Maryland Dems Push Another Swamp Insider to Replace Hoyer Voters Left Asking What Will Change

The liberal machine in Maryland just keeps churning. With Rep. Steny Hoyer—one of the old establishment’s most reliable Democrats—finally stepping aside after holding on to his seat for nearly five decades, you’d think the state might welcome a little fresh air. Not a chance. Instead, they’re rolling out state Delegate Nicole Williams, another loyal soldier ready to carry the torch for the same tired, progressive agenda.

Make no mistake, Williams isn’t running to serve the people—she’s running to keep the D.C. swamp thriving. After over forty years of broken promises and left-wing pandering from Hoyer, the last thing hard-working Marylanders need is another Democrat rubber stamp obsessed with identity politics and government overreach. But Democrats never pass on a chance to double down on failure.

This is what big government careerism looks like: a seat warms for almost half a century, then the next ambitious politician slides in and parrots the same stale talking points. Maryland voters have been fed a steady diet of tax hikes, crime surges, and job-killing regulations from the Democrats running their state. Yet, instead of changing course, the liberal elite keep choosing their next leader from the same inner circle.

What does Nicole Williams actually promise to do differently? Will she secure the border, defend parental rights, and stop the radical agenda in Washington? Or will she pledge loyalty to Biden, the Squad, and the open borders crowd? The left’s playbook is clear—say whatever it takes to win, then serve the globalists and the woke mob once in office. Maryland deserves leaders who care about freedom, not just pleasing their party bosses.

We need fighters, not followers. The last thing America needs is another voice in Congress pushing insane far-left ideas while ignoring the real struggles of American families. Maryland faces a choice—more of the same liberal decay, or a true turn toward sanity and common sense. If voters don’t demand better, can they really expect anything to change?

Source: Washington Times


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