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After Iowa Caucus, O'Malley Drops Out of Presidential Race

Martin O'Malley, the former Maryland governor who had always acknowledged his campaign for president would be a long shot, ended the effort late Monday night after a disappointing finish in the first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses.

By John Fritze

Martin O'Malley, the former Maryland governor who had always acknowledged his campaign for president would be a long shot, ended the effort late Monday night after a disappointing finish in the first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses.

Eight months after he stood in Federal Hill Park to launch a campaign he said would deliver a message of "new leadership" in the race for the Democratic nomination, O'Malley told supporters in Iowa that he had "fought very hard ... to give people a choice" but that the time had come to suspend that effort.

"This cause continues, this fight continues," said O'Malley, joined on stage by his family. "I am suspending this presidential bid, but I am not ending this fight."

The announcement came after O'Malley barely registered in Iowa against his better-known rivals Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders, failing to meet already low expectations set by polling in the weeks before the caucuses. O'Malley did not receive the 15 percent threshold of caucus goers needed to be considered viable in most of the state's precincts.

Clinton wished O'Malley well in an address late Monday, calling him "a great public servant who has served Maryland and our country."

The former Baltimore mayor, who had been rumored to be considering a presidential run for years, oversaw an issues-based campaign that was heavy on retail politics in Iowa and New Hampshire; he spent more time in Iowa last year than either Clinton or Sanders. Even his some of his critics have given him credit for the disciplined campaign.

But political analysts say O'Malley's effort was severely hampered by timing, including the decision by Sanders to enter the race early. The Vermont senator managed to coalesce the same anti-Clinton voters that O'Malley had hoped to court. The governor also struggled to capture attention in a media landscape dominated by Republican Donald Trump.

"From the moment Gov. O'Malley entered this race, he campaigned with heart and with a singular focus on building a better future for American families," Democratic National Committee chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz said in a statement. "Gov. O'Malley knows that progress is not inevitable _ progress is a choice, and he has the record to show it."

O'Malley and Wasserman Schultz had exchanged terse words throughout much of the campaign after O'Malley repeatedly harped on party leaders for sanctioning only six debates before Iowa and New Hampshire. The Democratic candidates _ now, minus O'Malley _ will hold a seventh debate on Thursday.

The former Maryland governor influenced the race in other ways, as well. He was the first candidate to call on the U.S. to accept more refugees from Syria, for instance _ an idea that was later adopted by Clinton. And his campaign released detailed policy memos on immigration, Wall Street reform and gun control before any of the other candidates.

O'Malley always knew he would be in for a serious challenge running against Clinton, a one-time ally with strong support in the party. The governor tried to sell voters on a more liberal approach, one based on his final years in Annapolis and accomplishments that included a same-sex marriage law and a higher minimum wage.

But while O'Malley's campaign was technically smooth, outside forces repeatedly delivered setbacks. The rioting that took place in Baltimore in April came at a time when O'Malley was trying to pitch himself as a technocrat who had turned the city around. Earlier, his lieutenant governor, Anthony Brown, lost to Republican Larry Hogan in last year's gubernatorial election.

By last fall O'Malley was struggling to change the narrative that the contest for the Democratic nomination increasingly appeared to be a two-person race. And by early December, in an indication of his inability to capture support, O'Malley was forced to take out a $500,000 loan just to keep his campaign afloat.

On Monday night, sounding a recently developed campaign theme, O'Malley urged his supporters to "hold strong" to the issues they had been pushing for months.

"In conclusion, there is no conclusion," O'Malley said. "Thank you for allowing me to make this offering out of love."

(c)2016 The Baltimore Sun

Caroline Cournoyer is GOVERNING's senior web editor.
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