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Senate Titan Sets Exit, and Maneuvering Begins
Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr., who was first elected to the legislature in 1970, and Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.
(By Preston Keres -- The Washington Post)
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Miller's gift, Frosh said, has been his ability to be both disarmingly charming and piercingly blunt. He plainly told Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr., for instance, that a Republican administration could expect a cooperative, collegial Senate for three years. It didn't need to be said what the fourth, an election year, would be like.
Miller once likened Parris N. Glendening to a baboon in a tree (the higher he climbs, the more of his rear you see, he'd say with a laugh). But once Glendening became governor -- and appointed Miller's son, Thomas, to the Maryland Parole Commission -- the two began to work seamlessly on rafts of legislation, including many bills Miller initially resisted.
Glendening yesterday called him an "absolutely extraordinary figure in Maryland history."
Despite the widely circulated bit of trivia that Miller is the nation's longest-serving Senate president, that's a distinction he isn't likely to realize. The presiding officer of the Tennessee Senate has served for 16 years longer than Miller, and Indiana's Senate president, who just left office, had him bested by seven.
That won't stop the testimonials, though. Already, the Senate's newly constructed office building carries Miller's name, so there's no telling what more could follow.
There will be plenty to look back on when the time comes to explore Miller's tenure. He has had incredible highs, as when he stood alongside President Bill Clinton under the State House dome for the signing of "smart gun" legislation that he helped make palatable to opponents.
There have also been low moments, though in most cases, Miller managed to emerge from beneath them -- as when the FBI looked into his fundraising maneuvers (and closed the case without finding wrongdoing), or when a fellow senator launched a coup attempt (that failed), or when a political foe had him charged for punching him in the face (but the charges were dropped).
"He knew how to make the system work," Glendening said.
And though not many major policy shifts have originated in Miller's office, every one of them had to pass across his desk.
"The progress the state has made over the last four decades has a lot to do with Mike Miller," Currie said. "When you think about it all, it's pretty phenomenal."
His assiduous attention to his Southern Maryland Senate district, and his heavy involvement in the drawing and redrawing of his district lines, has guaranteed him electoral safety. So his departure will come by choice.
That choice was cemented, Miller said yesterday, when Democrats swept this month's elections. His fundraising and advice helped him maintain a firm Senate majority, and after four years under Ehrlich's control, the state will return in January to its long tradition of Democratic governors.
"The Democrats are now positioned to be the party at the center of mainstream politics," Miller said. "Now that the party is the mainstream again, I feel very happy. Very happy."




