Surprise! Andy Harris is Not Listening to His Constituents About Offshore Wind

“For many years, my constituents across the First Congressional District have been overwhelmingly clear: they do not want offshore wind off their coast.”
~ Rep. Andy Harris (MD-01), July 11, 2025
Congressman Andrew P. Harris (R-MD-01) has not accomplished much in his 15 years in Congress, but he has become famous for being Maryland’s regressive anti-offshore wind farm champion — no matter how his constituents feel about it or the benefits that would accrue to them.
He has called offshore wind an existential threat to local economies, and claims it poses a risk to national security and will cause great harm to marine life and the environment.
And he has consistently maintained that his “constituents across the First Congressional District have been overwhelmingly clear: they do not want offshore wind off their coast.”
However, a recent poll of Eastern Shore residents found that
- There is solid support for offshore wind.
- Strong majorities are convinced that wind projects will create jobs, improve health conditions, and support American energy independence.
The poll found that 51% of Eastern Shore residents support building offshore wind farms off the coast of Maryland; only 37% say they are opposed, and 12% gave no opinion.

The poll also found that 54% of Shore residents support a goal of moving away from fossil fuels and toward renewable sources, such as offshore wind; only 39% are opposed, and 7% offered no opinion.

Respondents agreed by significant margins that offshore wind would bring benefits in key areas:
- Job creation: 70%
- Health benefits: 67%
- Air and water quality: 66%
- Electricity prices: 65%
- Energy independence: 65%
- Electricity reliability: 61%
- Climate change: 56%

On the question of whether offshore wind would have a positive impact on ocean ecosystems and marine life, respondents were evenly split: 43%-43% with 14% undecided. (This is a complicated issue, but most marine scientists agree that while there are negative effects on marine life during turbine construction, these effects disappear when construction ends or actions are taken to mitigate harm. There are also benefits from the creation of artificial reefs that protect and attract wildlife.)
“The results are clear. Eastern Shore voters strongly support building an offshore wind farm off our coast,” said Jared Schablein, Chair of Shore Progress. “The US Wind project is a huge investment in our community. It will bring good-paying jobs and help us become energy independent at a time when energy bills are skyrocketing. It’s time to move forward with clean energy, lower costs, and good jobs for the Shore.”
US Wind has permits to build an offshore wind farm well off the coast of Ocean City. The project would build 114 wind turbines, generating more than two gigawatts of clean electricity — enough to power over 718,000 Maryland homes, with zero greenhouse gas emissions, according to the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management. The project could begin construction in 2025.
It's time that Congressman Harris started listening to his constituents and working for us. The people of the Eastern Shore want to be in the vanguard of adopting clean energy sources and benefitting from them. Don’t stand in our way, Andrew!
About the Poll:
The poll was sponsored by Shore Progress, an Eastern Shore regional advocacy group, and conducted by Gonzales Research & Media Services, Inc., based in Annapolis.
The poll was conducted from December 27, 2024, through January 6, 2025. It sampled 404 registered voters on Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Maryland Senate Districts 36, 37, and 38, and has a margin of error of ±5 percentage points. If the entire population in the region was surveyed, there is a 95% probability that the true numbers would fall within this range.
Jan Plotczyk spent 25 years as a survey and education statistician with the federal government, at the Census Bureau and the National Center for Education Statistics. She retired to Rock Hall.
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore





