Report: First GOP ticket is Craig/Haddaway-Riccio

It appears one of our own on the Eastern Shore may be gracing a gubernatorial ticket.

John Wagner of the Washington Post is reporting that Delegate Jeannie Haddaway-Riccio will be selected as David Craig’s running mate next week. While Wagner goes through some of the ramifications of the selection, particularly the gender and generational aspects since Craig is 28 years Haddaway-Riccio’s senior, I also wanted to focus on the local angle as well.

Assuming this is true, suddenly a seat on the House of Delegates opens up in what’s a plurality-Republican two-seat district for a politician from Talbot, much of Dorchester, southern Caroline, or southern and western Wicomico County. Haddaway-Riccio is from Talbot County and her fellow Delegate Addie Eckardt hails from Cambridge in Dorchester County.

Obviously no one is going to announce their intentions before the word becomes official, but you can bet there are a couple politicians from Wicomico County who may covet this opportunity. Democrats only managed to run one candidate for the two seats in 2010 – Patrice Stanley from Cambridge – but with the opening they will surely have a primary battle, as may Republicans itching to move up after a decade of the same representation in District 37. Haddaway-Riccio was appointed to the seat in 2003 after the resignation of Kenneth Schisler, who was selected for the Public Service Commission by then-Governor Bob Ehrlich, while the other District 37 representatives have held office since at least 1998.

If Haddaway-Riccio is indeed the choice and Craig is nominated for the GOP bid, it would mark the third election in a row the GOP sends out a female LG candidate; Bob Ehrlich lost in 2006 with Kristen Cox and in 2010 with Mary Kane. The only Democratic ticket thus far announced is all-male, although current Lieutenant Governor Anthony Brown is black and has a white running mate in Howard County Executive Ken Ulman. Other Democrats pondering a gubernatorial run are considering diversity of a different sort: prospective candidate Doug Gansler is rumored to be considering another Eastern Shore resident, openly gay Salisbury mayor Jim Ireton, as his running mate; meanwhile openly lesbian Delegate Heather Mizeur is angling to be the first LGBT statewide nominee in Maryland history.

Finally, one has to ask what Haddaway-Riccio would bring to the ticket as far as legislative experience. Jeannie was the Minority Whip in the House for two years until being ousted by new leadership earlier this spring; however, she remains a member of the Economic Matters Committee and sponsored an interesting assortment of bills this year, with a bill expanding opportunities for small breweries being the lone one to pass muster. Two others for which she served as lead sponsor were vetoed as duplicative to Senate bills by Governor O’Malley.

In my years of doing the monoblogue Accountability Project, I’ve found Jeannie’s record is fairly parallel to her District 37 counterparts, as all have lifetime ratings in the low 70s. Jeannie is not the right-wing firebrand of the House and generally stops short of voting along the staunchly conservative lines of other Eastern Shore delegates like Mike McDermott, Michael Smigiel, or Charles Otto, but instead ranks among the middle of the pack overall.

In many respects Jeannie is a complementary choice for Craig, bringing youth and gender balance to the ticket while compiling a record inoffensive to most, although fiscal conservatives may not appreciate her seeming hypocrisy on bond bills. I’ve suspected for some time she would run for higher office at some point, having put in a decade in the House of Delegates before turning 40, and this seems like a great opportunity to set herself up for that success, whether in 2014 or down the road.

Shorebird of the Week – July 11, 2013

At this level of baseball, where starting pitchers are often limited to four to six innings per appearance, the second pitcher bridging the gap between the starter and closer takes on additional importance. Normally there is no “seventh inning guy” or “setup man” for these teams; instead the role almost becomes that of a secondary rotation featuring three or four pitchers rather than the six-man starting rotation favored by the Baltimore organization.

One pitcher who is absolutely thriving in this role is the Orioles’ sixth round selection from last year out of Samford University, Lex Rutledge. The 22-year-old Mississippi native has done an outstanding job since joining the Shorebirds in May.

I say “outstanding” based on the fact Lex has pitched 35 innings but allowed just 20 hits and 15 walks for a WHIP of exactly 1. That will play at any level, and the 4-2, 1.29 topline Rutledge is sporting backs up the fact he’s been a tough lefty to figure out for the SAL, which is batting just .165 off him and creates 2.65 ground outs for every fly ball out. The sinker is obviously working.

Rutledge was a valued commodity out of high school in Tupelo, Mississippi, so much so that the Milwaukee Brewers selected him in the 26th round of the 2009 draft. Instead, he opted for college baseball and was snatched up by the Orioles in 2012. Yet while he pitched well enough in the Gulf Coast League (0-1 but with a 1.64 ERA in 11 innings) Lex looked nowhere near as dominant at Aberdeen last year, going 0-3 with a frightening 9.49 ERA in six starts – none of which lasted more than 3 1/3 innings. So perhaps relief is a role he’s more comfortable in, although he has started twice for the Shorebirds and posted an incredible 13 strikeouts in five total innings. (His longest stint this season is four innings, pitching in relief.)

As a high draft pick, the question always becomes that of how soon the Orioles will move a player who excels with one of their lower level teams. Since he’s not used as a starter, he can fit into any bullpen role the organization may envision as they’re apparently not moving quickly to stretch him out to be a fulltime starting pitcher. And because he’s getting the outs both via the ground ball and the strikeout (fanning 38 in 35 innings so far) they may envision him as a late-inning reliever down the line. In either case, surely the Shorebirds are happy to have a shutdown guy in their bullpen.