Gov. Wes Moore enters the reelection cycle with a solid head start. His top donors include the Exelon CEO, Jerry Seinfeld’s wife and Anheuser-Busch.
The battle to solve Maryland’s $3 billion budget deficit has prompted a debate between the state’s two most recent leaders, who are pointing fingers and blaming each other for the fiscal
Gov. Wes Moore (D), who stumped across the country for Democratic candidates up and down the ballot in 2024, raised almost $4 million for his state campaign account over the past year — often when he was on out-of-town trips.
Governor Wes Moore says two-thirds of the people of Maryland, or 82%, will be getting a tax cut soon. Moore joins “CUOMO” to discuss his balanced Maryland budget and says “this is the moment when Maryland can actually grow economically” while helping working families.
An overhaul of Maryland’s personal income taxes would give two-thirds of filers an average tax cut of about $173 while raising hundreds of millions of dollars more from those making more than $500,000 under a budget plan proposed Wednesday by Gov.
I will release my proposal to balance the state budget. For the third year in a row, we will not raise the sales tax or the property tax. Through
President Biden delivered his farewell address to the American people tonight. Maryland Governor Wes Moore joins The Eleventh Hour to discuss it, plus the legacy President Biden leaves behind.
Gov. Wes Moore is set to propose $2 billion in cuts to the state's budget.Maryland's Governor announced his intention at a summit at Eye On Annapolis on Wednesd
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore has included higher income tax rates for taxpayers who make more than $500,000 in his budget plan, as well as about $2 billion in budget cuts to address a $3 billion deficit.
Without selling the tax increases that the governor unveiled in his $67 billion budget proposal on Wednesday, Moore faces making even deeper cuts to balance the state’s finances.
Moore said the brunt of the tax increases will be shouldered by Marylanders with a household income north of $700,000 a year. In 2023, more than 18% of Maryland households were estimated to earn $200,