How do you know? |
Actually, it was. I've known them for a while. |
Can confirm those who work in politics seem to be largely Friedson supporters. A friend of mine said sadly none of them are great choices, but Friedson is the best to work with because he will actually listen to the people who know what's going on and adapt/adjust to the practical reality of a situation rather than digging deeper into a bad plan/idea. |
Can Friedson find his way around the county east of Connecticut Ave? I don't think so. This guy will take care of his own. It sucks that Jawando is so bad and that Glass' campaign hasn't taken off. |
I am the one who talked to his wife and maybe it was Cannon Road ES instead of Weller, but I remember it was definitely up county silver Spring and not as good as the one his child ended up going to. |
I’m sure you did. This all happened before he was on the council, by the way, so it wasn’t like he had strings to pull then. |
Friedson only listens to developers. He introduces legislation at their behest and then gets enough co-sponsors so that the public hearings are performative. I appreciate that Jawando has pushed back on these bills. The other people involved in politics probably don’t appreciate this because it makes their bosses look bad for co-sponsoring flawed bills. |
Not a good look. |
| Supposedly, it's a three-way tie, within the margin of error. I guess we'll see on June 23. |
+1. The last people I’d want to listen to are people who work in politics. Lots of people who work in politics are also trump supporters. People in politics just care about who will do favors for big donors and give lots of handouts, not who will have the best policies. |
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Now Andrew Friedson is attacking Will and Evan for voting to raise the recordation tax. I didn’t like that tax increase either.
But here’s the irony: Andrew Friedson and Casey Anderson cooked up a plan to cut impact fees that developers pay and offset those cuts by raising the recordation tax. Friedson sped the impact fee cuts through the council but deferred action on the recordation tax. Because school construction only has two dedicated sources of funding (the recordation tax and impact fees), something had to give later to fund the MCPS capital budget. Friedson wouldn’t support restoring the impact fees so the rest of the council voted to implement the second half of Friedson’s original plan by raising recordation taxes. When school construction costs went up (in part because of a very expensive expansion at Whitman), Friedson gave developers another break on impact fees but didn’t provide any relief on the recordation tax. This is what you get from Friedson. He talks a good game on taxes, but only developers get tax breaks. Everyone else pays for those tax breaks through higher taxes because government isn’t free. This will be his template as county executive. If having an equitable, progressive tax regime is important to you, vote for Will or Evan. |
Another insider here. Not here they aren't. Trump-type people left county leadership/support long ago. And insiders are good to listen to in the Executive race, because it's a very different job than just caring about policy. It's managing 10,000 employees and the budget (with MCPS) for 20,000 more. So managerial skills are key. Effective collaboration with others (Council) is also key. Those strengths and weaknesses vary widely among the top three executive candidates. |
How does telling the truth figure into your matrix of managerial skills? Friedson has failed hard on that one. He’s always mislead on his policy proposals (remember that housing for teachers that required a $157k a year salary?). I guess everyone does that a little but his conduct in the election disqualifies him on integrity grounds. |
They all lie. A lot. You just haven't noticed or cared about other policy issues. |
Even allowing for lying in policy advocacy, neither Will nor Evan has run a dishonest campaign. Andrew has run a negative campaign built on lies. That’s disqualifying. |