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Wednesday, Nov 7 Republican Gov. Larry Hogan won a second term Tuesday, lifted by Democrats who crossed party lines to vote for his centrist approach to governing despite their anger over President Donald Trump. | | |
| Dundalk Democrat Johnny Olszewski Jr. will be Baltimore County's next county executive after besting Republican Al Redmer Jr. in Tuesday's election. |
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| Maryland Rep. Steny Hoyer will seek majority leader spot — not speaker, sources say. Elijah Cummings, who won his 13th term, was expected to become chairman of Oversight and Government Reform. |
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| Democrats seized the House majority from Trump's Republican Party in a suburban revolt that threatened what's left of the president's governing agenda. |
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| Elections were held across Maryland and the country on Tuesday — returning some politicians to office, replacing others, and shifting political power dynamics in several ways. |
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| Calvin Ball will be the first African-American Howard County executive. |
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| Steuart Pittman upset incumbent Steve Schuh in a surprise victory. |
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| Sen. Ben Cardin, the Maryland Democrat who has held elected office for more than 50 years, won his third term Tuesday in a three-way race. |
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| Democrat David Trone, who spent more than $15 million in Maryland’s most expensive congressional race, captures the 6th District seat two years after being defeated in a neighboring district. Trone was vying against former Reagan administration official Amie Hoeber. |
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| As Gov. Larry Hogan cruised to an easy and historic victory Tuesday, the political landscape in Maryland shifted in some key areas. Here are some takeaways from the election. |
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| Baltimore voters approved the creation of an independent inspector general's office to investigate waste and corruption, one of several tweaks to how the city is run that were backed at the polls. |
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