2002 Maryland House of Delegates election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2002 Maryland House of Delegates election

 1998
November 5, 2002
2006 

All 141 seats in the Maryland House of Delegates
71 seats needed for a majority
  Majority party Minority party
 
Leader Casper R. Taylor Jr.
(lost re-election)
Al Redmer
Party Democratic Republican
Last election 106 35
Seats won 98 43
Seat change Decrease 8 Increase 8

Results:
     Democratic gain      Republican gain
     Democratic hold      Republican hold

Speaker before election

Casper R. Taylor Jr.
Democratic

Elected Speaker

Michael E. Busch
Democratic

The 2002 Maryland House of Delegates elections were held on November 5, 2002, as part of the 2002 United States elections, including the 2002 Maryland gubernatorial election . All 141 of Maryland's state delegates were up for reelection.

Democrats

  1. District 3: Sue Hecht retired to run for Maryland state senator in District 3.[1]
  2. District 6: Edmund C. Dotterwiech Jr. retired.
  3. District 8: Kathy Klausmeier retired to run for Maryland state senator in District 8.[2]
  4. District 13B: John A. Giannetti Jr. retired to run for Maryland state senator in District 13.[3]
  5. District 14: Tod David Sher retired to run for Maryland state senator in District 14.[4]
  6. District 15: Mark Kennedy Shriver retired to run for Congress in Maryland's 8th congressional district.[1]
  7. District 17: Cheryl Kagan retired.[5]
  8. District 18: Sharon M. Grosfeld retired to run for Maryland state senator in District 18.
  9. District 22B: Rushern Baker retired to run for Prince George's County Executive.[6]
  10. District 24: Darren Swain retired to run for Maryland state senator in District 47.[7]
  11. District 26: Kerry A. Hill retired.
  12. District 26: David Mercado Valderrama retired to run for Maryland state senator in District 44.
  13. District 33: Robert C. Baldwin retired.
  14. District 39: Paul H. Carlson retired.[8]
  15. District 41: Lisa Gladden retired to run for Maryland state senator in District 41.[9]
  16. District 44: Verna L. Jones retired to run for Maryland state senator in District 44.[1]
  17. District 46: Cornell N. Dypski retired.
  18. District 47: John F. Quirk retired.

Republicans

Incumbents defeated

In primary elections

Democrats

  1. District 6: Jacob Mohorovic Jr. lost a redistricting race to Michael H. Weir Jr., John S. Arnick, and Joseph J. Minnick.[12]
  2. District 11: Dana Stein lost to Robert Zirkin, Dan K. Morhaim, and Jon S. Cardin.[13]
  3. District 18: Leon G. Billings lost renomination to Ana Sol Gutierrez, John Adams Hurson, and Richard Madaleno.
  4. District 20: Dana Lee Dembrow lost renomination to Peter Franchot, Sheila E. Hixson, and Gareth E. Murray.[14]
  5. District 23A: Joan Breslin Pitkin lost a redistricting race to Mary A. Conroy and James W. Hubbard.[15]
  6. District 28: Samuel C. Linton lost renomination to Sally Y. Jameson, Jim Jarboe, and Van Mitchell.[16]
  7. District 41: Wendell F. Phillips lost renomination to Jill P. Carter, Nathaniel T. Oaks, and Samuel I. Rosenberg.
  8. District 43: Kenneth Montague Jr. lost a redistricting race to Curt Anderson, Ann Marie Doory, and Maggie McIntosh.[1]
  9. District 43: Michael V. Dobson lost renomination to Curt Anderson, Ann Marie Doory, and Maggie McIntosh.[1]
  10. District 47: William H. Cole IV lost a redistricting race to Peter A. Hammen, Carolyn J. Krysiak, and Brian K. McHale.

Republicans

  1. District 4A: Louise Virginia Snodgrass lost renomination to Paul S. Stull and Joseph R. Bartlett.[17]
  2. District 38A: Charles A. McClenahan lost renomination to D. Page Elmore.
  3. District 42: Emil B. Pielke lost a redistricting race to John G. Trueschler, Susan L. M. Aumann, and William J. Frank.

In general elections

Democrats

  1. District 1C: Casper R. Taylor Jr. lost to LeRoy E. Myers Jr.[18]
  2. District 7: Nancy M. Hubers lost a redistricting race to Richard Impallaria, J. B. Jennings, and Pat McDonough.[19]
  3. District 30: C. Richard D'Amato lost to Michael E. Busch, Virginia P. Clagett, and Herb McMillan.[20]
  4. District 31: Mary Rosso lost to Joan Cadden, Don H. Dwyer Jr., and John R. Leopold.[20]
  5. District 34A: B. Daniel Riley lost to Charles R. Boutin and Mary-Dulany James.
  6. District 36: Wheeler R. Baker and James G. Crouse lost to Michael D. Smigiel Sr., Richard A. Sossi, and Mary Roe Walkup.
  7. District 42: James W. Campbell lost to Susan L. M. Aumann, William J. Frank, and John G. Trueschler.[21]

Predictions

List of districts

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI