WASHINGTON 鈥斅燜ormer head of the NAACP Ben Jealous won a decisive victory Tuesday night in the Democratic primary contest for Maryland governor, besting Prince George’s County Executive Rushern Baker in a race that pitted an insurgent candidate from the party’s progressive wing against a tried-and-true member of the state’s Democratic establishment.
The Associated Press called the race for Jealous shortly after 10:30 p.m.
Speaking to supporters at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African-American History and Culture on Tuesday night, Jealous said Baker had called to concede the race.
Screams of joy here - as news comes that Rushern Baker has conceded to
— Michelle Basch (@mbaschWTOP)
. says he鈥檚 not running to the left or right, he鈥檚 鈥渞unning to the people of our state鈥 More in video
— Michelle Basch (@mbaschWTOP)
Jealous opened an early and, ultimately overwhelming, lead over Baker during Tuesday’s vote-counting. As of 12 a.m. Wednesday, with 99 percent of precincts statewide reporting results, Baker trailed Jealous by more than 10 percentage points.
Polling in the final weeks indicated the race had mostly tightened to a two-person race between Baker, who had racked up an endorsement from The Washington Post, and many of the state鈥檚 most prominent party leaders, and Jealous, who snagged endorsements from Sens. Bernie Sanders, Cory Booker and Kamala Harris.
During the campaign, Jealous ran on a progressive platform, pledging to support tuition-free college education and universal health care by expanding Medicare for all. He also proposed legalizing the adult use of marijuana in the state and taxing its use to pay for universal pre-kindergarten.
Jealous, who was endorsed by the Maryland State Education Association, has also promised to boost teacher salaries by 29 percent.
Jealous will challenge Republican popular Republican Gov. Larry Hogan in the general election.
Democrats outnumber Republicans in Maryland by a margin of 2 to 1 and President Donald Trump is deeply unpopular in the state. Still, most political analysts say it鈥檚 uncertain whether a predicted 鈥渂lue wave鈥 in November will be strong enough to wash the popular Hogan out of the governor鈥檚 mansion in the general election.
In a , 71 percent of Marylanders said they approved of the way Hogan is handling his job as governor.
In the , more than half of respondents 鈥 51 percent 鈥 said they would vote for Hogan over Jealous.
Still, analysts predict the race to tighten once a Democratic nominee is selected.
, Hogan congratulated Jealous on his primary victory and said he looked forward “to a vigorous debate on the direction of our state and the issues that matter most to Marylanders.”
“We are ready to pull our party together and go out there and beat Larry Hogan,” Jealous said during a lengthy address to supporters Tuesday night.
In his speech, Jealous told the crowd of cheering supporters: “I’m not running to the left; I’m not running to the right; I’m running towards the people of our state. Health care, education, mass incarceration, ending the student debt crisis and protecting the environment are people issues.”
Jealous would be the first African-American governor of Maryland if he鈥檚 elected in November. Jealous’ running mate is Susie Turnbull.
WTOP’s Michelle Basch contributed to this report.
