Baltimore Sun

Madaleno sends a kiss to Trump

Democrat’s commercial features same-sex kissing, with president as a target

- By Michael Dresser mdresser@baltsun.com twitter.com/michaeltdr­esser

Sometimes, a kiss is more than just a kiss. State Sen. Richard S. Madaleno Jr., a Democratic candidate for Maryland governor, has launched a television ad in which a kiss between him and his husband is portrayed as a statement of defiance against President Donald J. Trump. A leading gay rights organizati­on says it is the first-ever kiss of a same-sex married couple in a U.S. political ad.

By late Thursday, the ad and the media coverage it spawned had gone viral. After the ad’s content was reported by The Baltimore Sun and Washington Post, the story was picked up by dozens of organizati­ons, including USA Today, CBS News and The Daily Beast.

The openly gay former Houston Mayor Annise Parker, president of the LGBT Victory Fund, said the ad is a sign of changing times.

“I kissed my spouse on stage at my inaugurati­on as mayor,” she said. “But I don’t think I would have put it in a campaign ad eight years ago.”

Madaleno, an underdog in the June 26 Democratic primary to nominate a challenger to Republican Gov. Larry Hogan, is running the ad on cable television in Montgomery County, where it is certain to be seen by many Democratic voters. But the candidate also placed it during commercial breaks on the staunchly conservati­ve “Fox & Friends” show in the Washington market Thursday morning, where his campaign was hoping it would be seen by one Republican in particular.

The theme of the ad is “Take that, Trump.” It focuses on the actions Madaleno has taken in his General Assembly career that would offend Trump. It portrays him not just as an opponent of the president, but the most effective anti-Trump candidate in the race.

There is no mention of Hogan in the ad. Spokesman Scott Sloofman said the Hogan campaign had no comment.

The 30-second spot opens with the Montgomery County lawmaker sitting on the steps of a red brick house, telling viewers he’s running for governor “to deliver progressiv­e results and stand up to Donald Trump. Here are a few of the things I’ve done that already infuriate him.”

The scene shifts to Madaleno standing with a group of children holding signs:

“I protected Planned Parenthood from the Republican­s in Congress,” he says. “Take that, Trump,” a girl says. The scene shifts to the candidate with a new group of children holding pro-guncontrol signs:

“I helped ban assault guns in Maryland,” he says. “Take that, NRA,” a young boy says. Finally, Madaleno sits with his husband, Mark Hodge, and their two adopted children.

“And what’s the No. 1way I piss off Donald Trump and the Republican­s?” Madaleno asks. He and Hodge then kiss briefly. “Take that, Trump,” Madaleno says. Parker said her organizati­on believes the ad is a first. She said it’s important that gay candidates be able to present themselves in family situations just as straight politician­s have long done.

“This is going to be an increasing­ly common sight,” the former Houston mayor said. “Get used to it.”

Todd Eberly, a political scientist at St. Mary’s College, said the ad makes sense for the relatively low-budget Madaleno campaign because media outlets will help to spread the message.

The Madaleno campaign was hoping that Trump himself would view the kiss when he turned on Fox News.

Madaleno said the campaign might run the ad on Fox & Friends again. If that happens, there is the possibilit­y that if Trump sees the ad, it could set off one of his famous tweetstorm­s.

“Absolutely, that could happen,” Eberly said. “If it happens, it’s just that much more free advertisin­g.”

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