Advocates Call on Maryland Leaders to Pass the ‘Stable Homes, Strong Communities’ Housing Justice Agenda
Renters United Maryland Announces 2026 Legislative Agenda to Ensure all Marylanders Have Stable, Affordable Housing
Annapolis, MD – On the first day of the legislative session, Renters United Maryland (RUM) is calling on the Maryland General Assembly to pass the Stable Homes, Strong Communities legislative agenda. As rent prices skyrocket and more renting families are facing eviction and dangerous, unfair housing practices, it is more vital than ever for our state legislators to act to ensure renters in Maryland have stable housing, so we can all have strong communities.
To ensure that every Marylander has access to a safe, stable home, the 2026 Maryland General Assembly must:
- Pass Good Cause Eviction Enabling Legislation
- Fund Eviction Prevention
- Pass legislation ensuring fair background checks for housing
- Oppose “Evict First, Ask Questions Later” Bills
“Session after session, affordable housing is discussed as if homeownership is the only solution,” said Tonia Chestnut, President of the Enclave Tenant Association. “But renters are the backbone of our communities, and we are tired of being treated as an afterthought. At The Enclave, we see firsthand how a lack of protections allows housing conditions to deteriorate while rents continue to rise. If lawmakers are serious about addressing the housing crisis, they must move beyond talk and pass real, enforceable protections for Maryland renters.”
Read moreMarylanders Want Fair Maps: New Poll Shows Majority Support Redistricting
At a moment when political power is being reshaped across the country, Maryland voters are paying attention, and they are sending a clear message to Annapolis: they want action on redistricting.
A new statewide poll conducted for the Meet the Moment Maryland Coalition finds that a solid majority of Maryland voters support redrawing the state’s congressional maps before the 2026 election. Far from being a niche or insider issue, redistricting is increasingly understood by voters as a necessary step to protect fair representation, working families, and Maryland’s influence in Congress.
The Big Picture: Voters See the National Stakes
Across the country, Republican-controlled states like Texas, Missouri, and Indiana have already moved to redraw their congressional maps ahead of the 2026 elections—at the urging of the Trump administration—to tilt the playing field in their favor. Maryland voters are well aware of this.
In fact, nearly three-quarters of Maryland voters say they have heard a lot or a decent amount about redistricting efforts in Texas and California. By contrast, fewer than half say they’ve heard much about what’s happening here in Maryland. Still, voters are not confused about where they stand.
They understand that when other states manipulate their maps, Maryland’s voters lose power, and the state risks losing its ability to stand up for working families, protect federal jobs, and secure funding for transportation and infrastructure.
A Clear Majority Supports Redistricting
When asked directly whether they favor redrawing Maryland’s congressional districts before the 2026 election, 54% of likely Maryland voters said yes.
Support is especially strong in the communities most affected by decisions made in Washington:
- Montgomery County: 64% support
- Prince George’s County: 68% support
- Baltimore City: 68% support
While support is lower in parts of western, southern, and eastern Maryland, the statewide message is unmistakable: most Maryland voters want their leaders to respond.
The Bottom Line
Marylanders are engaged, informed, and ready for leadership. A majority support redistricting. Democratic primary voters support it even more strongly. And voters understand the national consequences of delay.
If state leaders are waiting for public permission to move forward, the voters have already given it.
Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, January 12, 2026
The Memo will be posted here after the email version has been sent.
News You Can Use: ICE protests cover state, enter legislative hopper
As the General Assembly begins its three-month gallop of a session, the new Speaker builds a distinctly more progressive team in the House while Gov. Moore vows to make the state less dependent on the vagaries of federal employment. As the legislators head for Annapolis, events in Minnesota and elsewhere bring nationwide protests against the savagery of ICE agents and the buttheadedness of its leadership (yes, the one under the oversized cowboy hat).
It all comes from the top, of course. The lunatic decrepitude of Trump is more apparent each time he realizes a fantasy (briefly) with an executive order or (violently) by directing military action against Venezuela and threatens others, including NATO allies. We frankly haven't had the fortitude to read through the transcript of his two-hour interview with NYT reporters; when we do, we'll be better able to decide just how far over the cliff he has gone.
States -- including Maryland -- are fighting back, including through the courts. Much of Trump's worst activity is stuck in traffic and he increasingly voices fear that he will lose control of the US House in the midterms. He is afraid of being impeached but he probably needs to worry less about that than becoming irrelevant. So 2026 is brightening. It's News You Can Use.
Read moreRepost: CASA Condemns ICE Killing and Escalating Violence Nationwide
HYATTSVILLE, MD – U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the nefarious agency with a well documented record of violence and brutality, has escalated once again, as reports surface of an ICE agent shooting and killing Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year old woman driving her vehicle in Minneapolis, Minnesota. This killing follows the Glen Burnie violence, where Tiago Alexandre Sousa-Martins was shot and injured by ICE agents in Maryland, our own backyard, on Christmas Eve.
Read moreProgressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, January 5, 2026
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Tumultuous beginning to 2026 as Trump punks Venezuela as Epstein distraction
So much excitement for 2026's first News You Can Use. Trump finally has an "Osama bin Laden moment" to top Obama's (and distract from Epstein stuff) although Mar-a-Lago doesn't really have a Situation Room We bet he's building one there now as we speak. States, we see below, are trying to find work-arounds for all the Affordable Care Act premium subsidies now last year's news; many states (like Maryland) are about to begin legislative sessions and find out how many other things they/we really have to worry about.
But News You Can Use has made it to 2026 and promises to keep you up on outrages and attafolkses at the global/federal, state and local level.
Read moreMaryland Groups Gather at State House to Call for Redistricting and Celebrate New Speaker
Broad coalition celebrates historic leadership moment while calling for action on redistricting to protect democracy
Annapolis, Maryland – Marylanders gathered Tuesday morning at Lawyer’s Mall for a high-energy pep rally hosted by the Meet the Moment Maryland Coalition, a broad alliance of more than 25 labor and community organizations. The rally uplifted a historic moment in Maryland politics, ahead of the first Afro Latina speaker of the house Del. Peña-Melnyk’s, while calling on state leaders to redistrict now to protect democracy, strengthen fair representation, and advance policies that support working families.
The rally comes as redistricting battles intensify nationwide, with Republican-led states aggressively redrawing congressional maps in ways that threaten to silence Black and working-class voters. Advocates warned that Maryland cannot afford to stand still while political power is reshaped around it.
“We’re proud to come together to celebrate Delegate Peña-Melnyk and the significance of this moment for Maryland,” said Larry Stafford Jr., Executive Director of Progressive Maryland. “Her leadership and commitment to redistricting matters, and this rally is about showing that our communities are paying attention, engaged, and ready to work with leaders who are committed to fairness, inclusion, and meeting this moment head-on. As maps are being redrawn across the country and communities are at risk of being silenced, Maryland needs leaders who are willing to meet the moment, protect fair representation, and stand with working-class families.”
Speakers at the rally represented a wide cross-section of Maryland, including progressive and labor leaders, immigrant rights and healthcare advocates, Chair of the state Democratic party Steuart Pittman, local and state elected officials. Together, they emphasized that fair maps are not an abstract political issue, but one that directly impacts funding for schools, access to healthcare, transportation investments, and protections for vulnerable communities.
Advocates closed the rally with a clear message: Maryland must act decisively to protect fair maps, defend democracy, and ensure that working families and communities of color are not left behind as national political lines are redrawn.
The livestream of the rally can be found here

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Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, December 15, 2025
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A no-tax pledge from Moore as budget-tinkering accompanies slight revenue improvement. So, it's money week
>>>>>>>>>>>>Note: no News You Can Use blog until January so practice your info-scavenging skills...<<<<<<<<<<<<<
It'll be money week in several respects. The General Assembly will have a special session to elect Del. Joseline Peña-Melnyk (D-Prince George’s) as new House Speaker -- but it will also be a flurry of veto overrides. Gov. Moore, who has promised no new taxes to overcome a $1.5BN budget deficit, is juking around with minor budget items to take some of the sting out of what will be pretty rugged overrides. Meanwhile, many states are thumbing their noses at Trump's EO forbidding existing or future state laws that restrict AI, largely on the grounds that the feds have done zilch on this pressing subject. The Maryland Assembly won't have a regular session until January but they are almost guaranteed to have a better 2025 than Congress, which is about to slink home without having done anything about skyrocketing health care premiums for the Affordable Care Act (see Megan E's holiday post below).
It's News You Can Use. See you in 2026, and the best of the holiday season.
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