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2024 Maryland's 6th congressional district election

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2024 Maryland's 6th congressional district election

← 2022 November 5, 2024 2026 →
Reporting
96%
as of Nov. 14, 10:18 AM EDT
 
Nominee April McClain-Delaney Neil Parrott
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 191,226 172,568
Percentage 52.45% 47.33%

McClain-Delaney:      50–60%      60–70%
Parrott:      60–70%      70–80%

U.S. Representative before election

David Trone
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

April McClain-Delaney
Democratic

The 2024 Maryland's 6th congressional district election was held on November 5, 2024, to elect the United States representative for Maryland's 6th congressional district, concurrently with elections for the other U.S. House districts in Maryland and the rest of the country, as well as the 2024 U.S. Senate race in Maryland, other elections to the United States Senate, and various state and local elections. The primary election was held on May 14, 2024. The 6th district is based in western Maryland and the northwest District of Columbia exurbs and outer suburbs. It takes in all of Allegany, Frederick, Garrett, and Washington counties, as well as portions of Montgomery County. Cities in the district include Cumberland, Frederick, Gaithersburg, Germantown, and Hagerstown.[1]

The incumbent is Democrat David Trone, who was re-elected with 54.7% of the vote in 2022. Trone was first elected in 2018, when Democratic incumbent John Delaney retired to focus on his 2020 presidential campaign. Trone is not seeking re-election, instead choosing to run for the U.S. Senate to succeed retiring incumbent Democrat Ben Cardin. A wide field of candidates have filed for the race to replace Trone, with over 15 in all. Maryland Matters remarked that both Democrats and Republicans would need to find a candidate with a wide appeal, as the 6th district is largely split between suburban and rural areas.[2] The Washington Post further noted that Democrats outnumber registered Republicans by seven percentage points in the district.[3]

The 6th district is considered the most competitive congressional district in the state of Maryland, despite being a moderately blue largely suburban district with a more sparsely populated rural component. While Republicans typically run up large margins in the state's Western Panhandle (Washington, Allegany, and Garrett counties), the district has a slight Democratic lean due to the more heavily populated, strongly Democratic Montgomery County, and the former Republican stronghold of Frederick County, which has trended towards the Democrats in recent elections. Republicans last won the district in 2010, when long-serving Republican Roscoe Bartlett was elected to his final term; he lost re-election to Delaney in 2012 after the district became significantly more favorable to the Democratic Party during redistricting.[2] Democrat Joe Biden won the district with 53.9% of the vote in the 2020 presidential election.[4]

This district was listed on both the National Republican Congressional Committee's Young Guns program[5] and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee's Red-to-Blue program.[6] McClain-Delaney won the general election on November 5, 2024, narrowly defeating Parrott.[7]

Democratic primary

[edit]
George Gluck
Ashwani Jain
Laurie-Anne Sayles
Altimont Wilks

Candidates

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]
  • Peter Choharis, attorney (remained on ballot, endorsed McClain-Delaney)[18]
  • Geoffrey Grammer, retired U.S. Army Colonel and physician (remained on ballot, endorsed McClain-Delaney)[19]
  • Mia Mason, military veteran and nominee for the 1st district in 2020[8]
  • Stephen McDow, economist and businessman (remained on ballot)[8]
  • Joel Martin Rubin, former vice mayor of Chevy Chase and candidate for the 8th district in 2016 (remained on ballot, endorsed McClain-Delaney)[20]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Ashwani Jain
Organizations
Lesley Lopez
State cabinet officials
State legislators
Organizations
Labor unions
Tekesha Martinez
Organizations
April McClain-Delaney
U.S. representatives
State legislators
County officials
Local officials
Party officials
Labor unions
Newspapers
Laurie-Anne Sayles
Organizations
Joe Vogel
U.S. senators
U.S. representatives
State delegates
Local officials
Organizations
Labor unions
Newspapers
Destiny Drake West
Organizations
Geoffrey Grammer (withdrawn)
U.S. senators
Organizations
Labor unions

Debates and forums

[edit]
2024 Maryland's 6th congressional district Democratic primary debates
No. Date Host Moderator Link Participants
 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Non-invitee   I  Invitee   W  Withdrawn
Gluck Jain Lopez Martinez McClain-
Delaney
Sayles Vogel West Wilks Others
1[63] Feb 19, 2024 Washington County Democratic
Central Committee
Kalim Johnson Facebook P P P P P P P P P P[a]
2 Mar 6, 2024 Montgomery County
UpCounty Democrats
Andrew Saundry YouTube P N N P P N N P N
3 Mar 13, 2024 Jewish Democratic Council
of America
Halie Soifer YouTube A P A A P P P A A P[b]
4[64] Mar 20, 2024 Montgomery County
UpCounty Democrats
Andrew Saundry YouTube N P N N N P P N P P[c]
5[65] Mar 24, 2024 Frederick County Democratic
Central Committee
Bob Kresslein N/A P P P P P P P P P
6[66] Mar 28, 2024 Garrett County Democratic
Central Committee
Lillia Rose Facebook P P A P P P P P A
7[67] Apr 6, 2024 Washington County NAACP Eddie Peters Facebook P P P A P P P P P P[d]
8[68] Apr 11, 2024
Apr 16, 2024
Apr 23, 2024
Frederick County League
of Women Voters
Betty Mayfield
Michael Powell
YouTube I
YouTube II
YouTube III
P P P A P P P A A P[e]
9[34] Apr 21, 2024 Association of Black Democrats
of Montgomery County
Latino Democratic Club
of Montgomery County
Cheyanne Daniels Facebook P P P A A P P A A P[f]
10[69] Apr 28, 2024 Montgomery County Women's
Democratic Club
Brian Karem YouTube P P P P P P P A A P[g]

Fundraising

[edit]

Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.

Campaign finance reports as of June 30, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
George Gluck (D) $10,291 $10,783 $408
Ashwani Jain (D) $105,164[h] $109,695 $0
Lesley Lopez (D) $193,446 $189,956 $3,490
Tekesha Martinez (D) $628,572[i] $424,360 $70,061
April McClain-Delaney (D) $2,974,706[j] $2,757,607 $217,099
Laurie-Anne Sayles (D) $77,074 $74,773 $2,301
Joe Vogel (D) $792,054 $744,766 $47,288
Destiny Drake West (D) $15,880 $16,092 $64
Altimont Wilks (D) $3,375 $3,170 $205
Peter Choharis (D) $109,293[k] $69,612 $39,681
Geoffrey Grammer (D) $551,059[l] $550,661 $0
Joel Martin Rubin (D) $133,133 $133,133 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[70]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[m]
Margin
of error
Geoffrey
Grammer
Lesley
Lopez
Tekesha
Martinez
April McClain-
Delaney
Joel Martin
Rubin
Joe
Vogel
Other Undecided
Garin-Hart-Yang Research Group[A] May 6–7, 2024 400 (LV) ± 5.0% 37% 24% 17% 22%
Public Policy Polling[B] April 25–26, 2024 558 (LV) ± 4.2% 4% 8% 24% 24% 4% 36%
GBAO[C] March 14–17, 2024 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 5% 8% 8% 17% 10% 4% 48%
RMG Research[D] November 14–17, 2023 300 (LV) ± 5.7% 3% 3% 6% 5% 1% 3% 5% 74%

Results

[edit]
Results by county
  McClain-Delaney
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
Democratic primary results[71]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic April McClain-Delaney 22,985 40.4
Democratic Joe Vogel 14,940 26.3
Democratic Ashwani Jain 4,750 8.3
Democratic Tekesha Martinez 3,992 7.0
Democratic Lesley Lopez 2,600 4.6
Democratic Laurie-Anne Sayles 1,845 3.2
Democratic Destiny Drake West 1,086 1.9
Democratic Mohammad Mozumder 1,005 1.7
Democratic Joel Martin Rubin (withdrawn) 820 1.4
Democratic Peter Choharis (withdrawn) 818 1.4
Democratic Geoffrey Grammer (withdrawn) 651 1.1
Democratic George Gluck 437 0.8
Democratic Kiambo White 401 0.7
Democratic Stephen McDow (withdrawn) 246 0.4
Democratic Altimont Wilks 179 0.3
Democratic Adrian Petrus 166 0.3
Total votes 56,921 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]
  • Heath Barnes, burgess[n] of Woodsboro (2021–present) (endorsed Thiam)[75]
  • Todd Puglisi, grocery store clerk and candidate for U.S. Senate in 2022[76]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Neil Parrott
U.S. representatives
State legislators
Organizations
Mariela Roca
U.S. representatives
Tom Royals
Organizations
Newspapers

Debates and forums

[edit]
2024 Maryland's 6th congressional district Republican primary debates
No. Date Host Moderator Link Participants
 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Non-invitee   I  Invitee W  Withdrawn O  Not yet entered race
Heath
Barnes
Dan
Cox
Chris
Hyser
Neil
Parrott
Todd
Puglisi
Mariela
Roca
Tom
Royals
Brenda
Thiam
1[82] Sept 20, 2023 Upper Montgomery
Republican Women's Club
David Bossie YouTube P O P O P P P P
2[83] Feb 12, 2024 Frederick County
Conservative Club
Matthew Foldi
Jonathan Jenkins
N/A W P P O W A P P
3[84] Feb 15, 2024 Legislative District 15
Republican Club
Dan Cuda[85] N/A W P P P W P P P
4[86] Feb 17, 2024 Garrett County Republican
Central Committee
Garrett County Republican
Women's Club
Dirk Haire YouTube W P P P W P P P
5[67] Apr 6, 2024 Washington County NAACP Eddie Peters Facebook W A P A W A A P
6[68] Apr 18, 2024 Frederick County League
of Women Voters
Betty Mayfield YouTube W A P A W P A P

Fundraising

[edit]

Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.

Campaign finance reports as of June 30, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Dan Cox (R) $160,715[o] $160,684 $30
Chris Hyser (R) $167,256[p] $43,353 $123,902
Neil Parrott (R) $630,004 $465,867 $222,395
Mariela Roca (R) $289,671 $283,146 $6,551
Tom Royals (R) $558,497 $553,752 $4,745
Brenda Thiam (R) $49,520[q] $35,474 $14,046
Heath Barnes (R) $34,373 $34,373 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[70]

Results

[edit]
Results by county
  Parrott
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  •   60–70%
Republican primary results[71]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Neil Parrott 22,604 45.9
Republican Dan Cox 14,797 30.1
Republican Mariela Roca 6,071 12.3
Republican Tom Royals 2,060 4.2
Republican Chris Hyser 1,625 3.3
Republican Brenda Thiam 1,607 3.3
Republican Todd Puglisi (withdrawn) 446 0.9
Total votes 49,210 100.0

Third-party and independent candidates

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Failed to qualify

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[88] Lean D November 1, 2024
Inside Elections[89] Lean D October 31, 2024
Sabato's Crystal Ball[90] Lean D November 4, 2024
Elections Daily[91] Safe D October 5, 2023
CNalysis[92] Very Likely D November 16, 2023

Post-primary endorsements

[edit]
April McClain-Delaney (D)
U.S. senators
U.S. representatives
Statewide officials
State legislators
County officials
Local officials
Individuals
Party officials
Organizations
Labor unions
Neil Parrott (R)
U.S. representatives
State legislators
County officials
Individuals
Organizations

Debates and forums

[edit]
2024 Maryland's 6th congressional district general election debates
No. Date Host Moderator Link Participants
 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Non-invitee   I  Invitee   W  Withdrawn
McClain-Delaney Parrott
1[124] Oct 6, 2024 Frederick County
League of Women Voters
Hood College
Sara Malec YouTube P P
2[125] Oct 15, 2024 WJLA-TV Scott Thuman Video A P
3[126] Oct 16, 2024 Washington County
Chamber of Commerce
Richard Willson YouTube P P
4[127] Oct 29, 2024
Oct 31, 2024
JCRC of Greater Washington Deborah Miller YouTube I
YouTube II
P P

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of October 16, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
April McClain-Delaney (D) $4,394,665[r] $4,186,833 $207,832
Neil Parrott (R) $910,348 $566,733 $373,986
Source: Federal Election Commission[70]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[m]
Margin
of error
April McClain-
Delaney (D)
Neil
Parrott (R)
Other Undecided
DecipherAi (R)[E] October 14–16, 2024 700 (LV) ± 4.0% 41% 45% 14%
Gonzales Research August 24–31, 2024 317 (RV) ± 5.6% 39% 41% 20%
Public Opinion Strategies (R)[E] August 6–11, 2024 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 42% 40% 4% 13%

Results

[edit]
2024 Maryland's 6th congressional district election[128]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic April McClain-Delaney 191,226 52.45% −2.37%
Republican Neil Parrott 172,568 47.59% +2.18%
Write-in 811 0.22% +0.09%
Total votes 364,605 100.00%

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Geoffrey Grammer and Joel Martin Rubin
  2. ^ Geoffrey Grammer
  3. ^ Mohammad Mozumder and Kiambo White
  4. ^ Peter Choharis and Mohammad Mozumder
  5. ^ Peter Choharis and Kiambo White
  6. ^ Peter Choharis
  7. ^ Peter Choharis and Mohammad Mozumder
  8. ^ $30,000 of this total was self-funded by Jain
  9. ^ $4,908 of this total was self-funded by Martinez
  10. ^ $1,875,000 of this total was self-funded by McClain-Delaney
  11. ^ $25,000 of this total was self-funded by Choharis
  12. ^ $439,689 of this total was self-funded by Grammer
  13. ^ a b Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  14. ^ Mayor
  15. ^ $12,225 of this total was self-funded by Cox
  16. ^ $132,268 of this total was self-funded by Hyser
  17. ^ $30,670 of this total was self-funded by Thiam
  18. ^ $2,600,000 of this total was self-funded by McClain-Delaney
Partisan clients
  1. ^ Poll sponsored by McClain-Delaney's campaign
  2. ^ Poll sponsored by Equality PAC, which supports Vogel.
  3. ^ Poll sponsored by Vogel's campaign.
  4. ^ Poll sponsored by U.S. Term Limits. Vogel has signed the group's term-limit pledge.
  5. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Parrott's campaign and the National Republican Congressional Committee

References

[edit]
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  3. ^ Thompson, Steve (April 27, 2024). "Republicans in Maryland navigate Trump effect in run to flip House seat". The Washington Post. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  4. ^ "Daily Kos Elections' 2020 presidential results by congressional district, for new and old districts". Daily Kos. September 29, 2021. Retrieved August 11, 2023.
  5. ^ a b Rod, Marc (September 20, 2024). "NRCC adds two candidates with questionable records on antisemitism to prestigious program". Jewish Insider. Retrieved September 20, 2024.
  6. ^ Cohen, Max; Sherman, Jake (September 26, 2024). "House Republicans pressure Johnson on farm bill". Punchbowl News. Retrieved September 26, 2024.
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  9. ^ a b c Marshall, Ryan (June 1, 2023). "Lopez, McDow join District 6 congressional race". Retrieved June 2, 2023.
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  14. ^ Kurtz, Josh (August 10, 2023). "Political notes: MoCo councilmember joins congressional race, a tribute to Cardin with oysters, and endorsement watch". Maryland Matters. Retrieved August 10, 2023.
  15. ^ Marans, Daniel (May 8, 2023). "Joe Vogel Is Running To Be The Second Gen Z Member Of Congress". HuffPost. Retrieved May 8, 2023.
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  19. ^ Pagnucco, Adam (March 18, 2024). "Grammer Withdraws, Endorses Delaney". Montgomery Perspective. Retrieved March 18, 2024.
  20. ^ a b Pagnucco, Adam (March 6, 2024). "Rubin Drops Out, Endorses Delaney". Montgomery Perspective. Retrieved March 6, 2024.
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  45. ^ a b Kravis, Isabelle (June 29, 2023). "Maryland: Two gay congressmen endorse Joe Vogel for Congress". Washington Blade. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  46. ^ a b "LGBTQ+ Victory Fund Endorses Joe Vogel for Congress; Would Be First LGBTQ+ Person Elected to Congress from Maryland". LGBTQ+ Victory Fund. July 27, 2023. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
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  68. ^ a b Jacoby, Ceoli (March 28, 2024). "League of Women Voters to host online forums for primary candidates". Frederick News-Post. Retrieved April 1, 2024.
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  116. ^ SEIU 500 [@seiu500] (May 30, 2024). "We are thrilled to announce that SEIU Local 500 has endorsed @April4Congress for Congressional District 6! April is committed to protecting our kids in the digital era, safeguarding our democracy, and defending a woman's right to choose. Let's move forward together!" (Tweet). Retrieved June 1, 2024 – via Twitter.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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  123. ^ SBA Pro-Life America [@sbaprolife] (June 28, 2024). ".@NeilParrott is taking on an extremist in #MD06 who says if she's elected the first thing she'll do is co-sponsor legislation to impose all-trimester abortions nationwide, even when babies feel pain. Neil stands with babies & moms. Marylanders, he deserves your vote!" (Tweet). Retrieved June 28, 2024 – via Twitter.
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Official campaign websites