The following is a transcript of an interview with Larry Hogan, former Maryland governor, on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" that aired on Sept. 29, 2024.
The 2024 Maryland Senate race between Democrat Angela Alsobrooks and former Republican Governor Larry Hogan is neck-and-neck, a surprising turn in a reliably blue state. NBC News' Antonia Hylton reports on how this race could determine the balance of power in Congress come November.
The Democratic National Committee will announce Friday that it is sending $75,000 to the Maryland Democratic Party to help boost Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks' (D) Senate campaign against former Gov.
As Democrats in Maryland tell it, the state's key Senate race isn't about any particular person -- even the candidates themselves.
Democratic candidate Angela Alsobrooks is leading former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, her Republican opponent, by double digits in a new poll in the state’s hotly contested Senate race. The
Alsobrooks is up by 11 percentage points, while Republican Larry Hogan remains popular enough to close the gap and has pulled off upsets before.
Polls by “select pollsters” are shown with a diamond. These pollsters have backgrounds that tend to mean they are more reliable. Also, polls that were conducted by or for partisan organizations are labeled, as they often release only results that are favorable to their cause.
A new campaign by Maryland Latinos Unidos aims to let Hispanic and Latino Americans know that their voice and vote matter in this upcoming election.
Easily the most specious argument made by the increasingly desperate Angela Alsobrooks camp is the plea to vote against Larry Hogan because he could become “Number 51” in the United States Senate, thus shifting the majority from Democratic to Republican ( “Poll: Angela Alsobrooks maintains lead with 7-point advantage over Larry Hogan,” Sept. 18).
The city of Frederick, Maryland, has passed a significant change to its charter allowing non-citizens to vote in local elections. The new law, however, does not affect state or federal elections, as non-citizens are not permitted to vote in races such as those for the U.
The two campaigns and their supporters are taking different strategies in a race that could be as close as a dead heat between Angela Alsobrooks and Larry Hogan.
This is an updated version of a column that appears in the October issue of The Business Monthly, serving Howard and Anne Arundel counties. The presidential election this year may well be determined in places like the neighborhood where I grew up in Croydon,