W Post
September 14, 2013
 
 
Western Maryland secessionists  seek to sever ties with the liberal Free 
State

 
 
By _Michael S. Rosenwald_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/michael-s-rosenwald/2011/03/04/ABW13wN_page.html)
 

 
 
< 
The push by 50 western Virginia counties to  secede in 1863, forming West 
Virginia at the height of the Civil War, was led by  a charismatic 
store-clerk-turned-lawyer who famously urged his supporters: “Cut  the knot 
now! Cut 
it now! Apply the knife.” 
West Virginia was the last state to break off from another. Now, 150 years  
later, a 49-year-old information technology consultant wants to apply the 
knife  to Maryland’s five western counties. “The people are the sovereign,” 
says Scott  Strzelczyk, leader of the fledgling _Western  Maryland 
Initiative_ (https://www.facebook.com/FreeWesternMaryland) , and the western 
sovereigns are fed up with Annapolis’s  liberal majority, elected by the 
state’s 
other  sovereigns.



 
“If you think you have a long list of grievances and it’s been going on 
for  decades, and you can’t get it resolved, ultimately this is what you have 
to do,”  says Strzelczyk, who lives in New Windsor, a historic town of 1,400 
people in  Carroll County. “Otherwise you are trapped.” 
Strzelczyk’s effort is one of several across the country to separate  
significant portions of states from, as he puts it, “the dominant ruling 
class.” 
 Nearly a dozen_ northern Colorado counties _ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/govbeat/wp/2013/08/19/colorado-county-to-vote-on-secession/)
 are the 
furthest along, with  nonbinding referendums set for November ballots. The 
Upper Peninsula of Michigan  is making a move to join with parts of 
Wisconsin. Northern California counties  want to form a state called Jefferson. 
Historians, political scientists and the leaders of the movements say  
secession efforts are being fueled by irreconcilable differences on issues such 
 
as gun control, taxes, energy policy, gay marriage and immigration — all  
subjects of recent_ legislative efforts_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/md-politics/marylands-leftward-swing/2013/04/04/2fb2ff5a-97d9-11e2-814b-0636
23d80a60_story.html)  at state and federal levels. The  notion of 
compromise is a non-starter. With secessionists, the term “final  straw” comes 
up a 
lot. 
“You don’t have to be a student of the details to know that people are 
just  disgusted with what goes on these days,” says Kit Wellman, a political  
philosopher who studies secession at Washington University in St. Louis. “
These  people figure they are better off on their own if they could just be 
with  like-
minded folks.” 
Secession is a difficult political fight to win. The U.S. Constitution 
allows  regions to separate only with the approval of the state legislature and 
 
Congress, and over the years there have been hundreds of quixotic and  
unsuccessful efforts, according to Michael J. Trinklein, the author of _“Lost 
States: True Stories of Texlahoma, Transylvania, and  Other States that Never 
Made It.”_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00F1XV12M?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creativeASIN=B00F1XV12M&linkCode=xm2&tag=washpost-books-20)
   
In the 1950s, Northern California tried to form the state of Shasta, to  
protect its fresh water. The builders of Mount Rushmore also wanted it to sit 
in  a new state: Absaroka, a reference to a subrange of the Rocky Mountains. 
Eastern  Shore residents pushed for the state of Chesapeake in the 1970s to 
retain  tourist tax dollars. 
Political polarization  
What’s different now is how the secession efforts illuminate a hard truth  
about the country: The rural-urban divide is increasingly a point of 
political  conflict. The population boom in urban areas such as Baltimore and 
the 
Maryland  suburbs near the District, the Boulder-Denver areas in Colorado, 
and in Detroit  have filled state legislatures with liberal policymakers 
pushing progressive  agendas out of sync with rural residents, who feel 
increasingly isolated and  marginalized.
 
In Maryland, the five western counties — Garrett,  Allegany, Washington, 
Frederick and Carroll — represent just 11 percent of  Maryland’s population, 
according to 2010 Census figures. They earn less than the  people who live 
in more urban areas. They vote overwhelmingly for Republicans in  _a deeply 
Democratic state_ 
(http://voices.washingtonpost.com/annapolis/2009/08/maryland_more_blue_than_new_yo.html)
 . Nearly 90 percent of the  residents are 
white, compared with 51 percent elsewhere. About  60 percent were born in 
Maryland vs. 46 percent in other parts of the  state. 
“If you don’t belong in their party,” Strzelczyk says of Democrats, “you’
ll  never have your views represented” in Maryland. “If we have more states,
” he  says, “we can all go live in states that best represent us, and then 
we can get  along.”
 
Strzelczyk concedes that he could move to another state more in line with 
his  values, but he grew up in Maryland, his parents are here and he doesn’t 
want to  upend his family. He launched the initiative with a _Facebook  
page_ (https://www.facebook.com/FreeWesternMaryland)  in July, trying to 
solicit 
support from other frustrated  Marylanders. 
The Facebook page has drawn more than 2,200 likes, with residents from  
western counties chiming in with ideas and offers to help. Suzanne Reisig 
Olden,  a Carroll County paralegal, offered her services pro bono.
 
“The state quite honestly disgusts me,” Olden said in an interview. “Those 
 that we elect in the House of Delegates or in the Senate who are 
conservative  are either ignored or just told to shut up. My voice does not 
count.” 
She adds:  “In a new state, my vote could count, my values would be valued. 
So I like the  idea.” 
Olden’s views are generally not the same as those that dominate Maryland’s 
 urban centers. She is against gay marriage. She is against what she 
describes as  “the horrible encroachment on Second Amendment rights.” She 
opposes 
 abortion. 
She is fed up with taxes and was particularly galled by the “rain tax” — a 
 stormwater management fee — approved last year. 
“Taxing the friggin’ rain?” she says. “The next thing they tax will be 
the  air we breathe.” 
Party fatigue  
Although he grew up a Democrat, Strzelczyk became increasingly frustrated  
with politics in the past decade, and Barack Obama’s election in 2008 sent 
him  over the edge. 
He spoke at tea party rallies, started helping with a weekly radio show  
called _“Forgotten  Men”_ (http://www.forgottenmen.com/)  and began reading 
up on the Constitution. He says he has read thousands  of books and articles 
on the subject. He became fed up with Republicans, too,  and now considers 
himself a Constitutionalist, writing essays for the Tenth  Amendment Center, 
American Thinker and his own blog, _“A Citizen’s  View.”_ 
(http://sas4liberty.wordpress.com/)   
He wants to live in a smaller state, he says, with more “personal liberty,  
less government intrusion, less federal entanglements.” He wants the right 
to  carry a gun. He would abolish the U.S. Department of Education. Although 
 he thinks the government shouldn’t be involved with marriage, he’d put 
the  question of gay marriage to a vote. Medical marijuana would be just fine, 
 he says. There would be lots of liberty. 
Strzelczyk knows that breaking up is hard to do. He needs help forming a  
political nonprofit organization to push the measure, which is where people 
such  as Olden could come in. He needs an official Web site. He needs to sway 
county  commissioners to put the question to voters to get attention from 
lawmakers in  Annapolis, who would need to pass legislation for Congress to 
approve. Offers  are coming in.
 
“I’m a finance geek, so I may be able to help,”  Bryan Smith writes on 
Facebook. 
And then there are the matters of statehood. Would it be called Western  
Maryland? West Maryland? On Facebook, Chad Maroney offered this thought: “The  
new state should be called Augusta. That was George Washington’s name for 
the  Appalachian region.”
 
Where will the water come from? What would the state code look like? What  
happens to home deeds? How will the state be funded? What about the state  
prisons in Western Maryland? Will there be a state police force? What about 
the  portion of state debt the region is responsible for? Where’s the 
capital? (To  offset any shifts in U.S. Senate power, some ponder giving the 
District the  statehood it has long desired.) 
“We are not dumb people,” Strzelczyk says. “We get that this is hard to  
do.” 
Hard is probably understating the challenge. Political experts and 
historians  say the efforts at new statehood around the country will be nearly 
impossible to  pull off, though they could spread virally through social media, 
attracting  mainstream attention. 
“As a legal matter, it will be incredibly difficult, and it’s probably not 
 going to happen,” says Wellman, the secession expert at Washington 
University.  “But as a moral matter, I’m on the opposite side of insane.” He 
noted 
the  country’s formation was its secession from England. “We said, ‘You’
re not going  to govern us.’ And there are very few people who don’t think 
we were entitled to  do so.”  
The best case scenario, experts say, is that the threat of walking out  
somehow gets people back to the table. (Comparisons to marriage counseling  
come to mind.) In Colorado, Gov. John Hickenlooper (D) has said that he  doesn’
t agree with the secession movement there, but his public comments on the  
issue suggest that the efforts are at least seen as real. 
And in the end, just having their voices heard could, perhaps, soothe the  
situation for frustrated voters such as Olden. 
“Best case scenario: It works. Worst case: Nothing changes,” she says. “
But  if it doesn’t work, maybe they will finally see that the populace really 
is fed  up.”

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