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Conventions over, Maryland politicos turn eye toward November — and 2018

With the presidential conventions in the rearview, Maryland Republicans have one eye on November — aiming to get Del. Kathy Szeliga elected to fill the seat of retiring Sen. Barbara Mikulsi — while keeping one eye on 2018 — when they hope to get popular Gov. Larry Hogan re-elected. (Joshua McKerrow / Baltimore Sun Media Group)

PHILADELPHIA — With the major party conventions over, Maryland Democrats and Republicans are turning their attention back home, to the next three months of a general election campaign unlike any before it.

Democratic leaders say they plan to set aside their traditional post-convention practice of exporting volunteers and resources to the neighboring battleground states of Virginia and Pennsylvania and focus instead on promoting turnout in already-blue Maryland — in part to build voter lists for the 2018 gubernatorial election.

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Republicans, divided by presidential nominee Donald Trump, say they will campaign in Maryland for local candidates, but send money and volunteers to states where Trump has a better chance of beating Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.

Leaders of both parties say that with all projections pointing to a win for Clinton in Democratic-leaning Maryland, the election in 2016 will sow the seeds for a political showdown in two years, when Democrats will attempt to take back the governor's mansion from Republican Larry Hogan, and the GOP will try to make Hogan only the second Republican governor in state history to be elected to a second term.

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"I know we're probably in a rock-solid position for Hillary Clinton," said Joe Cluster, executive director of the Maryland GOP. "The most important election for Maryland is in 2018. Our No. 1 goal as a state party is to make sure that Larry Hogan gets re-elected because Larry Hogan's re-election would make Maryland a real two-party state."

Fresh off last week's convention, Democratic leaders in Maryland will begin implementing a plan aimed at harnessing enthusiasm for their party's first female presidential candidate, building a network that gives Democrats not just victories, but landslide wins.

The strategy is a departure from most presidential years, when Maryland's plentiful and in many cases wealthy Democrats have sent resources to states with tougher, closer congressional and presidential contests. Volunteers would board buses, drive into the heavily Democratic suburbs of Northern Virginia and southeastern Pennsylvania, and knock on doors to help the party identify voters.

Bruce Poole, chairman of the Maryland Democratic Party, called this election cycle a "building phase."

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"We are not going to go to other states — at least not very much — this year," he said. Poole described plans for "a fundamental retooling in how the Democratic Party does business" in Maryland, done with an eye toward taking on the broadly popular Hogan.

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