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Maryland District 6
Rep. Roscoe Bartlett (R)

Maryland 6th District

Rep. Roscoe Bartlett (R)


One of America’s first frontiers was Western Maryland, where the Appalachian ridges that cross the state diagonally from northeast to southwest cut through long sloping fields. The land was settled by Pennsylvania Dutch and Scots-Irish hill people, not Chesapeake Bay tobacco growers. Maryland is where the 19th century’s great paths to the interior were staked out: The National Road; the nation’s first railroad, the Baltimore & Ohio, which crossed the wide valleys of bounteous farms and climbed over the Catoctin Mountains; and the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, which began operating in 1828, primarily to haul coal from Western Maryland to the port of Georgetown in Washington. Towns grew up with narrow streets of row houses that today are overhung with telephone wires. They planted themselves among cornfields, pastureland, and ancient mountains. Across this placid land moved vast armies during the Civil War. In Frederick, city officials paid the Confederates $200,000 not to burn the town, and near Sharpsburg, blue- and gray-clad soldiers fought the Battle of Antietam, on the bloodiest day in American military history. A century later, on the steps of City Hall in Cumberland, near the coal-laced hills of Appalachia, President Johnson declared his War on Poverty. Poverty did fall here in the 1970s, but conditions worsened in the 1980s with the closure of several large factories. Hard-pressed as it is, Western Maryland is trying to preserve its natural wonders of small mountains and thick, deciduous forests. In 2008, opposition from residents halted a plan by a Pennsylvania company to sheer 400 mountaintop acres for a wind farm with 100 turbines. Cumberland has attempted to refashion itself as an arts community, with dozens of studios cropping up. To the east, Carroll County in metro Baltimore, and Frederick County in metro Washington, have grown rapidly in recent years and have become new hubs for outward expansion.

2008 Presidential Vote
McCain 200,652 (58%)
Obama 139,421 (40%)
Cook Partisan Voting Index
R+13

The 6th Congressional District includes all of Western Maryland, takes in a small part of northern Montgomery County, and runs eastward across the northern farmlands and hunt country of Baltimore and Harford counties all the way to the Susquehanna River. The political tradition in most of this area, unlike the rest of Maryland, is Republican. This was Union country during the Civil War and has been predominantly Republican ever since. The new rush of settlement—which has made this the fastest growing district in Maryland—is mostly made up of young families of modest incomes seeking respite from urban life, which is strengthening the area’s already conservative leanings. Only seven of Maryland’s 24 counties have more registered Republican voters than Democrats, and five of them are in this district.



Maryland District 6

Rep. Roscoe Bartlett (R)



Elected: 1992, 9th term.
Born: June 3, 1926, Moreland, KY .
Home: Frederick.
Education: Columbia Union Col., B.A. 1947, U. of MD, M.S. 1949, Ph.D. 1952.
Religion: Seventh Day Adventist.
Family: Married (Ellen); 10 children.
Professional Career: Farmer; Prof., U. of MD, 1948–52; Asst. prof., Loma Linda Schl. of Medicine, 1952–54; Asst. prof., Howard U. Medical Schl., 1954–56; Research scientist, N.I.H., 1956–58; Research scientist, U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Inst., 1958–62; Research scientist, Johns Hopkins U., 1962–67; Research mgr., IBM, 1967–74; Pres., Roscoe Bartlett & Assoc., 1974–86.

 

The congressman from the 6th District is Roscoe Bartlett, a Republican first elected in 1992. In his early 80s, Bartlett is the second-oldest member of the House after Republican Ralph Hall of Texas. He is a curious character, a descendant of a signer of the Declaration of Independence and a Seventh Day Adventist with 10 children (he and his wife each have four children from previous marriages). He was born in Kentucky and grew up in poverty in Western Pennsylvania, where his father was a tenant farmer. After getting a bachelor’s degree in theology and biology, he earned a Ph.D. in physiology at the University of Maryland, where he also taught and wrote more than 100 scientific articles. Over the years, he has also operated a 145-acre dairy farm, where he still milks goats. He was awarded 20 patents for inventing life-support equipment for pilots, astronauts, firefighters, and respiratory patients. In 1999, the Aeronautics and Astronautics Institute gave him an award for his career contributions to the advancement of medical knowledge and technologies. When Bartlett first ran for the House, he was a 65-year-old retired professor who seemed to have no chance of winning. Democrat Beverly Byron had represented the district for 14 years and had a conservative voting record. Bartlett lost to her in 1982, 74%-26%. But in 1992, Byron was upset in the primary by a liberal who favored national health insurance and abortion rights. Bartlett’s conservative views and his attacks on his opponent’s record in the state Legislature drove him to a 54%-46% victory.

 
Election Results:
  2008 General
        Roscoe Bartlett (R) 190,926 (58%) ($204,443)
        Jennifer Dougherty (D) 128,207 (39%) ($172,381)
        Gary Hoover (Lib) 11,060 (3%)
  2008 Primary
        Roscoe Bartlett (R) 51,635 (78%)
        Joseph Krysztoforski (R) 5,686 (9%)
        Tom Croft (R) 4,895 (7%)
        John Kimble (R) 3,433 (5%)

Prior Winning Percentages: 2006 (59%), 2004 (67%), 2002 (66%), 2000 (61%), 1998 (63%), 1996 (57%), 1994 (66%), 1992 (54%)

Bartlett has proved a surprisingly durable, if quirky, politician. Profiled in The Washington Post as Maryland’s “Mr. Right,” he described a 2004 visit to Iraq, where he visited the “spider hole” where Iraqi Leader Saddam Hussein was captured after the U.S. invasion. “I was probably the only congressman who laid down there. It’s very interesting dirt. It doesn’t collapse. The water table is at 17 feet throughout most of Iraq.” Bartlett is the only Republican in the state’s congressional delegation, but his conservative views have not always followed Republican orthodoxy. “I’m not interested in politics,” he says. “I am a conservative who wants to help restore the limited federal government envisioned and established in the Constitution by our nation’s founders.” He sometimes objects to his party’s big spending, including President Bush’s No Child Left Behind education law that mandated testing in public schools as a requisite for continued federal funding. But Bartlett voted for the 2003 bill creating a prescription drug benefit in the Medicare program. He also voted against renewal of the Bush administration’s USA PATRIOT Act because he saw the anti-terrorism law as a threat to civil liberties. His fiscal conservatism was reflected in his opposition to expanded federal funds for a local Interstate highway. He was one of 33 House Republicans to oppose renewal of the Voting Rights Act. “He believes that when a disease is cured, you don’t have to keep taking the same medicine,” his spokeswoman said.

In the 110th Congress (2007-08), Bartlett was the only member of the Maryland delegation to oppose the $700 billion bailout of the financial markets, as well as the proposed expansion of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program. He is also the only member of the delegation who opposes abortion rights. The first member of Congress to drive a hybrid car, Bartlett purchased a Toyota Prius in 2000. He has been a passionate advocate of alternative energy sources, and he powers his home with solar energy and a wood stove. When fellow Republicans voiced skepticism about former Vice President Gore’s warnings about climate change, Bartlett chided them, saying, “It’s possible to be a conservative without appearing to be an idiot.”

On the Seapower and Expeditionary Forces Subcommittee of the Armed Services Committee, he has called on the Navy to build smaller, cheaper ships. He believes that the Navy needs more attack submarines and has urged a shift to nuclear power for surface ships because of concern about oil supply. And in 2006, Bush signed his bill to prohibit condominium associations and other residential group from barring members from displaying the American flag.

Bartlett has been re-elected by solid margins. In 2004, he faced an unusual primary challenge from Frederick County State’s Attorney Scott Rolle, who criticized Bartlett for not supporting the Bush administration strongly enough. Bartlett responded by getting Vice President Cheney to make an appearance in his behalf before more than 700 people at a breakfast in Hagerstown just four days before the election. Bartlett won 70%-30% and carried Rolle’s Frederick County base, 60%-40%. In 2008, against modestly funded Frederick Mayor Jennifer Dougherty, a Democrat, Bartlett won 58%-39%, his lowest percentage since he was first elected. But he won all eight counties, including 52%-44% in his opponent’s home area. Maryland Democrats seem unlikely to take this final Republican outpost any time soon. In 2008, Slate magazine named him one of “America’s silver lions,” a list of the country’s most influential people over the age of 80.


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Population
Population 2007 722,855
Change since 2000 9.2%
Urban 60.5%
Area size 3,094 sq mi
Work
Private 76.0%
Government 17.9%
Self-employed 5.8%
Blue collar 20.8%
White collar 63.6%
Khaki collar 0.2%
Other 15.5%
Median income $65,592
Median home value $307,500
Age
Median age 38.2 yrs
Over 65 12.1%
Under 18 24.5%
Education
High school degree 87.9%
College degree 27.7%
Graduate degree 10.7%
Race/Ethnicity
White 87.6%
Black 5.9%
Hispanic 2.9%
Asian 2.0%
Native Am. 0.2%
Hawaiian 0.0%
Two+ 1.2%
Ancestry
German 23.7%
Irish 13.0%
English 9.4%
USA 7.1%
Italian 5.6%
Military veterans
% of pop. 11.6%
Office Information

State Offices

Cumberland, 301-724-3105; Frederick, 301-694-3030; Hagerstown, 301-797-6043; Westminster, 410-857-1115.

DC Office

2412 RHOB, 20515, 202-225-2721

Fax

202-225-2193

Web site

 http://bartlett.house.gov

Committees
House Armed Services Committee (2nd of 25 R): Air & Land Forces (Ranking minority member); Seapower & Expeditionary Forces.
House Science and Technology Committee (5th of 17 R): Energy & Environment.
House Small Business Committee (2nd of 12 R): Contracting & Technology.

Group Ratings
  2007 2008
ADA 15 15
ACLU -- 45
LCV 45 15
ITIC -- 43
NTU 76 72
COC 80 78
ACU 88 96
CFG 87 88
FRC -- 100

NJ Ratings
  2009 Lib.-Con. 2008 Lib.-Con. 2007 Lib.-Con.
Economic - 21 - 78 30 - 69
Social - 31 - 62 31 - 67
Foreign - 35 - 62 43 - 56
Composite - 30.8 - 69.2 35.3 - 64.7
Complete Ratings For: 2008 | 2009

House Key Votes
Bail out financial markets N 2008
Repeal D.C. gun law Y 2008
Overhaul FISA Y 2008
Increase minimum wage N 2007
Expand SCHIP N 2007
Raise CAFE standards N 2007
Share immigration data Y 2007
Foreign aid abortion ban Y 2007
Ban gay bias in workplace N 2007
Withdraw troops 8/08 N 2007
No operations in Iran Y 2007
Free trade with Peru Y 2007
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