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Maryland Manual, 1973-74
Volume 176, Page 5   View pdf image (33K)
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MARVIN MANDEL
Governor of Maryland
Marvin Mandel, the 1972-73 Chairman of the National Governors'
Conference, was elected to a full four-year term as Governor of Mary-
land on November 3, 1970, by the largest margin ever recorded by a
gubernatorial candidate in the history of the State. In a landslide elec-
tion, he polled the largest number of votes ever cast for a candidate
for Governor, winning every subdivision in the State except one, where
he came within a mere 90 votes of making a complete sweep of the
State. The only candidates for public office ever to receive more votes
in Maryland than Marvin Mandel were Lyndon Baines Johnson in his
overwhelming Presidential victory in 1964 and Richard Nixon in 1972.
In electing Governor Mandel to a full four-year term, the voters of
Maryland gave him an overwhelming mandate, a mandate that re-
affirmed the confidence and trust placed in him two years earlier when
he became the fifty-sixth Governor of Maryland.
Marvin Mandel was elected Governor of Maryland in a rare selection
process that had occurred only several times before in the State's
history.
Because Maryland at that time had no direct line of succession to
the governorship. Governor Mandel was selected overwhelmingly by
the Maryland General Assembly when it met January 7, 1969, to pick
a successor to Spiro T. Agnew, who had resigned to become Vice
President of the United States.
Within hours after his election, Governor Mandel was sworn into
office in a befitting modest ceremony; and in his inaugural speech he
set the tone for his Administration, whose record of achievement has
become one of the most successful and progressive in modern Mary-
land history.
In that address, his first as the State's new Chief Executive, Gov-
ernor Mandel declared; "Let there be no mistake in anyone's mind, I
shall govern."
If there was ever any doubt in anyone's mind, Marvin Mandel has
striven vigorously to live up to the challenge he set for himself. One
of his first acts was to restore to Medicaid 22,000 persons who were
cut from the rolls in an economy move by the Agnew Administration.
No governor in recent history has enjoyed greater success in guiding
through the Maryland General Assembly such a massive package of
legislation as was enacted during the 1969 and 1970 Legislative Ses-
sions. Significantly, 93 of the 95 measures sponsored by the Mandel
Administration were adopted by the General Assembly. Governor Man-
del's record of legislative achievement continued to grow in 1971 when
the General Assembly enacted 34 of 37 measures sponsored by his Ad-
ministration. During the 1972 session of the General Assembly, Gov-
ernor Mandel won enactment of 15 of the 18 Administration measures,
including three of the most controversial laws to come before any legis-
lature in the Nation during that year. He sponsored and won passage
of one of the strictest handgun control laws in the Nation; he saw
enacted his landmark transportation measure, committing the State to
the concept of a unified transportation system by funding rapid transit
systems in the Baltimore metropolitan area and the Maryland suburbs
around Washington, and by broadening the State's responsibility for
building and maintaining primary highway systems in Maryland's
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Maryland Manual, 1973-74
Volume 176, Page 5   View pdf image (33K)
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