Martin O'Malley's Maryland Fairy Tale As Told by Politico
According to Politico
reporter Alexander Burns, Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley wants to tell
“his story.” That is, O’Malley is
framing the narrative of his 2016 Democratic presidential primary run as the
story of his “results oriented” stewardship of the Free State.
Burns however, like too many in Maryland’s political press
corps, has fallen for the mythical Potemkin Village of “One Maryland,” created
by O’Malley’s spin machine.
For example, Burns uncritically repeats the O’Malley fiction
of “cutting billions in state spending.”
In fact, Maryland’s budget has ballooned by nearly $9 billion, a 30
percent increase, since O’Malley first took office in 2007. Unfortunately, reporting O’Malley’s $9 billion
spending increase, as billions in spending cuts, is a
common journalistic malady for the state’s two papers of record The
Baltimore Sun and The Washington Post.
Burns writes:
In a speech earlier this month unveiling his 2014 budget, O’Malley explicitly contrasted Maryland’s approach with the state of the federal government.“Even though we’ve been able to apply a balanced approach here in Maryland, our national politics is still struggling with restoring this balanced approach in our nation’s capital,” he said on Jan. 16, taking a whack at “the hara kiri Congress down the street.”
Apparently increasing spending by $9 billion and taxes by $6
billion is the new definition of “balanced approach.”
Burns also obediently repeats O’Malley’s boasting of
Maryland public schools number one ranking in by Education Week. Yet, the crack Politico reporter omitted the
fact that the same Education Week report shows Maryland schools consistently
fail its poorest students. According to
Education Week Maryland ranks dead last in the 8th grade math
poverty gap. Nor did Burns report that a
large majority of Maryland high school graduates need
remedial Math and English instruction when they get to college.
Burns also uncritically accepts the assertion made by an
unnamed O’Malley adviser, whom he quotes, that O’Malley protected Maryland’s
AAA bond rating. Yes, that is
technically true, but Moody’s
put Maryland on its watch list and assigned a negative outlook to the state.
The outlook on Maryland's AAA
rating is negative due to its indirect linkages to the weakened credit profile
of the US government. The negative outlook relates to Moody's August 2, 2011
decision to confirm the AAA government bond rating of the United States and
assign a negative outlook, and to our December 7 assessment of the state's
exposure to indirect linkages to the federal government. Moody's has determined
that issuers with indirect linkages, such as Maryland, have some combination of
economies that are highly dependent on federal employment and spending, a
significant healthcare presence in
their economies, have direct healthcare operations, or high levels of
short-term and puttable debt.
Moody’s
also noted the ticking time bomb of Maryland’s debt and pension
obligations. According to State Budget
Solutions, Maryland’s
debt is nearly $82 billion, and state pension and retiree healthcare
liabilities stand at $64
billion. Much of O’Malley’s budget
balancing came through swapping out cash in capital funds and replenishing it through
bond debt.
Burns tell us O’Malley wants to “tell his story,” but that story is fairy tale, and it is his job as a reporter to tell the real story, not play stenographer.



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