Pat McDonough explained

Patrick L. McDonough
State Delegate:Maryland
District:7th
Term Start:January 8, 2003
Term End:January 9, 2019
Predecessor:Nancy M. Hubers
Successor:Lauren Arikan
Birth Place:Baltimore, Maryland
Residence:Middle River, Maryland
Party:Republican
Profession:Radio Talk Show Host, Entrepreneur
State Delegate2:Maryland
District2:46th
Term Start2:January 10, 1979
Term End2:January 12, 1983
Predecessor2:John Linz
Successor2:American Joe Miedusiewski

Patrick L. McDonough is an American politician. He was previously a Republican member of the Maryland House of Delegates and a candidate for County Executive of Baltimore County, Maryland, in the 2018 and 2022 elections.[1] He represented District 7, which covers Baltimore and Harford Counties, along with fellow Republicans J.B. Jennings and Richard K Impallaria. He also served in the House from 1979 to 1983 as a Democrat.[2]

Education

McDonough attended Baltimore parochial schools. He then attended Baltimore City College. He later attended the University of Baltimore.

Career

McDonough has been a radio talk show host and producer. He is the president of the Maryland Leadership Council and the Future Leaders of America. He is a founding member of the Maryland Coalition Against Crime. He is a member of the Route 40 Business Civic Association and the Essex-Middle River-White Marsh Chamber of Commerce. He is also active with the Hawthorn Civic Association, the Joppa Residents Council, and the Harford County Pro Life group.

McDonough is also a part of the President's Rally for America and the Classroom Coalition since 2004. He serves as the host for "Inside Annapolis", which is produced by Harford Community College Television. He is co-chair of the Annual Flag-waving Tribute to Victims and Families of 9–11.

McDonough is known for his continual push to make English the official language for the State of Maryland.

In March 2007, a resolution was sponsored by State Senator Nathaniel Exum calling for the state of Maryland to officially apologize for its role in slavery. McDonough criticized the bill as being a "superficial gesture designed to make people feel guilty".[3] Additionally, he mentioned that, "I don't think apologies solve anything." McDonough was one of six dissenting votes in the House. Slavery existed in Maryland since 1642, was legally formalized in 1664, and was abolished under Maryland law by a new state constitution in 1864.

In July 2007, McDonough called for the impeachment of Montgomery County Circuit Court Judge Katherine Savage who released a non-English-speaking rape suspect when he demanded a court-appointed interpreter and none were available. The suspect speaks Vai, a West African language. Judge Savage claimed that not having an interpreter denied the suspect his Constitutional right to a speedy trial, as provided by the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Delegate McDonough maintained that the defendant did not need an interpreter, as he had attended both high school and college in the U.S., and had been successfully interviewed (in English) four times during the course of the investigation.

McDonough's circulated widely in early 2012 as he mounted a legislative challenge to the neighboring District of Columbia's Wildlife Protection Act of 2010.

McDonough's current radio program can be heard on WCBM AM680 radio in Baltimore on Saturday evenings from 8pm to 10pm.

He ran in the 2018 primary election as a Republican candidate for County Executive of Baltimore County. He lost the primary to Al Redmer, 55%-44%.[4] During the campaign, he pledged "dramatic and powerful change" if elected, calling for more police and greater efforts to combat gangs and drugs.[5]

On April 18, 2022, McDonough announced he would again run for County Executive of Baltimore County.[6]

Legislative notes

Election results

Voters to choose one:

NameVotePercentOutcome
Alfred W. Redmer Jr.18,058  55.5%   Won
Pat McDonough14,487  44.5%   Lost

Voters to choose one:

NameVotesPercentOutcome
C. A. Dutch Ruppersberger, Dem.192,183  62.1%   Won
Pat McDonough, Rep.102,577  33.1%   Lost
Kristin S. Kasprzak, Libertarian14,128  4.6%   Lost
Other Write-Ins592  0.2%   Lost

Voters to choose one:

NameVotesPercentOutcome
Pat McDounough28,397  71.4%   Won
Carl H. Magee, Jr.4,195  10.6%   Lost
Bill Heine3,203  8.1%   Lost
Yuripzy Morgan2,257  5.7%   Lost
Mark Gerard Shell1,709  4.3%   Lost

Voters to choose up to three:

NameVotesPercentOutcome
Pat McDonough, Rep.35,627  26.9%   Won
Kathy Szeliga, Rep.33,197  25.0%   Won
Richard K. Impallaria, Rep.32,560  24.6%   Won
Bob Bowie, Jr., Dem.11,154  8.4%   Lost
Norman Gifford, Jr., Dem.10,192  7.7%   Lost
Pete Definbaugh, Dem.9,707  7.3%   Lost
Other Write-Ins145  0.1%   Lost

Voters to choose up to three:

NameVotesPercentOutcome
Pat McDonough6,971  29.0%   Won
Kathy Szeliga6,125  25.5%   Won
Richard K. Impallaria5,790  24.1%   Won
David Seman3,483  14.5%   Lost
Tina Sutherland1,675  7.0%   Lost

Voters to choose up to three:

NameVotesPercentOutcome
Pat McDonough, Rep.27,217  23.1%   Won
Richard K. Impallaria, Rep.25,450  21.6%   Won
Kathy Szeliga, Rep.24,573  20.9%   Won
Jeff Beard, Dem.14,885  12.6%   Lost
Kristina A. Sargent, Dem.13,551  11.5%   Lost
James Ward Morrow, Dem.11,960  10.2%   Lost
Other Write-Ins111  0.1%   Lost

Voters to choose up to three:

NameVotesPercentOutcome
Pat McDonough6,479  27.2%   Won
Richard K. Impallaria5,678  23.8%   Won
Kathy Szeliga4,021  16.9%   Won
Brian Bennett1,838  7.7%   Lost
Marilyn Booker1,808  7.6%   Lost
Roger Zajdel1,783  7.5%   Lost
John Cromwell1,031  4.3%   Lost
Jim Berndt873  3.7%   Lost
Laine O. C. Clark312  1.3%   Lost

Voters to choose up to three:

NameVotesPercentOutcome
Richard K Impallaria, Rep.21,333  18.7%   Won
J. B. Jennings, Rep.21,189  18.6%   Won
Pat McDonough, Rep.23,184  20.3%   Won
Linda W. Hart, Dem.17,122  15.0%   Lost
Jack Sturgill, Dem.15,390  13.5%   Lost
Rebecca L. Nelson, Dem.13,481  11.8%   Lost
Kim Fell, Green2,307  2.0%   Lost
Other Write-Ins83  0.1%   Lost

Voters to choose up to three:

NameVotesPercentOutrcome
Pat McDonouogh4,214  30.1%   Won
J.B. Jennings3,798  27.1%   Won
Richard K. Impallaria3,654  26.1%   Won
John T. Laing1,499  10.7%   Lost
Nikolai Volkoff845  6.0%   Lost

Voters to choose up to three:

NameVotesPercentOutcome
J. B. Jennings, Rep.22,470  20.4%   Won
Pat McDonough, Rep.20,869  18.9%   Won
Richard Impallaria, Rep.18,749  17.0%   Won
Nancy M. Hubers, Dem.17,092  15.5%   Lost
Donna M. Felling, Dem.14,205  12.9%   Lost
Randy Cogar, Dem.13,926  12.6%   Lost
Michael F. Linder, Libertarian2,817  2.6%   Lost
Other Write-Ins80  0.1%   Lost

Voters to choose up to three:

NameVotesPercentOutcome
Pat McDonough3,191  16.9%   Won
J.B. Jennings3,126  16.5%   Won
Richard K. Impallaria2,594  13.7%   Won
Sheryl L. Davis-Kohl2,473  13.1%   Lost
Michael J. Davis2,079  11.0%   Lost
Dilip B. Paliath1,883  10.0%   Lost
Christopher Saffer1,851  9.8%   Lost
Jackie Bailey1,708  9.0%   Lost

Voters to choose one:

NameVotesPercentOutcome
Grace G. Connolly123,896  59.7%   Won
Pat McDonough83,471  40.3%   Lost

Voters to choose one:

NameVotesPercentOutcome
Ben Cardin, Dem.130,204  67%   Won
Pat McDounough, Rep63,229  33%   Lost

Voters choose one:

NamesVotesPercentOutcome
Pat McDonough12,115  70%   Won
Carroll Myers3,979  23%   Lost
Joseph Cilipote1,134  7%   Lost

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Wood, Pamela . Knezevich, Alison . Sun/UB Poll: Brochin and McDonough lead Baltimore County executive primaries. The Baltimore Sun. June 12, 2018. 1. 2018-06-12.
  2. Web site: Official 2006 Gubernatorial General Election results for House of Delegates. elections.maryland.gov. Sep 4, 2019.
  3. Web site: Delegate: Slavery Apology is A "Superficial Gesture" - WBAL Radio - wbal.com . 2007-03-27 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070927231626/http://wbal.com/news/story.asp?articleid=55619 . 2007-09-27 .
  4. Web site: 2018 Election Results. elections.maryland.gov. Sep 4, 2019.
  5. News: Wood. Pamela. Balto. Co. executive candidates outline visions. Towson Times. June 13, 2018. 12.
  6. News: Beeler . Buzz . McDonough throws his hat in the ring for Baltimore County Executive . July 16, 2022 . The Baltimore Post . April 18, 2022.
  7. News: Md. House bill excludes pot as a parole violation. Washington Post. Sep 4, 2019.
  8. Web site: Baltimore County Executive Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved August 14, 2018
  9. Web site: Representative in Congress Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved August 14, 2018
  10. Web site: Representative in Congress Primary Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved August 14, 2018
  11. Web site: House of Delegates Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved on August 14, 2018
  12. Web site: House of Delegates Primary Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved on August 15, 2018
  13. Web site: House of Delegates Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved on August 14, 2018
  14. Web site: House of Delegates Primary Results. Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved on August 15, 2018
  15. Web site: House of Delegates Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved on Sept. 22, 2007
  16. Web site: House of Delegates Primary Results. Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved on August 15, 2018
  17. Web site: House of Delegates Results . Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved on Sept. 22, 2007
  18. Web site: House of Delegates Primary Results. Maryland Board of Elections. Retrieved on August 14, 2018
  19. Web site: County influence remains solid Election results unlikely to affect standing in Annapolis; Strength won't wane; Collins tops Holt, ending Senate race marred by tricks; ELECTION 1998.
  20. Web site: Representative in Congress Results. Maryland Board of Elections. Retrieved on August 14, 2018
  21. Web site: Representative in Congress Primary Results. Maryland Board of Elections. Retrieved on August 14, 2018