stating that his administration has greatly improved schools and that they “are on the mend for the first time in decades.” As one of his five most prominent achievements, O'Malley claims that his administration “improved student test scores across the board.” It is difficult to deny that much more improvement still needs to be made in all aspects of school quality. A national study on the graduation rates in the nation's 50 biggest cities found Baltimore to be second to last with respect to dropout rates (with Detroit in last place). [11]. As the city school system is independently controlled by a board jointly appointed by the mayor and the governor of Maryland, a structure adopted in 1997 as part of litigation in the Federal court system, no single political leader or single level of government (city or state) has responsibility for or authority over the city schools, and it is difficult to hold specific elected officials responsible for either the successes or failures of the city school system. [12]

[edit] National Prominence

In 2002, Esquire Magazine named O’Malley “The Best Young Mayor in the Country,” and in 2005, Time Magazine named him one of America’s “Top 5 Big City Mayors” [13]. In August of 2005, Business Week Magazine Online named O'Malley as one of five "New Faces" in the Democratic Party. Business Week said O'Malley "has become the party's go-to guy on protecting the homeland. The telegenic mayor has developed a detailed plan for rail and port safety and has been an outspoken critic of White House security priorities" [14]. Martin O'Malley also appeared in the film Ladder 49, as himself, then-mayor of Baltimore City.

[edit] Homeland Security

In 2003, national Democratic leaders asked him to give the Democratic Response to the President’s weekly radio address in which he spoke about Homeland Security.

During the 2004 presidential campaign, Sen. John Kerry invited O'Malley to speak on the topic in Wisconsin. In 2004, O'Malley was one of the featured speakers at the Democratic National Convention in the FleetCenter in Boston, Massachusetts. In his speech, he focused on Homeland Security stating “Sadly and unforgivably almost three years after that fateful day when thousands of moms and dads, sons and daughters didn’t come from work on September 11th, America’s cities and towns, America’s ports and borders and America’s heartland remain needlessly vulnerable” [15]. As the only mayor to speak at the Democratic National Convention, O'Malley proved that he was a “rising star” in the Democratic Party.

In August 2005, O'Malley was invited to speak to the National Press Club to give a mayoral perspective on homeland security issues. Again he criticized the Bush Administration, stating, "In Washington today, the traditional strong defense values of the party of Abraham Lincoln are found only in the words carved on the cold walls of his memorial." O'Malley also stated that increased Homeland Security funding supported the "values of our republic – what former Senator Gary Hart would call 'the Fourth Power' – the moral exponent of our military, economic, and diplomatic powers" [16].

[edit] Family

O'Malley is married to Catherine Curran O'Malley (Katie). He first met her in 1986 while he was working on now-U.S. Senator Barbara Mikulski’s primary and general election campaign and she was working on her father J. Joseph Curran, Jr.’s campaign for Attorney General of Maryland. In 1988, they began to date and he married her in 1990 while he was running his first (and unsuccessful) campaign for political office.

In 1991, they had their first child, Grace. They live in Northeast Baltimore City with their children, Grace, Tara, William, and Jack. The children attend St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church.

O'Malley’s father in law, J. Joseph Curran, Jr., is the longest serving attorney general in Maryland history, serving since 1987. He is also a former Lieutenant Governor of Maryland, member of the Maryland House of Delegates, and a state Senator.

In 2001, Katie, an attorney with an undergraduate degree from Towson State University and law degree from the University of Baltimore, was appointed by Democratic Governor Parris Glendening (D) as District Court Judge of Baltimore City.

[edit] Relations

Due to a possible inherent conflict of interest in potentially having two close family members at the position of Governor and Attorney General, some have suggested that Curran should step down from his post. Curran decided not to seek reelection on May 7, 2006, citing his age and having accomplished a great deal rather than his relation to O'Malley.[citation needed]

The potential conflict of interest was recently cited when environmentalist groups initiated a class action lawsuit against the George W. Bush administration concerning mercury pollution rules. Republican Ehrlich blocked attorney general Curran and the entire state of Maryland from joining the dozens of states in a law suit against the Bush administration's decision to exempt power plants from mercury emission controls. Curran’s son-in-law O’Malley then joined the suit on behalf of the City of Baltimore to protect the environment and the Chesapeake Bay. He was met with criticism from Republicans for not focusing on Baltimore’s needs [17].

[edit] 2006 Gubernatorial Elections

O'Malley was nominated by the Democratic Party to challenge incumbent Maryland Governor Robert Ehrlich in the November 2006 election. O'Malley featured the news article “Running early, running hard" [18] on his new web site, launched June 2005. It states, "O'Malley has yet to officially announce his run for governor, but that doesn’t mean he hasn’t been busy on the campaign trail." O'Malley named Jonathan Epstein as his campaign manager, but he fired Epstein in May 2006.

O'Malley selected Anthony G. Brown, Delegate from Prince George's County, lawyer, and Iraq War veteran, as his running mate. O'Malley was expected to face Montgomery County Executive Doug Duncan in the Democratic primary. However, Duncan dropped out of the race on June 22, 2006, citing health reasons.

Friends of O'Malley also have speculated that he could be a presidential candidate in 2012 [19].

O'Malley defeated incumbent Gov. Ehrlich in the November 7, 2006, gubernatorial election.[20]

[edit] Sources

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Kurt L. Schmoke
Mayor of Baltimore
1999 - Ends January 2007
Succeeded by
Sheila Dixon (Mayor-Succeed)
Preceded by
Robert Ehrlich
Governor of Maryland
Term Starts January 2007
Succeeded by
Incumbent
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