In a surprise announcement that’s already shaking up early 2028 election chatter, Maryland’s Democrat Governor Wes Moore made it clear—he’s not running for president. Despite growing national buzz and visits to early-voting states, Moore shut the door on a White House run during an interview with the Associated Press, saying plainly: “I’m not running.”
While party elites and liberal media have floated Moore as a fresh face for a party in desperate need of a generational reset, the Maryland governor insists he’s staying put. “And people should get very used to me going all over the country bringing business back to Maryland, because that’s exactly what I plan on doing as long as I’m the governor of the state,” Moore said, while attending a dedication event in Annapolis.
Still, Moore’s political moves haven’t gone unnoticed. With frequent stops in high-profile battlegrounds like South Carolina, observers have long speculated that the freshman governor was laying groundwork for a national run. But now, Moore says his focus is on securing reelection in Democrat-dominated Maryland next year.
Moore’s exit from the presidential rumor mill doesn’t mean the 2028 race is cooling off. In fact, it’s heating up. Former Vice President Kamala Harris, California Gov. Gavin Newsom, and former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg are already being groomed by the media as frontrunners in what’s shaping up to be a fractured Democrat primary.
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