Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Tuesday, February 17, 2026
|
Assembly, Moore fight ICE collaboration as legislature hits prime hearings time
The Big Ugly Bill that Trump oddly refers to as "Beautiful" included quite a few provisions that added tons of tax deductions for the wealthy by looting state treasuries and their revenue systems. A number of bills are quietly getting traction in the Assembly to choke off that loot-fest, as noted atop our HERE IN MARYLAND roundup.
The Assembly has also passed, and Gov. Moore signed today, a measure preventing ICE and border control goons from co-opting the efforts of local law enforcement through an agreement that looks good for local governments but puts everyone at risk -- as we know from the depredations of those same masked, unidentified ICE goons around the country.
So far so good -- but, as one veteran legislator used to say, it takes three or four years to get a good bill through the Assembly -- but only one year for a bad one. How can you make a difference?
Â
Many Marylanders find themselves surprised by how much they can learn, and do, at https://mgaleg.maryland.gov/mgawebsite -- the website of the Maryland General Assembly. All the bills are there and all the hearings where the fate of those bills may be decided. You can be heard in those hearings, and without going to Annapolis to do so. The website language is carefully neutral and therefore a little deceptive about which bills are important and highly supportable. That's where outfits like Progressive Maryland and the Maryland Legislative Coalition step in. You can get weekly accounts of the bills that need passing at our Weekly Memo (you can get it in your inbox here ) or get our virtual Annapolis Task Force briefing on how to be heard on bills here. The Maryland Legislative Coalition's weekly roundups during session keep you up on the bills and hearings that really matter. Advocacy organizations in climate/environment, social justice, education and community solidarity all have ways of keeping you up during our top-speed legislative sessions. The legislature is entering one of the most active parts of their session, so don't get ambushed after April by bills that are bad for you and your community.
Below you can see how states (and the feds) are managing their governance, for better or worse. Might be some lessons there, pointing in both directions. That's why we call it News You Can Use.
Read moreProgressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, February 9, 2026
|
Â
Â
Â
Read moreMaryland amps up its defenses against ICE incursions, worrying some that it might invite them
Maryland, not heavily engaged with ICE enforcement at the battleground scale of Minnesota and some other states, is nevertheless ramping up its defenses. Trump's wholly vindictive assault against Minneapolis-St. Paul is showing signs of wear but state and national officials -- including some in Congress -- are still trying to temper the damage by legal means. Judges, however, are making long lists of the number of legal rulings that the mock-warriors of DHS are routinely ignoring. Congress is near-deadlock on funding the Department of Homeland Security unless Democratic requirements for controlling ICE tactics get some satisfaction. If it gets more intense we might have to do this twice a week. It's News You Can Use, but don't look away too fast or you might miss something.
House Passes Bill to Stop Utilities from Charging Customers for Excessive Executive Salaries
|
Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, February 2, 2026
The Memo will be posted here after the email version has been sent.
Â
Â
Â
Â
As ICE assault and deaths continue, working people shovel snow, make plans: News You Can Use
Right here in Maryland, the slow-building catastrophe of Trump retribution against Blue states adds up, as our legislature works to manage its way through Gov. Moore's proposed tough-love budget. Federal pullbacks in a wide variety of public benefits, from medical care to food assistance to education to the loss of hundreds of thousands of federal jobs by state residents, leave the cupboard pretty bare. Two years in a row of wrenching deficit solutions have shaken the typical good-natured rivalry between progressive groups seeking funding and legislators holding out on funds. Meanwhile, Trump's ICE paramilitary goon squad continues to terrorize populations, not only in Minnesota but in many cities around the nation. And the response is resistance: "ICE out" in Baltimore and at the Grammies, and 9,000-plus Chicagolanders voted to name their newest snowplow "Abolish Ice" -- nearly three-quarters of those who suggested names. It's all News You Can Use.
Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, January 26, 2026
|
US reels at more grim news from Minnesota; Maryland struggles with impact of federal budget cuts
Anyone, including your correspondent, approaches the keyboard with a heavy heart this week. It feels punk to tap out sentences about resistance while thousands of our fellow humans  are out in subzero temperatures in Minnesota (and this week, everywhere) fighting back against occupation and terrorism by a  poorly-trained gang of thugs.
Here in Maryland we are much less troubled by that Minnesota not-nice brand of oppression but suffering from the Trump Gang’s discriminatory persecution of many of our fellow citizens and immigrants of various status who don’t look like white billionaires. On top of that, our state budget took a mighty hit from the Big (Un)Beautiful Bill that diverted so much of our tax money to ICE (Trump’s personal armed force) and away from the public-health and premium subsidies that have allowed families to have medical insurance since the Obama administration (as the stories below detail). Our General Assembly is wrestling with the resulting deficit in its session right now (or, actually, after the snow and ice are cleared somewhat). It already looks as though the state’s commitment to a clean energy future will be slowed and the out-of-pocket cost of going to college in Maryland increased.
It’s News You Can Use, sometimes better, sometimes not so great.
Read moreProgressive Maryland Statement on the Governor’s Redistricting Advisory Commission Vote to Advance New Congressional Map
We applaud the Governor’s Redistricting Advisory Commission for voting to recommend a new congressional map that reflects the voices of Marylanders and meets the urgency of this moment. The proposed map is the product of a transparent, public-driven process that invited residents to submit maps, provide feedback, and help shape decisions that will directly impact how they are represented in Congress.
Now, as GOP-controlled states across the country continue to cave to pressure from the Trump administration to rig the midterm elections, it is up to Maryland’s legislature to choose to fight for our democracy.
The stakes are real and immediate. Control of the U.S. House could come down to a handful of seats, and Maryland cannot afford to sit on the sidelines while others manipulate the system to their advantage. Federal decisions directly shape the lives of Marylanders — from protecting voting rights to securing infrastructure and transportation funding, to defending workers and public services. This is about whether Maryland has a congressional delegation strong enough to serve as a meaningful check on an increasingly hostile federal government.
We urge the Maryland General Assembly to act with the boldness this moment demands and advance a map that protects fair representation. Delay or inaction is not neutral — it is a decision with national consequences. Leadership means standing up now to defend democracy and protect Maryland communities.
Marylanders are watching, and they expect their leaders to lead.











