David R. Brinkley Explained

David R. Brinkley
Office:Secretary of Budget and Management of Maryland
Governor:Larry Hogan
Term Start:February 13, 2015
Term End:January 11, 2023
Predecessor:T. Eloise Foster
Successor:Marc L. Nicole
Office1:Minority Leader of the Maryland Senate
Term Start1:September 23, 2013
Term End1:November 12, 2014
Predecessor1:E. J. Pipkin
1Blankname1:Whip
1Namedata1:Christopher Shank
Term Start2:January 10, 2007
Term End2:September 16, 2008
1Blankname2:Whip
1Namedata2:Allan Kittleman
State Senate3:Maryland
District3:4th
Term Start3:January 8, 2003
Term End3:January 15, 2015
Predecessor3:Timothy R. Ferguson
Successor3:Michael Hough
State Delegate4:Maryland
District4:4A
Term Start4:January, 1995
Term End4:January 8, 2003
Predecessor4:George Littrell & Thomas H. Hattery
Successor4:Joseph R. Bartlett
Birth Date:September 24, 1959
Birth Place:Frederick, Maryland, U.S.
Party:Republican
Alma Mater:University of Maryland, College Park (BS)

David R. Brinkley (born September 24, 1959) is an American politician who served as the Secretary of Budget and Management for the U.S. state of Maryland from 2015 to 2023.[1]

Early life, education, and pre-political career

David Brinkley was born in Frederick, Maryland, the only son of Dr. George Ross Brinkley and Jean Brinkley. He was raised in New Market, Maryland and graduated from Linganore High School in 1977.

He attended Gettysburg College and received a Bachelor of Science degree at the University of Maryland, College Park in 1981.

He entered the life insurance business with Acacia Mutual Life Insurance Company, and earned his professional designations – Chartered Life Underwriter (CLU) & Chartered Financial Consultant (ChFC) – from The American College of Financial Services in Bryn Mawr, PA in October, 1984.

During the early-1980s, David was an EMT/Firefighter with the New Market District Volunteer Fire Company, and a volunteer EMT driver as Frederick County initiated its Paramedic program.[2]

Maryland House of Delegates

In 1994, Brinkley was elected to the House of Delegates, serving two terms representing District 4A. He was elected to the House of Delegates along with Paul S. Stull defeating Thomas H. Hattery and Thomas Gordon Slater.[3] Incumbent George Littrell ran for the State Senate seat left open by Charles H. Smelser. Littrell was defeated by Timothy R. Ferguson.[4]

As a member of the House of Delegates, he was Deputy Minority Whip from 1997 to 1998. In 1998, Stull and Brinkley easily won re-election defeating Democratic challenger Valerie M. Hertges.

Maryland Senate

In 2002, Brinkley was elected to the Maryland Senate, representing District 4, which covers Carroll County and Frederick County. He defeated Republican incumbent Timothy R. Ferguson in the primary election.[5] He went on to overwhelmingly defeat Timothy Schlauch in the general election.

In 2006, he defeated Republican challenger Paul Chamberlain in the primary election.[6] He ran unopposed to any Democrats in the general election and convincingly defeated the write-ins.[7]

Tenure

He was the Senate Minority Leader from 2007 to 2008.

In 2010, he was selected as Minority Whip alongside Senator Allan H. Kittleman who was selected as Minority Leader.[8] When Kittleman resigned in 2011, Brinkley again ran for Minority Leader, but was rejected in favor of the conservative Senator Nancy Jacobs.[9] [10] Brinkley immediately resigned his position as Minority Whip upon losing the election to the more conservative Jacobs.[11] Brinkley returned to the position of minority leader in 2013 following a five-year hiatus.[12] [13]

Committee assignments

[14]

Other memberships

2012 congressional election

See main article: article. After redistricting, 85-year-old Republican incumbent U.S. Congressman Roscoe Bartlett was placed into a district that Obama won. Portions of Baltimore and Harford counties as well as Carroll County were taken away from the 6th District during redistricting. More of Montgomery County was put into the district, while another part of Montgomery County was removed and added to northern Frederick County to reform the 8th District.[15] His current district has Obama at just 40%, while the newly redrawn district has Obama at 56%.[16]

In November, his Chief of Staff, Bud Otis, was reportedly soliciting the support of Maryland Republicans to run for his seat should he decide to retire. On November 30, 2011 Roll Call reported that Brinkley will run for Maryland's 6th congressional district and, “if necessary,” will primary Bartlett, according to his friend and supporter, state Delegate LeRoy Myers.[17] In the Republican primary election in 2012, Brinkley won nearly 20% of the vote, falling short of Bartlett's 43.6%.[18] Bartlett went on to lose the general election to Democrat John Delaney.

2014 election

Brinkley faced another Republican challenge from Delegate Michael Hough, who aligned himself with the more conservative Tea Party faction[19] Hough accused Brinkley of being a "tax-and-spend liberal"[20] and of cooperating too much with the Democratic majority and then-Governor Martin O'Malley. Hough crushed Brinkley in the primary election, 68%-32%.[21]

Newly elected governor Larry Hogan appointed Brinkley to the position of Secretary of Budget and Management in January 2015.

Electoral history

NameVotesPercentOutcome
Michael Hough, Rep.8,946  67.7%   Won
David R. Brinkley, Rep.4,261  32.3%   Lost
NameVotesPercentOutcome
David R. Brinkley, Rep.31,522  72.8%   Won
Sara Lou Trescott, Dem.11,733  27.1%   Lost
Other (Write-Ins)50  0.1%   Lost
NameVotesPercentOutcome
David R. Brinkley, Rep.33,879  98.7%   Won
Other (Write-Ins)455  1.3%   Lost
NameVotesPercentOutcome
David R. Brinkley, Rep.29,231  76.4%   Won
Timothy Schlauch, Dem.8,957  23.4%   Lost
Other (Write-Ins)82  0.2%   Lost

Voters to choose two:

NameVotesPercentOutcome
David R. Brinkley, Rep.15,383  39%   Won
Paul S. Stull, Rep14,559  37%   Won
Valerie M. Hertges, Dem9,892  25%   Lost

Voters to choose two:

NameVotesPercentOutcome
David R. Brinkley, Rep.12,296  31%   Won
Paul S. Stull, Rep11,789  30%   Won
Thomas H. Hattery, Dem9,900  25%   Lost
Thomas Gordon Slater, Dem5,785  15%   Lost

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Maryland Gov.-Elect Larry Hogan picks David R. Brinkley to oversee budget. The Washington Post. Jenna. Johnson . January 15, 2015.
  2. Web site: About David Brinkley . Brinkley for Maryland State Senate . https://web.archive.org/web/20131004215320/http://dbrinkley.com/subpages/aboutdavidbrinkley.html . October 4, 2013 . dead . mdy .
  3. Web site: 1994 Gubernatorial General Election Results: House of Delegates. Maryland State Board of Elections.
  4. Web site: 1994 Gubernatorial General Election Results: State Senate. Maryland State Board of Elections.
  5. Web site: 2002 General Election Results. Maryland State Board of Elections.
  6. Web site: 2006 Primary Election Results. Maryland State Board of Elections.
  7. Web site: 2006 General Election Results. Maryland State Board of Elections.
  8. http://kittleman.com/kittleman-elected-senate-gop-leader/Kittleman elected Senate GOP leader
  9. Web site: Kittleman to step aside as minority leader. https://web.archive.org/web/20111108000248/http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/2011/01/kittleman_to_step_aside_as_min.html. November 8, 2011 . The Baltimore Sun. Annie . Linskey. January 18, 2011.
  10. News: Jacobs to lead Senate Republicans: First female minority leader, Pipkin chosen as minority whip. January 21, 2011. Julie . Bykowicz. June 23, 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130623095323/http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2011-01-21/news/bs-md-nancy-jacobs-20110121_1_kittleman-nancy-jacobs-whip-position.
  11. News: Pipkin replaced Brinkley as Senate minority whip . The Frederick News Post . October 1, 2013 . January 23, 2013 . https://archive.today/20130123212700/http://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/news/display.htm?storyid=115631 . dead .
  12. News: Brinkley, Getty named GOP Leaders in State Senate. September 28, 2013. Carroll County Times.
  13. https://www.fredericknewspost.com/news/brinkley-tapped-as-senate-minority-leader/article_c8c21dfc-24b5-11e3-9bef-001a4bcf6878.html
  14. Web site: David R. Brinkley: Republican, District 4, Carroll & Frederick Counties. Maryland Manual Online . State of Maryland . https://web.archive.org/web/20141229205144/http://msa.maryland.gov/msa/mdmanual/05sen/html/msa12193.html. December 29, 2014.
  15. News: Republicans Outnumber Dems Running for GOP Rep's Maryland Seat . Fox News . November 11, 2011.
  16. News: GOP candidates lining up to take on Bartlett" With primary in April, TV ads already airing . November 18, 2011 . C. Benjamin . Ford . The Gazette . November 22, 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20111122201706/http://www.gazette.net/article/20111118/NEWS/711189645/1034/gop-candidates-lining-up-to-take-on-bartlett%26template%3Dgazette . dead . mdy-all.
  17. Web site: Bartlett Draws Primary Challenge . Roll Call . November 30, 2011 . Abby . Livingston.
  18. Web site: 2012 Presidential Primary Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved on May 21, 2015
  19. Web site: Senate GOP leader faces challenge from right: Brinkley's pragmatic approach makes him a target at home. Michael . Dresser. The Baltimore Sun. 2014-05-31.
  20. Web site: Election Projection 2014: District 4. August 14, 2014. Club for Progress. May 21, 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150205004743/http://www.clubforprogress.org/content/election-projection-2014-district-4/. February 5, 2015. dead.
  21. Web site: State Senate Primary Results, 2014 . Maryland State Board of Elections.
  22. Web site: 2014 State Senate Primary Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved on May 21, 2015
  23. Web site: 2010 State Senate Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved on May 21, 2015
  24. Web site: State Senate Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved on Oct. 4, 2007
  25. Web site: State Senate Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved on Oct. 4, 2007
  26. Web site: House of Delegates Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved on Sept, 07 2007
  27. Web site: House of Delegates Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved on Sept, 07 2007