In the contested Democratic primary for the U.S. Senate, candidate Angela Alsobrooks picked up support from the only other woman to hold the job in Maryland: Barbara A. Mikulski.
Mikulski surprised a crowd gathered at an Alsobrooks fundraiser at Guilford Hall Brewery in Baltimore Tuesday night with her brief speech praising the candidate. Though the retired senator did not use the word βendorsement,β her remarks had all the hallmarks of one.
βMy spirit is young, but the knees are weak,β joked Mikulski, now 87 and using a walker. βBut Iβm here tonight to make my enthusiastic support for Angela Alsobrooks to be the next senator for Maryland.β
Mikulski is the only woman ever to be elected to the U.S. Senate from Maryland, serving from 1987 to 2017.
βThough I was the first, I didnβt want to be the only,β she said. βAnd now we have the opportunity to send another woman back to the United States Senate from Maryland because, for Angela, itβs not only about gender, itβs about the agenda. Sheβs got the right stuff. Letβs get behind her!β
Mikulski is the latest member of Marylandβs Democratic political establishment to back Alsobrooks in her campaign thatβs primarily against U.S. Rep. David Trone, a self-funded candidate who so far has led in independent polls.
Trone, the founder of the Total Wine & More liquor store chain, has poured $41.8 million of his own money into his campaign, according to his most recent finance report.
One of Marylandβs U.S. Senate seats is up for election this year, following U.S. Sen. Ben Cardinβs decision not to run for reelection. The winner of the Democratic primary is likely to face Republican former Gov. Larry Hogan in the general election.
Once Hogan got into the race, it began drawing national attention as one of the elections that could determine the balance of power in the U.S. Senate. Though Maryland has reliably elected Democratic senators for years, Hogan is a popular politician who was elected to statewide office twice.

Alsobrooks sewed up endorsements from many top Democratic politicians, including the other U.S. senator, Chris Van Hollen; Gov. Wes Moore; and most of the stateβs members of the House of Representatives. Some spoke at Tuesdayβs fundraiser and asserted that the race between Alsobrooks and Trone is narrowing.
Trone picked up support from U.S. Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger, who is also retiring; an array of local officials and state lawmakers; and many of his Congressional colleagues from other states.
Alsobrooks thanked Mikulski for her support, bestowing one of her favorite compliments by calling the retired senator βsuper-bad.β
Mikulski, in a brief interview, said that she prefers the term βsupportβ rather than βendorsement.β She said she wanted to make her opinion known because sheβs been asked often who she wants to win the primary election.
Mikulski has offered similar support β without the word βendorsementβ β for other women candidates this year, including Baltimore mayoral candidate Sheila Dixon and Sarah Elfreth, a state senator running for the U.S. House of Representatives in a suburban district.
Mikulski said sheβs βnot knockingβ Trone, but thinks Alsobrooks is better.
βIβve known Angela as a prosecutor and a county executive and sheβs got the right stuff,β she said.
In-person early voting begins Thursday and runs through May 9, followed by traditional Election Day voting on May 14.



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