Business Agenda Falls Flat in Session

Summary


Heading into the General Assembly last year, Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. must have known his only chance at getting his agenda through was to incorporate businesses.

To that end, he asked them to "get dangerous," and the Maryland Chamber of Commerce responded by creating a political action committee - a lobbying entity that vowed to track and grade legislators. Those deemed "anti-business" would have the full resources of the chamber put on them come election time.

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Extract


Business Agenda Falls Flat in Session

The Annapolis and Anne Arundel Chamber of Commerce also made a case for its members, assembling 15 pages of position statements on bills.

In the end, Maryland's first Republican governor in a...

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