Maryland
District 4
Rep. Donna Edwards (D)
Maryland 4th District
Rep. Donna Edwards (D)
In 1696, the proprietors of the colony of Maryland created a new county between the Potomac and Patuxent rivers and named it after the husband of the heir to the throne, Prince George of Denmark. During its 300 years, Prince George’s County has not often won national fame—maybe briefly when investigators chased the plotters of Abraham Lincoln’s murder here—but it might now. With a population that is nearly two-thirds African-American, Prince George’s is the home of America’s largest black middle class. It is also the wealthiest county with a majority black population. Historically, Prince George’s was tobacco country, dotted by slave plantations and pretty much controlled by its white property owners. A hundred years after the Civil War, the population grew as middle-class blacks moved out of neighboring Washington, D.C., into modest suburbs at the county’s edge and affluent subdivisions farther to the east. In the 1960s, this was one of the nation’s fastest-growing suburban counties. Its African-American population increased from 14% in 1970, to 37% in 1980, to 65% in 2006, as the county’s total population also grew. Prince George’s is affluent by national standards, and 70 % of women here work outside the home, one of the highest percentages in the nation. With office and shopping mall development, it has lately been far more commercially vibrant than adjacent parts of the District of Columbia.
2008 Presidential Vote |
||
| Obama | 267,790 | (85%) |
| McCain | 44,996 | (14%) |
| Cook Partisan Voting Index D+31 | ||
New economic development includes a 12-lane bridge across the Potomac River to replace the crumbling Wilson Bridge, and the nearby National Harbor hotel and convention center at Oxon Hill near the bridge, which is billed as the largest such non-casino facility on the East Coast. The county’s median household income of more than $65,000 compares favorably with the national median of about $48,000 and is double the national median for black households. “The county ranks in the top 2 percent in the nation in income level, and in people who are employed in executive jobs,” Ebony magazine reported. Yet amid this success, considerable problems remain: Prince George’s accounts for half of Maryland’s car thefts, and homicide rates tend to be high for a suburban county. The murder rate doubled from 2000 to 2004, though it has declined significantly since then.
The 4th Congressional District of Maryland includes most of Prince George’s County inside the Capital Beltway that rings Washington. It also includes a large portion of Montgomery County that is mostly outside the Beltway, starting in Silver Spring, heading up Georgia Avenue and covering a sizable rural area all the way to Clarksburg at the Frederick County line. This Montgomery County area is heavily Democratic, as is Prince George’s; Barack Obama won the latter by an extraordinary 89%-10% in 2008. Overall, this is the most Democratic district in Maryland. The biggest industry is government. It has the highest percentage of federal employees of any congressional district in the nation. Suitland, inside the Beltway in Prince George’s, is the home of the Census Bureau.
Maryland District 4
Rep. Donna Edwards (D)
Elected: June 2008, 1st full term.
Born: June 28, 1958, Yanceyville, NC .
Home: Fort Washington.
Education: Wake Forest U., B.A., 1980, Franklin Pierce Law Center, J.D., 1989.
Religion: Baptist.
Family: Separated; 1 child.
Professional Career: Lockheed Engineering, 1982-86; Lobbyist, Public Citizen and Congress Watch, 1992-94; Executive director, Center for a New Democracy, 1994-96; Co-founder and executive director, National Network to End Domestic Violence, 1996-99; Executive director, The Arca Foundation, 2000-present.
The new congresswoman from the 4th District is Donna Edwards, who won a special election in June 2008 to succeed Albert Wynn. She is the first black woman to represent Maryland in Congress. Edwards was born in North Carolina, the second of six children. The family moved frequently as a result of her father’s career in the Air Force. Edwards says she learned adaptability from her mother, and, as she told The Washington Post, “There’s not a room I go in where I feel like a stranger.” She was president of her high school class in New Mexico, and returned to her home state for college at Wake Forest University, where she was one of six African-American women in her class. She went to work for Lockheed at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., and after the 1986 explosion of the space shuttle Challenger, she decided to attend law school. At Franklin Pierce University in New Hampshire, she focused on public-interest law. She settled in Fort Washington, Md., and clerked for a District of Columbia Superior Court judge. Later, she co-founded and was the first executive director of the National Network to End Domestic Violence. Edwards earned national recognition for her work on behalf of battered women. She was also executive director of the Center for a New Democracy, where she focused on campaign finance reform. In 2000, she became executive director of The Arca Foundation in Washington, which focuses on social equity and justice. After separating from her husband, she briefly was homeless and then lived with her young son in a room in her mother’s home.
| Election Results: | ||||
| 2008 General | ||||
| Donna Edwards (D) | 258,704 | (86%) | ($1,443,942) | |
| Peter James (R) | 38,739 | (13%) | ($23,514) | |
| 2008 Special | ||||
| Donna Edwards (D) | 16,481 | (81%) | ||
| Peter James (R) | 3,638 | (18%) | ||
| 2008 Primary | ||||
| Donna Edwards (D) | 78,008 | (59%) | ||
| Albert Wynn (D) | 48,885 | (37%) | ||
In 2006, Edwards challenged seven-term Wynn in the Democratic primary and surprised him with a well-funded and late-blossoming campaign. She ran to his left ideologically, benefited from strong local opposition to the Iraq war, which Wynn backed, and attacked the incumbent’s close ties to business interests. Wynn accused Edwards of distorting his record. The Washington Post endorsed Edwards, writing, “Too often Wynn’s votes have been at odds with good government and the interests of his constituents.” Wynn won, but by a hair, 49.7%-46.4%. Wynn took his home Prince George’s County, 57%-40%. In Montgomery, which cast 32% of the vote, Edwards led 60%-35%. Following that contest, Wynn increased his visibility in the district and co-sponsored a resolution to impeach Vice President Cheney. But Edwards almost immediately began preparing for a rematch in two years.
In 2008, she benefited in the primary from the support of MoveOn.org, the liberal grassroots group, and EMILY’s List, the women’s fundraising powerhouse. She did not take money from political action committees, and she criticized Wynn for his reliance on special-interest funds. Still, she was able to raise and spend $1 million to get her message to voters. The outcome this time was not close. Boosted by heavy turnout from the presidential primary, Edwards won the primary contest with Wynn, 59%-37%. She led 55%-41% in Prince George’s, and 67%-27% in Montgomery County. Six weeks later, but before the general election, Wynn unexpectedly announced he was quitting Congress to join the Washington law firm of Dickstein Shapiro. That decision gave Edwards a chance to take the seat early and so have at least some seniority over other freshmen in the upcoming election. Wynn formally resigned on June 1, 2008. Democratic Gov. Martin O’Malley scheduled a special election for June 17; Edwards won 81%-18% over Republican Peter James, a technology developer, in a low-turnout event. She got some attention when she was among the House members who initially voted against the $700 billion bailout of the financial industry but then switched their votes to yes. Edwards said she voted for the revised version of the bill after a phone call from Obama urging her support.


