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Bill

HB 237

Child Welfare.

2025-2026 Session Introduced by William Brisson and 2 co-sponsors

HB 237 requires party central committees selecting legislative vacancies to publish notices, accept applications publicly, interview openly, and recuse applicant-members.

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Bill Summary · HB 237

Summary — HB 237: General Assembly Vacancy — Political Party Central Committees — Procedures

Status: Referred to Education, Energy, and the Environment
Introduced: August 18, 2025
Effective date in bill text: October 1, 2025 (if enacted)
Cross-file: SB 171 (companion)

Purpose

HB 237 prescribes minimum transparency, notice, accessibility, and conflict‑of‑interest procedures that county and State political party central committees must follow when selecting a replacement to fill a vacancy in the Maryland General Assembly under Article III, § 13 of the Maryland Constitution. The bill is intended to make the selection process more open, accessible to applicants, and consistent with language‑access obligations.

Key provisions

  • Application period and notice

    • Central committees must keep the application period open for at least 7 days.
    • Committees must publish a conspicuous public notice that includes:
    • the committee’s intent to meet to fill the vacancy;
    • the time and place of meetings to discuss or vote on the appointment;
    • the process for filling the vacancy; and
    • how individuals may apply.
    • That notice must be translated into any non‑English language required by the county Board of Elections under § 203 of the federal Voting Rights Act.
  • Public posting and retention of applications

    • All applications must be posted online promptly after the application deadline by the county or State central committee.
    • Posted applications must remain online at least 30 days after the committee votes on a selection.
  • Public meetings and interviews

    • Central committees must hold a public meeting to interview applicants.
    • Any meeting to discuss or vote on the vacancy must be open to the public and publicly announced at least 3 days in advance.
  • Voting and conflict of interest

    • The committee’s vote to select a person must be by roll call or by signed ballots and occur in a public meeting.
    • Any central committee member who applies for the vacancy must recuse from administering the selection process (including advertising, reviewing, interviewing) and from voting on the appointment.

Who is affected

  • Primary: county and State central committees of political parties that select nominees to fill legislative vacancies.
  • Secondary: individuals who apply to fill legislative vacancies; the Governor (appointment process remains governed by the Constitution and existing timelines); the public and voters (greater transparency and language access).
  • No direct fiscal impact to State or local government (per Department of Legislative Services fiscal note). No small business effect.

Relationship to current law and process

  • The bill imposes procedural requirements on the internal selection process used by central committees under the constitutional vacancy‑filling framework. It does not change the constitutional deadlines that central committees have to submit a nominee to the Governor (generally within 30 days) or the Governor’s 15‑day appointment window after receipt (or after the committee deadline elapses).

Procedural/timeline elements (statutory minimums)

  • Application period: ≥ 7 days
  • Meeting announcement: ≥ 3 days prior
  • Application posting retention: ≥ 30 days after the committee vote
  • Recusal required for applicant‑members throughout process and vote

Impact and considerations

  • Increases transparency and public access to the nominee selection process.
  • Improves accessibility for limited‑English‑proficient communities by tying notice translation to VRA §203 obligations.
  • May require committees to adopt or adjust notice, record‑keeping, online posting, and meeting procedures to comply.
  • Does not alter Governor’s constitutional appointment authority or timing.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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