Maryland law permits new laws that the state legislature
passes to be submitted by petition for voter referendum. Since 1915, there have been 18 laws upheld
or vetoed by voter referendum, the last being in 2006. This year, there will be 4 issues on the
ballot (so far).
The upswing in referenda is due to the recent permission of
online signature gathering, plus a decrease in voting numbers. According to referendum statute, a law may
be sent for referendum after the people have gathered a number of signatures
equal to 3% of the votes in the last gubernatorial election.
I’m not sure what to think about the whole idea of the veto
referendum. It’s hard enough to get a
decent law passed without having the unwashed masses weigh in. In theory, it sounds good to leave final
veto approval directly with The People. In reality, The People in general are
way too uneducated on the details of the laws and are far too easily swayed by
the onslaught of issue ads.
Throw together a couple of big-monied special interests with
a stake in the issue and a slick marketing agency and voila, you have bumper
sticker sound bytes coming at you at lightning speed, which sound good on the
surface but have only a passing similarity to the truth.
These are the issues on which The People in Maryland will be
voting this year:
1) Redistricting. Every 10 years, the party in power is
permitted to redraw congressional district boundaries. Redrawing the boundaries into tortured
shapes in order to provide favorable election results to the party in power is
known as Gerrymandering and that’s what’s going on here.
As a whole, Maryland is a true blue Democratic state, although
there are pockets of deep red. Rural
Western Maryland and the waterman’s haven of the Eastern Shore vote reliably
Republican. But these areas are
overwhelmed by the shear numbers of the urban population center that is the
Baltimore metro area.
So in order to try to squeeze a couple more Democrats into
the House of Representatives, they redrew some of the Western Maryland districts
to include a reach into the western Baltimore suburbs.
My Take: I don’t
have a problem with it because I want
more Democrats in the House. The
redistricting system has been in effect forever so to the victor goes the
spoils. But I admit that if I were
Republican, I’d be hopping mad.
My Prediction: It
passes. The urban center will carry the
weight like it always does.
2) The Dream Act,
which allows the children of illegal immigrants pay in-state tuition to state
schools, provided they meet conditions like, so many years of taxes paid, years
attending high school and grade minimums.
My Take: This is
an easy choice for me. Illegals are
here, they’re not going away, and they bring their children with them. The choice comes down to, “do we want these kids educated, or would we
prefer they stay ignorant and marginalized?”
It’s not like they’re getting a free ride; they still have
to pay for college. The difference is
that out-of-state rates are cost prohibitive, unless the parent is at least
middle-class. The kids did nothing
wrong, other that have the misfortune of being borne to an illegal
immigrant. I don’t see the upside of
penalizing them further. Best to get
them producing within society rather than becoming a drain on it from the
outside.
My Prediction:
This one goes down in flames. Fear of
“ferners” outweighs the nuance of what’s going on in the details. Nothing gets citizen to vote against an
issue faster than when passing it means someone else gets something that he
doesn’t.
3) Civil Marriage
Protection Act, or in other words, permitting same-sex marriage.
My Take: If
you’ve read me long at all, you know I’ve written extensively about this issue,
(including yesterday.) There is no logical reason to keep
consenting adults from marrying, there is only personal prejudice and religious
dogma, neither of which does anyone have the right to apply to third
parties. It has already passed in 7
other states plus DC, and as of this writing, society as we know it has not
collapsed. Enough hysteria already and
pass it.
My Prediction:
Same sex marriage loses in a close one.
The media blitz hasn’t started yet, but it will. Remember how the Mormons poured all that
money into a campaign against gay marriage in California? I don’t see why that won’t happen here
too. Plus they’ll be joined by the
Catholics and Baptists. I don’t know if
they’ll do any funding, but they have
already started preaching against it from the pulpit. I don’t know that the Catholic effort will matter much, given how
many parishioners pick and choose which tenets they adhere to, but I expect the
black Baptist churches to turn out a slew of “anti” voters. Perhaps President Obama’s recent public
support for the issue may change some minds.
Polls here show that gay marriage is favored by a majority
of the people, but there is also suspicion that people are saying one thing in
a poll, so not to look biased, but may go the other way in the privacy of the
voting booth.
It’s a shame, because the time is fast approaching to break
the skid of states that have voted down gay marriage referenda. Maryland could be the first to approve, but
I just don’t see that happening. But I
can dream. One day my gay and lesbian
friends will have every right to be just as unhappily married as their straight
friends.
One day soon, I hope.
4) Full Table
Gaming. This one just made the
ballot. A couple years ago, Maryland
passed a law permitting slots, for the first time. They authorized 5 slot houses to be built around the state, from
which Maryland is slated to take a healthy bite in taxes. To date, only two or three are in operation
thus far.
In the meantime, the surrounding states of New Jersey,
Delaware, Pennsylvania and West Virginia all have full gaming, including poker,
roulette, blackjack and whatnot. The
2012 law was written to permit table gaming, add a 6th casino
location and lower the casino tax rates, (for example, lowering the rate from 63%
to 59%, varying by location).
My Take: Why
not? Gambling’s fun. If you don’t like
it, don’t go. But those that do like it
will happily go to another state and
spend their money. It seems best to me
to keep that dough in Maryland.
The lowered tax rate is meant to compensate for adding
another competing location. That seems
reasonable to me, and hey, a 59-60% tax rate is still freakin’ huge. The casino owners aren’t in this business to
give money away; they need to be profitable themselves. If they can’t make bank, they provide a
lesser product, which loses business to other locations, which completes the
self-fulfilling prophesy until they close.
The slots games that are already in use often times play
exactly like blackjack or poker; they’re just done electronically instead of
with a live human. So why not keep the
game and employ some more people? It’s
not like we’re flush with jobs right now.
My Prediction: It
passes. The commercials are already
running like crazy, between the rich casino owners that want in, and the
business owners here that don’t want competition or more urban congestion. Funny thing is they keep harping on it being
a casino “bailout.” That’s funny
because the casinos are just getting started, or are still un-built. What’s there to bail out? It’s just another example of using loaded
language that has a negative connotation, and hoping that no one looks into the
details.
Gambling passed the first time and I think this update, to
keep up with surrounding states, will pass again.
How does your state do referenda? Is there anything noteworthy coming up on your ballot this fall?
We have river boat gambling where I live. Something about it not actually being on land? I'm not sure. All I know is that it dumps tons of money into our economy from the droves of Texans who come in every single weekend.
ReplyDeleteThat's what they're missing here... Gambling on a boat in the Inner Harbor. Sounds like fun!
DeleteGore Vidal would applaud your take on gay marriage. He never approved of the institution even after 40 + years with one partner. .
ReplyDeleteIf marriage is under “attack” from anyone, it’s the heterosexuals that enter into it so cavalierly; it results in a 50% divorce rate. Or the celebrities that marry to raise their Q score and get some publicity. Cheapens the whole institution. The gays are the least of the problem.
DeleteAren't they also voting on legalizing sports betting? Or maybe that was Delaware. Or maybe they already had that one.
ReplyDeleteBeware of whatnot. I lost my shirt on that once. The house always wins.
Nope… no sports book in Maryland. I’d be in favor of that though… could be fun. But I’ve a very conservative gambler. I’d never lose my shirt because I never bet more than a sock or two.
DeleteIt IS Delaware. They think it's okay because they have no professional sports teams there. I say, neither does Maryland! Bam!!!!
DeleteHey, don’t talk bad about dem “O’s”. (In Baltimore, pronounced “ay-ooze.”) They’re fighting for the wild card, babee… First time flirting with playoffs (or a .500 season) since 1998. Not as long as the Buccos, but still…
DeleteRegarding Delaware, with all the banks “headquartered” there (on paper), maybe they need something to do with all that dough.