Projected Order of Finish:
Maryland’s 7th Congressional District – Special Primary
Election
(As of 11/26/2019)
The top half:
1. Senator Jill Carter. 22%.
Clear Left choice in a crowded field. Existing electoral base.
2. Dr. Maya Rockeymoore
Cummings. 19%. Party connections & strong policy
background.
3. Former U.S. Representative Kweisi
Mfume. 15%. Establishment. It’s not 1996
anymore.
4. Delegate Dr. Terri Hill. 12%.
Good progressive credentials & only top-flight HoCo candidate. How much vote can her campaign pull out of
Baltimore County and the City?
5.
Delegate Talmadge Branch. 8%. Majority Whip in Annapolis but an unclear
path to D.C.
6.
Delegate Dr. Jay Jalisi. 6%. A
well-deserved humiliation for a walking embarrassment.
7.
Harry Spikes.
5%. Cummings connections but
faces the daunting challenge of shifting from aide to Member of Congress.
8.
Saafir Rabb.
2%. Interesting business/community background.
9.
Dr. Mark Gosnell. 1.5%.
Been in the race for a while. Where
is his constituency?
10. Dr.
Leslie Grant. 1%. Good health care credentials.
11. F.
Michael Higginbotham. 1%. Solid
legal/academic background.
12. Anthony
Carter Sr. 1%. Arguably, the strongest
of the three candidates running this time who primaried Congressman Cummings in
2018.
Topline thoughts:
The top four candidates have a legitimate chance of
winning the February primary. In a
likely low-turnaround election, one that is driven by the base D vote, it is
difficult to see Senator Carter finishing worse than a strong second place…
with an upside that could see her finish with a victory with 30%-33% of the
vote. Overall, her odds of winning: 3-2.
On paper, a candidate such as Dr. Rockeymoore Cummings could
absolutely crush it with 40%-45% of the vote but with so many credible
establishment candidates in the field, her odds of winning are substantially
reduced, 3-1.
Former Congressman Mfume stands to benefit the most if the
non-Carter front-runners collapse and Branch & Jalisi (as expected) under-perform. That said, he is running in a district quite
different from the one he represented before he resigned his office in
1996. Odds of Mfume winning the primary: 5-1
Meanwhile Dr. Hill needs to win Howard County by a
resounding margin, be highly competitive in Baltimore County, and pull a respectable double-digit figure in the City to obtain, by a narrow margin, the
nomination. Not impossible, but challenging. Dr. Hill’s odds of winning: 6-1.
And the other 12:
13. Charles
Stokes. < 1%. The second of the three 2018 D primary challengers to Rep. Cummings. Finished only 20 votes behind Carter Sr.
14. Paul
Konka. <1%. Finished second (albeit a
distant second) in the Baltimore County Board of Education (District 3) race.
Lost in the general by a wide margin.
15. T.
Dan Baker. < 1%. Public health background but a virtual unknown.
16. Darryl
Gonzales. <1%. Educator.
17. Nathaniel
Costley, Sr. <.5%. Ran in the 10th House District Democratic
primary (same seat as Jalisi) in 2018.
Finished 5th of 6 candidates.
18. Adrian Petrus. < .5%. Frequent candidate.
18. Adrian Petrus. < .5%. Frequent candidate.
19. Jay
Fred Cohen. <.5%. Why?
20. Jermyn
“Mike” Davidson. <.5%. Does.
21. Matko
Lee Chullin III. <.5%. It.
22. Alicia
Brown. <.5%. Really.
23. Dan
Hiegel. <.5%. Matter.
24. Charles
Smith. <.5%. Third of the
aforementioned three ’18 D primary challengers.
Note: Top 4
candidates garner 68% of the vote. Top 7
candidates account for 87% of the vote.
In solidarity.
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