A Simple Question About Dalya Attar’s Campaign
(BALTIMORE – June 12, 2026) – There is something about politics that never ceases to amaze me.
The more power some people acquire, the more they seem to believe that the rest of us are not paying attention.
Driving through the 41st District recently, I noticed several campaign signs bearing the message:
RE-ELECT DALYA ATTAR FOR STATE SENATE.
Now, maybe it’s just me.
But how exactly do you re-elect someone who was never elected to the office in the first place?
Dalya Attar was elected as a delegate. She was not elected by voters to the Maryland Senate. She was appointed to the Senate seat after former State Senator Jill Carter resigned.
That is not an opinion.
That is a fact.
Yet throughout the district, voters are being asked to “re-elect” someone who never stood before them and won election to the office she currently holds.
Is it a clever political slogan?
Perhaps.
Is it technically defensible because she previously won election to public office?
Maybe.
But politics is not merely about what is technically permissible. It is also about what is honest, clear, and respectful of the voters.
And that’s where the problem begins.
Words matter.
If they didn’t matter, campaigns wouldn’t spend hundreds of thousands of dollars crafting them.
If they didn’t matter, consultants wouldn’t obsess over them.
If they didn’t matter, candidates wouldn’t put them on giant billboards.
The purpose of political communication is to create an impression. The impression created by the phrase “Re-Elect Dalya Attar” is that voters have previously elected her to the Senate and are now being asked to return her to office.
That never happened.
Which raises an obvious question:
Why not simply say “Elect Dalya Attar”?
Why not tell voters exactly what happened?
Why not trust the public with the truth?
These questions become even more important given the cloud that already hangs over this race.
Federal prosecutors have accused Attar of participating in conduct serious enough to warrant a criminal indictment. She remains presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law, and voters will ultimately decide whether those allegations matter.
But that reality makes transparency even more important, not less.
When questions already exist about judgment and accountability, every decision matters.
Every statement matters.
Every billboard matters.
And every attempt to blur distinctions matters.
Perhaps some people will dismiss this as a minor issue.
I disagree.
Trust is built in small moments.
Character is revealed in small decisions.
And if a candidate is willing to play games with something as simple as whether they were elected or appointed, voters have every right to ask what other distinctions they are expected to overlook.
The issue isn’t whether Dalya Attar can legally use the phrase.
The issue is why she chose to.
Because at some point, voters are entitled to ask a simple question:
Do you think we’re paying attention?
Or do you think we’re stupid?









