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 Wednesday, Jun 27 Elections can be chaotic affairs. The fliers. The endorsements. The problems at the polls. At the end of the night, what have we actually learned? Here are five takeaways from Maryland’s primary election. |  | |
| The primary elections are not over yet. |
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| With thousands of provisional ballots uncounted across Maryland, key races — including the Democratic primary for Baltimore County executive and hotly contested state legislative races — are undecided. |
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| Former NAACP chief Ben Jealous won Maryland’s Democratic primary for governor Tuesday, promising to deliver a progressive agenda that makes college free, legalizes marijuana and raises the state’s minimum wage to $15 an hour. |
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| Ben Jealous' victory is just one sign about where Maryland's voters are in advance of a pivotal election. |
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| A mice and flea infestation at Patapsco Elementary/Middle School in Baltimore's Cherry Hill neighborhood prompted election officials to move the polling place to another location. |
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| If the last-minute revelation that as many as 80,000 will have to vote provisionally in Tuesday’s primary election weren’t enough, the polls opened today with scattered reports of issues at several precincts. |
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| In Baltimore County, voters selected Democratic and Republican nominees for county executive. |
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| Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby won a contentious Democratic primary election Tuesday and became the city’s first top prosecutor to be re-elected in a dozen years. |
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| State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby leads in her quest for a second term despite the turmoil of the last three years. |
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