Legislative Debrief 2026

Tuesday, April 13th, 2026 marked the end of a hard fought 2026 Legislative Session. While we are celebrating a few key wins, we must also take a moment to reflect on a few losses and the corporate influence on our politics that obstructs strong people-centered policies from prevailing.

But first, thank you for being a supporter of Progressive Maryland (PMD). We are a grassroots, member-led organization. Our work to oppose corporate influence and pass progressive legislation is only possible through the power of our organized membership. If you share our vision and are excited by what you read below, the most important thing you can do is become a member. 

We belong to an ecosystem of organizations that together, under We Are CASA and ACLU of Maryland’s strategic leadership, ended both formal (banning 287(g) programs) and informal collaborations with ICE by pushing the Community Trust Act to the finish line. This is a HUGE win and a reflection of organized people power. Thanks to community members like you, the Senate felt an intense amount of heat, and under the pressure of the election year, yielded to the working people of Maryland! Organizing WORKS!

Although we cracked the Senate for immigration protections and secured a few additional wins, the fact remains that the state's political landscape remains hostile towards people-centered policies. It should not have taken the Maryland General Assembly so long to enact these immigrant protection policies and in this current climate, defined by a worsening crisis of affordability, rollback of civil rights, and white ethnonationalist sentiments, we need elected majorities that will act swiftly and in favor of working people, not corporate actors. This election year, you can be the difference between a legislature that continues its legacy of stalling on people-centered policies or a legislature that is responsive to the needs of everyday Marylanders.

With that in mind, let's dive in.

 

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Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, April 13, 2026

PMD_Weekly_Memo_Banner.pngThe memo will be posted here after the email version has been sent.

 

 

 

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Assembly wraps session with only fraction of bills passing in midst of wartime uncertainty

News_You_Can_Use_graphic_(2).pngLike the rest of us, the Assembly members must be looking over their shoulders at the US's impotent thrashing in the Persian Gulf and the wreckage it will bring to state budgets everywhere -- let alone Congress. Unless they hustle, Maryland's legislators are heading for a sorry record, with only 600 (0f 2600 filed) bills passed to Gov. Moore by Sine Die Monday compared to "nearly 900" last year with the same number filed. The results -- and the good, pro-working family bills falling by the wayside -- still reflect the grip of moneyed interests on the legislators, especially that of developers and landlords as well as the big power companies. And in an election year, that influence is aggravated as those seeking election or re-election vie for the funds that should be constrained and limited by state law. But dream on. Limited public financing has been put in place by some counties and cities, but the Assembly members have never felt enough pressure to impose that kind of pro-democracy yoke on their own reckless getting and spending. Those campaign-finance bills have been filed every year, every session, and left stuck in committee.

News You Can Use, as typically on Sine Die, features the modest successes and glaring failures of an Assembly with both eyes focused on the elections, plus the pathetic attempts of the Trump administration to find a way to weasel out of a clueless war of choice that has left it -- and us -- isolated from the rest of the world. Good luck to all of us; we will need it.

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REPOST: Reclaiming Medicaid from MCOs in Maryland

By HOPE ZAMORA , ROHAN JAISWAL and AMANDA ANDRIESSEN | April 3, 2026

ERIC WANG / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Zamora, Jaiswal and Andriessen advocate for the removal of MCOs in Medicaid.

As medical students, we often witness the devastating effects of a broken health care system on our patients. Recently, one of us was caring for a young patient on Medicaid in the hospital who had been suffering from debilitating pain for over a year. For months, she struggled to identify in-network providers, bouncing from waitlist to waitlist for various specialists, growing increasingly frustrated by her inability to get appropriate care. When she was often referred to a new doctor or ordered a new diagnostic test, her Medicaid managed care organization (MCO) would inform her that the doctor was out-of-network or that the test was not covered, delaying her diagnosis and prolonging her suffering. She was ultimately diagnosed with cancer and required surgery for treatment. While she was thankfully able to receive this life-saving care, the impediments from her Medicaid MCO prolonged her pain, incurred significant health care costs and could have allowed her cancer to spread, necessitating extensive treatment and risking possible death.

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Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, April 6, 2026

PMD_Weekly_Memo_Banner.pngThe Memo will be posted here after the email version has been sent.

 

 

 

 

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News You Can Use: Assembly 2026 is in the rapids of its final week

News_You_Can_Use_graphic_(2).pngWe have to sympathize with members of the General Assembly, even the ones whose stances and votes we generally don't like. How do you take a role in keeping the State of Maryland afloat and surviving when the national "leadership" keeps the engines of the economy in a high state of uncertainty, grinding out a war of choice that persistently has a vanishing off-ramp, and (in the case of Trump) keeps the planet off-balance with his bizarre behavior and mood changes. Nevertheless, the last full week of the session of the session is upon us (and them, too, the legislators) and the lack of certainty about expectations of revenue and costs of running a state leave everyone in a state of confusion.

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Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, March 30, 2026

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As Assembly looks down barrel of April, Iran war is unchecked and brings outrage

News_You_Can_Use_graphic_(2).png 

General Assembly members appear to have wrestled Maryland's budget deficit to a draw though maybe only a temporary respite. But as April and the mad rush to adjournment approaches, patches are still being applied and injured constituency groups still in full cry. Meanwhile, Marylanders took up the No Kings cause with anger and enthusiasm, along with an estimated 8 million Americans nationwide, protesting the Iran conflict-of-choice, the often lethal misbehavior of poorly trained ICE goons in disfavored Blue cities around the nation, and the general violation of constitutional rights and the balance-of-power system by Trump's reckless misuse of presidential power. Federal and district judges are sharpening the language in their opinions about the flood of cases rising from Trump's hyper-aggressive seizure of authority, the New York Times suggesting this is a symptom of " a growing sense among district-court judges that President Trump’s second term is an all-hands-on-deck constitutional emergency." No Kings, indeed. It's News You Can Use.

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Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, March 23, 2026

Today is a pivotal moment in the legislative session—it’s Crossover Day in the Maryland General Assembly. By the time lawmakers adjourn this evening, any bill that hasn’t passed out of its original chamber will no longer have a path forward this session.

That’s why Progressive Maryland members and staff are in Annapolis, working up to the final hours to push our priority bills across the finish line. 

Check out our Legislative Updates section below for more details on where our priority bills stand. We’ll have even more updates next week as we assess the full impact of Crossover Day—but right now, let’s make sure our voices are heard!

Read on for key legislative updates, actions you can take, issue campaign news, and important state and national updates.

In solidarity,
The Progressive Maryland Team

 

Here’s what’s in today’s memo:

  • Legislative Updates
  • Campaign Updates

  • Local Chapter Updates

  • State & National News

 

 

 

 

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Assembly's "Crossover Day" finds lots of work still to do; some bills stuck

News_You_Can_Use_graphic_(2).pngWhile all sorts of warlike behavior is going on outside US borders -- including those of Maryland -- more contained struggles continue in Annapolis, as we see below. Some high-profile bills are getting high-level attention, in many cases because they don't cost much. Others, more costly, are simmering in committees as we arrive at Crossover Day, a symbolic moment when bills must emerge from one chamber in order to be (more or less) guaranteed full rather than hasty consideration in the other chamber. Longtime observers can already see the first bubbles in the boiling stew that is the last week or two of the session, when the toughest (and often most expensive) legislation gets pummeled and massaged in hopes of achieving passage before that wonderful, unpronouncible moment called sine die, which your Latin teacher would probably have told you should be rendered as "see-nay dee-ay." Oh, well.

On Capitol Hill, Trump has time despite his war to keep a Homeland Security funding compromise hostage, insisting that the tag-end budget bill include his favorite new form of oppression, the SAVE Act -- devoted to making voting proportionally harder for lower-income voters with multiple jobs and little time to stand in line for a passport or birth certificate. To add to the burden, the Supreme Court conservatives appear ready to kick a hole in mail-in voting. Mississippi's law counts votes that are postmarked by Election Day even if they arrive as late as five days later. The Supremes' first argument on that was not confidence-inspiring if you think voting should not be accidentally curtailed by a short-staffed USPS. Speaking of accidents, we keep our fingers crossed as ICE agents try to behave themselves while (hopefully) shortening lines at the TSA checkpoints in major airports. Better use up your miles before the jet fuel runs out.

It's News You Can Use for this Monday.

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