Martin O’Malley.
Following are the workforce totals at the end of the Glendening administration (FY 2003), the end of the Ehrlich administration (FY 2007) and in O’Malley’s last budget proposal (FY 2011). The workforce is in two general categories: state regular full-time equivalents (FTEs), who are eligible for benefits, and contract FTEs, who do the work of employees but do not get benefits.

Ehrlich cut the regular workforce by 534 FTEs but added 729 contract FTEs for a net expansion of 195 FTEs, or 0.2% of the state’s total workforce.
O’Malley cut the regular workforce by 702 FTEs, added just 44 contract FTEs and had a net reduction of 658 FTEs, or 0.7% of the workforce.
Here are the workforce changes for the fifteen largest components of state government over each Governor’s term.

Ehrlich cut eight departments. O’Malley cut ten. The biggest reduction made by either Governor was O’Malley’s 15% cut to employment at the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. This has earned O’Malley lots of criticism, especially from the developmentally disabled community.
And so the right’s claim that Ehrlich presided over a fiscally conservative administration while O’Malley has been a liberal spender is just plain wrong, whether one examines dollars or employees. Will the mainstream media develop the courage to point this out?