In 2012, our high-profile governor consistently denied that he was considering a run for president in 2016, and we consistently refused to believe him. Here are the nine (yeah, nine, sue me) Baltimore Fishbowl stories that make our case, in chronological order.
โOโMalley Joins Conservatives (in Their Dislike of Mitt Romney)โ
Way back in January, when the Republican primary race was anything but decided (and when a very vocal minority of Republicans was almost in fits over the possibility of being stuck with then front runner Mitt Romney), OโMalley got involved in the GOP horse racem when he traveled to Myrtle Beach to bash Romney a little bit in anticipation of South Carolinaโs primary vote.
โNY Times Stamps OโMalley 2016 Presidential Contenderโ
โIs There Anyone Who Still Thinks This Guy Doesnโt Want to Be President?โ
Then, in February, we had the New York Times naming of him as a 2016 Democratic contender, alongside New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Soon after OโMalley was pay some his surrogate dues, defending President Obama and taking shots at Republican hopefuls on Bob Schiefferโs Face the Nation.
โOโMalley Plays Down 2016 Plans, Talks about โSilly Bomb’โ
In April, OโMalley held a press conference to deny any presidential ambitions, which is about as much evidence to the contrary as one needs.
โOโMalley Makes New York Postโs Gossip Columnโ
I wouldnโt say his appearance in the New York Postโs gossip column was particularly presidential โ he was spotted dining with actor Josh Charles and gay rights activist Brian Ellner as he redoubled efforts to pass a marriage equality bill in the General Assembly โ but it sure was profile-raising.
โOโMalley Plays Role of Partisan Attack Dog on Meet the Pressโ
August saw OโMalley return to his role of partisan attack dog on Meet the Press, doing damage control after Vice President Joe Bidenโs tasteless โput yโall back in chainsโ comment.
โOโMalleyโs Convention Speech: Hereโs How It Wentโ
Then came the moment OโMalley might have hoped would anoint him: his convention speech. He was energetic and to the point โ but too excited and smiley. Thankfully, he was followed by an even more wide-eyed and grinning speech by San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, which retroactively granted OโMalley some gravitas.
Later in the same month, OโMalley took a quick trip to Iowa to eat some mac and cheese and tell some registered Democrats about his biography and policy profile.
โOโMalley Uses Hurricane to Appear Presidentialโ
And finally, when superstorm Sandy threatened to bring carnage to Maryland just before Halloween, OโMalley seized the opportunity for grandstanding, in the form of a little preemptive angst at Pepco. In sanitized-tough-guy-ese OโMalley assured us, โWeโve had our boot up the backside of Pepco.โ Turns out he couldโve kept his boots clean. For the most part, the storm dodged us.

