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O'Malley Has Made Enemies For Himself, Allies for Ehrlich

Baltimore Mayor Martin O'Malley (D), a candidate for Maryland governor, has amassed a number of foes in his tenure, some of whom are in his own party.
Baltimore Mayor Martin O'Malley (D), a candidate for Maryland governor, has amassed a number of foes in his tenure, some of whom are in his own party. (By Linda Davidson -- The Washington Post)
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"He's not afraid to bring bad news to other people in power, and those people may not appreciate it, but the public finds it commendable."

O'Malley's popularity among the broader population is indisputable. He was reelected as mayor in 2004 with 88 percent of the vote and has won plaudits for his ability to work with the Baltimore City Council, an unwieldy body with a history of challenging the mayor's authority.

Still, questions about O'Malley's diplomatic skills date to the earliest days of his mayoral tenure, when he first went to Annapolis and asked then-Gov. Parris N. Glendening for $25 million for drug treatment in the city, more than twice what had been budgeted for the entire state. To punctuate the request, he proposed rounding up Baltimore addicts, busing them to Annapolis and dumping them on the State House steps.

"You can't run the risk of being a wallflower down here," O'Malley told reporters at the time. "You've got to be the squeaky wheel."

State Sen. Lisa A. Gladden (D-Baltimore), who called O'Malley "childish and rude" at the time, said he has matured. "He's learned that if you don't work with people, they're going to continue to make life difficult for you," she said.

On the campaign trail, O'Malley said he has "been moving our city to the politics of performance."

"Some people have felt their special interests should outweigh any benefits to the entire city," he said.

It is a transformation that he said has unnerved the city's old guard, including Orioles owner Angelos. It is unclear what incited their disagreement. City Hall officials point to a dispute over redevelopment plans near where Angelos owns a skyscraper. Angelos did not return telephone calls requesting comment.

Neither Angelos nor O'Malley has hidden his enmity. In 2003, as Duncan planned a bid for governor, Angelos threw a fundraiser for him. When the time came to tell guests why he backed Duncan, he turned talk to O'Malley.

The mayor is not "the presumptive heir to the governor's chair," he said. "I think we need to disabuse him of that idea."

Nine months later, O'Malley announced that he would support a new baseball club in Washington. The Orioles could count on fan support, he said, if the team would produce a "good product."

Miller, who is close to both men, says the dispute boils down to two powerful figures with differing visions for Baltimore. "There are certain people who feel the city owes them special concessions," Miller said. "No one has ever accused Martin O'Malley of giving away the store for anyone."

Schaefer, who said he started out as a supporter of the mayor, chalked up O'Malley's early struggles to arrogance, calling the mayor "a big kid who forgets friends as fast as he makes them." City Hall officials said Schaefer wanted to be O'Malley's liaison to the business community and grew frustrated when it didn't work out. Schaefer also feuded with Schmoke, who succeeded him as mayor.

O'Malley, a former prosecutor, also has sparred with State's Attorney Patricia C. Jessamy. The relationship tanked in 2001, when the mayor lashed out at Jessamy for dropping a police corruption case that O'Malley wanted prosecuted.

"She doesn't even have the . . . guts to get off her [rear] and go in and try this case, and I'm tired of it," he told a reporter. He later apologized, saying he had "allowed my tongue to get ahead of my head."

Since then, O'Malley and Jessamy have traded blame for the city's stubbornly high homicide rate, with O'Malley suggesting that the prosecutor was never fully committed to his goal of reducing the city's murder count. Jessamy, in turn, has become increasingly cozy with Ehrlich and rallied troops for Duncan.

O'Malley has had several high-profile falling-outs with former allies, including former police commissioners Edward T. Norris, Kevin P. Clark and Ron Daniel. His relationship with Norris soured after the commissioner left to serve as Ehrlich's state police superintendent. Norris later spent time in jail for misusing a city police account. Clark was fired amid allegations of domestic abuse. Daniel didn't support the mayor's plans for overhauling the department and resigned after 57 days.

Still, those relationships have left lingering political trouble for the mayor. Norris now hosts a popular radio talk show whose guests have included both Ehrlich and Duncan. Daniel recorded a radio ad for Ehrlich this week, in which he says: "I believe that Bob Ehrlich is a stronger leader, and I think that he would be a better governor."


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