The Washington Post, wrongly pilloried by Republicans as a Democratic organ somewhat to the left of Pravda, has endorsed Bob Ehrlich for as second term. I doubt that the editorial will save Ehrlich's flagging campaign. Here's why:
(1) Unlike their endorsement of Democrat Ben Cardin for the Senate, it is hardly a ringing endorsement. It contains plenty of criticism of the incumbent:
There have been disappointments and dithering during Mr. Ehrlich's term as well, mostly of his own making. Relishing battle and cherishing his status as a besieged underdog, he picked fights needlessly, as in the childish blacklisting of two journalists from the Baltimore Sun. Likewise, his tiresome quarrels with the leaders of the General Assembly look more like clashes of puffed-up egos than hard legislative bargaining. Mr. Ehrlich could be a more effective governor if he applied himself more to the mechanics of governing and less to the skewering of his enemies on talk radio.Hardly a description that inspires passion among voters.
(2) While ultimately plumping for another term for Ehrlich, the editorial ironically refutes the central theme of Gov. Ehrlich's campaign in its description of Mayor Martin O'Malley:
Mr. O'Malley, who has run a carefully scripted campaign for governor, has put his plentiful ambition to good use in one of the toughest big-city mayor's jobs in the nation. He made progress in stanching Baltimore's outflow of population, reviving some of its more blighted neighborhoods, reducing its level of violent crime, and adapting corporate methods of efficiency and accountability to the functions of government. Mr. O'Malley did not solve the problems of rampant crime and rough schools in Baltimore, but he put a dent in them.Certainly not the picture of an incompetent mayor painted by Ehrlich. Although it fails to give the many Democrats who populate the Washington suburbs a burning reason to defect from their party and vote for Ehrlich, the Post has removed any real doubts about O'Malley's ability to do the job.
(3) Endorsements matter more when they are issued far out from the election, in down ballot races, and in primaries. The Post has not given Ehrlich all that much time to capitalize on the endorsement and it is hardly so strong that he would want to reprint it in its entirety and send it to voters. At most, I predict a few carefully snipped quotes.
Unlike in many races for local or state office, voters have enough information to form their own opinions in gubernatorial elections. In general elections, party also serves as a crucial cue which is utterly useless in primary contests and leads more to depend on newspaper and other endorsements.
(4) Maryland's swing voters are not concentrated in the counties where the Post's writ runs strong. Montgomery and Prince George's are not just lopsidedly Democratic, they are solidly so. Even in 2002, when support for the Democratic gubernatorial nominee was collapsing around the state, both counties remained strong Democratic bastions. If the Post had influence in the Baltimore suburbs, it would be an entirely different story.
(5) Ehrlich is just too far behind. Even if the Post helps him gain a point or two, it just isn't enough to make up his deficit. O'Malley led Ehrlich by an average of ten points in the last five polls. Incumbent governors who are ten points behind two weeks before the election are overwhelmingly headed for defeat.
Ehrlich may simply be a victim of President Bush's unpopularity or Maryland's Democratic nature reasserting itself rather than his own mediocrity and lack of accomplishment as Democrats claim. However, Ehrlich's millions of advertising have yet to put a dent in O'Malley's lead. It is hard to see the Post changing the fundamental dynamics of this campaign.