This article was republished with permission from 草莓传媒’s news partners at .聽Sign up for today.

This content was republished with permission from 草莓传媒鈥檚 news partners at Maryland Matters. Sign up for today.
As Maryland Republicans prepare to gather at the Maryland Live! Casino Saturday to elect a new slate of leaders following a calamitous election cycle, one GOP consultant is pushing an idea to help build the party from the ground up.
Jim Burton, a former executive director of the Maryland Republican Party who has advised GOP candidates in the state for three decades, plans to convert a dormant political action committee he controls called Maryland Families First into a recruiting and training organization for Republicans and conservatives at the county level, including school board races.
Burton said he believes the key to the party鈥檚 renewal is building a bench of quality candidates at the local level. He envisions the PAC supplementing the work of the state party, which tends to concentrate on elections higher up the ballot.
鈥淭here鈥檚 not an organized focus on the county level,鈥 Burton said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not trying to take anything away from the state party or steal their thunder. But they鈥檙e obviously focused on the statewide picture.鈥
Burton has been discussing the idea with his clients and other party leaders and stalwarts over the past several days and also plans to pitch it to GOP activists at the state convention in Hanover this weekend. He hopes to attract some seed money to get the organizing effort off the ground in the coming weeks.
The Maryland Republican Party is holding its semi-annual convention in the wake of an election last month that saw its nominee for governor Dan Cox lose by 32 points 鈥 the worst defeat for a Republican gubernatorial candidate in Maryland since 1986. Republican candidates for three other statewide offices 鈥 state comptroller, attorney general and U.S. Senate 鈥 lost by comparable margins, while GOP contenders in competitive county executive elections were defeated. The party lost seats in the General Assembly and highly-touted congressional nominees also went down to defeat.
These losses occurred despite the enormous popularity of term-limited Gov. Larry Hogan (R), who has appealed to Democrats and independents as much as he has to voters of his own party during his eight-year tenure. But the state Republican apparatus and activists have been dominated in recent years by fans of former president Donald Trump, who earned 34% and 32% of the vote in Maryland in the 2016 and 2020 White House elections, respectively, limiting the GOP鈥檚 broader appeal.
Dirk Haire, who had been the state Republican chair for the past six years, announced days after the election that he would not seek another term, and the proceedings at this weekend鈥檚 GOP convention will be dominated by the fight to replace him as party leader.
The leading candidate appears to be Nicole Beus Harris, a political consultant and the wife of Rep. Andy Harris. She鈥檚 running with the support of Cox and the state鈥檚 three Republican county executives 鈥 Robert Cassilly of Harford County, Julie Giordano of Wicomico County, and Danielle Hornberger of Cecil County. Also running is聽Tim Fazenbaker, a Baltimore County business executive who ran unsuccessfully for state delegate this year and for Congress two years earlier.
Gordana Schifanelli, an Eastern Shore lawyer who was Cox鈥檚 running mate this year, had also planned to run for state chair, but she was told by party leaders that聽. She may still try to put her name before the Republican central committee members through a floor fight at this weekend鈥檚 convention.
It is with this drama as a backdrop that Burton is hoping to launch his candidate recruitment and training effort. He likens it to Emerge Maryland, the organization that has recruited and worked with Democratic women candidates for almost a decade and has become a force on the state鈥檚 political scene.
鈥淲e need to be thinking about the county folks,鈥 Burton said. 鈥淲e need to build it. We鈥檙e not going to be the top-down folks, we need to build it from the ground.鈥
The GOP strategist said he鈥檇 use any seed money he raises for the effort to do a deep dive into Maryland鈥檚 most recent election results, figure out how Republicans can better take advantage of the state鈥檚 three methods for voting 鈥斅爐hey are way behind Democrats when it comes to urging their supporters to vote early or use mail-in ballots 鈥斅燼nd how best to recruit and prepare candidates interested in county elections or school board races.
In Cecil County, local elections are held in the presidential election year, and Hornberger said the county GOP could benefit from Burton鈥檚 recruitment and training program ahead of 2024.
鈥淲e need the strongest effort to ensure that conservative Republicans are elected,鈥 she said.
Hornberger, now the longest-serving Republican county executive in the state, said she wanted to take a greater role in rebuilding the party in the years ahead, and would focus to a great degree on growing local parties.
鈥淚鈥檓 certainly excited to learn about this new independent effort to help elect conservatives, which should be a valuable asset to conservative voters in Maryland,鈥 she said.
Washington County Commission Vice Chair Jeff Cline (R), who was just elected to his fourth term and previously served on the Williamsport Town Council, also applauded Burton鈥檚 effort.
鈥淲hen I first ran for town council, when my political career began, I didn鈥檛 know what the hell I was doing,鈥 he said. 鈥淐andidates need to know what they鈥檙e getting into. The average candidate needs to have an idea of what they鈥檙e doing to be better candidates and better public servants.鈥
Burton said he鈥檚 optimistic that he can raise about $15,000 or $20,000 initially with a simple message: 鈥淲e鈥檝e got to find candidates,鈥 he said. 鈥淟et鈥檚 then find the tools to make them a success.鈥