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...thought this was sweet:
Martin O'Malley @GovernorOMalley · 21h 21 hours ago
Just want to take a sec to tell my Mom thanks for all she does as an amazing Mom and Grandma. Happy Mothers Day!
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...I posted this a while back, about his Mom:
Martin O'Malley's Mom, Upbringing Helped Shape His Political Future
photo by David Colwell
"The two things in our household that we'd never dream of skipping were an election and Mass," says Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley, who attended a rally for former Democratic Presidential candidate Hubert Humphrey with his mother when he was just two. "My mother taught us that the only thing wrong with politics is that not enough good people get involved."
The rich political environment of the O'Malley householdlate father Tom was the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia; mom Barbara was a National Committee Woman for the Young Democrats from Indianamade a lasting impression on Baltimore's former mayor. "My parents raised us all to believe we could make a difference in this world and that we could help other people," he says.
Whatever his endeavors, Barbara, who now works as an aide to Maryland Senator Barbara Mikulski, has always offered her oldest son support, from encouraging him to run for student council in his middle school days to dragging the family to watch his early performances with his Celtic rock band. ("We would sit at separate tables to make it look like there was a crowd," she says with a laugh.) Her maternal support even extended to helping him get in some much-needed shut-eye on the bus during the last day of the 2006 election. "By that time in the campaign, you are utterly and totally depleted, and you want nothing but to sleep," says O'Malley. Knowing that his mother would never let him sleep through a stop, he felt comfortable enough to nap. And she knew just how to wake him: "The bus driver would click on Springsteen's 'Land of Hope and Dreams,' and mom would say, 'It's time to wake up!'" O'Malley recalls. Chuckles Barbara, "If I had just had a Bruce Springsteen record when he was little, it would have been a lot easier to wake him up."
read: http://www.baltimoremagazine.net/2009/5/thanks-mom
Barbara OMalley looks down as Gov. O'Malley acknowledges his mother during his final State of the State address. Bill OLeary/The Washington Post
The Maryland Democrats mother, Barbara OMalley, has been working as a receptionist for Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) and has become a staple of the Capitol Building, known for her acerbic wit and Spritz cookies, the Wall Street Journal reported Monday.
The 87-year-old receptionist has worked for Mikulski for 27 years, starting just after her son worked on the veteran senators first successful Senate campaign in 1986.
In that time, Barbara OMalley has become quite popular among Mikulskis colleagues. Shes so funny and shes tough, former Sen. Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia told the Journal. When she thinks the conversation has gone on too long, she goes, Go to your office and do some work.
Barbara OMalley said she was inspired to work for Mikulski in 1987 after she became the first Democratic woman elected in her own right. It didnt take too much urging, the elder OMalley told the Journal, I thought, Yay a woman senator!
read: http://www.politico.com/story/2015/02/martin-omalley-mother-barbara-omalley-115018.html
(WSJ)
Mrs. OMalley has greeted, trained, baked for and even scolded some of the hundreds of lawmakers and constituents who pass by her desk.
I will sometimes run into U.S. senators who Ive never met before, but they already know who my mom is, said former Gov. OMalley.
Statistically speaking, Mrs. O is an anomaly on Capitol Hill by virtue of both her age and longevity in a role that usually serves as a steppingstone for the 20-somethings who populate the place...
She probably has the record for the longest tenure of any receptionist on Capitol Hill, said Ivan Adler, a principal at the McCormick Group who specializes in recruiting congressional staffers to downtown lobbying shops. Its incredibly unusual because that is a starter position. Most people stay in there until they find the next step up and shes never worried about that.
Instead of moving up, Mrs. OMalley has instead extended her influence out. She has trained generations of staffers, estimated at somewhere between 50 and 75 aides who are now dispersed among the hallways of Capitol Hill and offices of downtown Washington.
read: http://baltimorejewishlife.com/news/print.php?ARTICLE_ID=57186
Barbara O'Malley, wife of lawyer Tom O'Malley (died in 2006), was a stay-at-home mom for two girls, Bridget and Eileen, and then four boys, Martin, Patrick and the twins, Peter and Paul. They lived in a three-bedroom house in Bethesda, and then moved to a bigger one in Rockville when the younger kids arrived...
But she was also a Democrat from an early age -- a dyed-in-the-wool, loyal-to-the-death Democrat. "I can't imagine being a Republican," she says now.
Her political heroes were Adlai Stevenson, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry Truman. (Her father once won $10 from Vice President Truman in a poker game.) She worked in a local congressional campaign before she was old enough to vote.
His mother was the one who talked him into running for student council president in the seventh grade, with slogans like "Rally, Rally Around O'Malley" and "Dial O for O'Malley."
And she even put up with the fact -- now here's a loving mother -- that Martin worked for a Republican in his first foray into politics. At age 7, he and his brother Patrick handed out brochures in support of James Gleason, a friend of their father's who was running for Montgomery County executive.
But take a tour of the O'Malleys' Rockville home and you understand why the Democratic party was in no danger of losing Martin to the opposition for long. Barbara O'Malley has hung the walls with antique campaign ribbons, her extensive collection of campaign buttons, and any number of political photographs. There are photos of John Kennedy, of herself and Adlai Stevenson, of her father standing near FDR and, more recently, of herself shaking hands with Al Gore at Senator Mikulski's office.
"I grew up with it," she says. "Politics was just something you talked about around the house."
read more: http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2000-05-14/news/0005110185_1_martin-omalley-pale-blue-stay-at-home-mother