Christopher T. Adams (born June 19, 1972) is an American politician who has served as a Republican member of the Maryland House of Delegates, representing District 37B, since 2015.[1]
Adams worked as a salesman from 1992 to 1995 and sales manager from 1995 to 2001 at Value Carpet One. He has served as president of Value Carpet One since 2001.[1]
In October 2013, Adams declared his candidacy for the Maryland House of Delegates.[2] He prevailed in the Republican primary alongside Johnny Mautz, earning 24.5 percent of the vote.[5] He won the general election with 30.3 percent of the vote.[6]
In 2018, Maryland Matters listed Adams as one of the ten most vulnerable House incumbents in the June 2018 General Assembly primaries.[9] Adams would survive his primary with 29.9 percent of the vote[10] and would be re-elected with 33.9 percent of the vote in the general election.[11]
In 2019, Adams voted to sustain Governor Larry Hogan's veto on legislation that would increase the state's minimum wage to $15 an hour.[12]
Adams opposed legislation introduced in the 2021 legislative session that would require government-funded construction projects to pay prevailing wages on contracts over $250,000 or when at least 25% of a project's construction costs are from state funds, arguing that the bill would hurt small, minority- and women-owned contractors the most and raise costs for smaller governments. The Maryland General Assembly voted along party lines to override Governor Hogan's veto on the bill in April 2021.[13]
Following the COVID-19 pandemic, Adams defended Governor Hogan's decision to cut federal unemployment benefits, saying that the most direct way to get money to people "is to put them back on the payroll working".[14]
Adams introduced legislation during the 2018 legislative session that would have prohibited the construction of a wind farm 30 miles off the coast of Ocean City, Maryland. The bill received an unfavorable committee report.[16]
During the 2019 legislative session, Adams was one of ten delegates who voted against the Clean Energy Jobs Act, a bill that would require electric utilities use 50 percent renewable energy by 2030.[17] Adams was one of six Republican delegates to receive a score of 0 percent on the annual Maryland League of Conservation Voters scorecard.[18]
Adams proposed an amendment to a water contamination bill introduced during the 2021 legislative session that would have blocked the bill from taking effect without greater guidance from state and federal environmental regulators. The amendment failed to pass in a vote on 42-89.[19]
Healthcare
Adams proposed an amendment to prescription drug pricing legislation passed during the 2019 legislative session that would have set up a pharmacy benefits manager for the state. The amendment failed to pass in a vote on 39-95.[20]
During the 2021 legislative session, Adams voted against legislation that would provide free menstrual products in school bathrooms.[21]
Housing
Adams introduced legislation during the 2016 legislative session that would allow counties to reverse a state rule requiring fire sprinklers to be installed on new and renovated single-family homes.[22]
Adams opposed tenant relief legislation passed during the 2021 legislative session that increased filing fees for cases other than summary ejectments in the state's district courts from $18 to $28,saying that the fee increase was a "slap in the face" for Maryland landlords alongside other tenant relief proposals.[23]
Redistricting
During the 2021 special legislative session, Adams supported the congressional redistricting maps proposed by the Maryland Citizens Redistricting Commission appointed by Governor Hogan.[24] In December 2021, Adams joined delegate Kathy Szeliga and Fair Maps Maryland in filing a lawsuit against Maryland's new congressional maps, alleging they violated the state constitution.[25]
Electoral history
Maryland House of Delegates District 37B Republican Primary Election, 2014[26]