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Return to Private Practice
During this
period, his private practice was growing
rapidly. His clients included banks, race
tracks, Rosa Ponselle, and the Baltimore Colts,
but he remained deeply involved with both city
and state government. He took an active party
in his friend McKeldin’s successful race for
governor in 1950, after which he functioned as
“first minister” in McKeldin’s “kitchen
cabinet.” In March 1951, McKeldin appointed
Sobeloff to head a commission to make an
extensive study of the operations of state
government. The “Little Hoover Commission,” or
“Sobeloff Commission,” as it came to be known,
did an exhaustive study of every aspect of state
government, from taxation, to budgeting, to the
structure of the executive Branch.
In addition, he continued as counsel
for the Baltimore Housing Authority, causing one
reporter to comment that Sobeloff had two direct
lines on his desk, one to McKeldin and one to
D’Alesandro. When the City Council Housing
Committee held hearings on a bill to lay the
groundwork for the transfer of three federal
housing projects to the Housing Authority, the
Real Estate Board opposed the measure on the
ground that it would extend subsidized public
housing. Representing the Housing Authority,
Sobeloff charged that the Real Estate Board
favored subsidies for the rich but not the
poor. He could not understand how the Board
could have just urged Washington to contribute
to insurance mortgages of well-heeled builders
but “when we try to take a family out of a rat
hole, they cry socialism.”
In April 1952, Sobeloff and McKeldin
left on a trip to Israel, with a planned stop in
Paris to see General Dwight D. Eisenhower. The
meeting had been arranged by Thomas E. Dewey,
the leader of the Eastern, or liberal,
Republicans, who was busy promoting Eisenhower’s
candidacy for President. Shortly before they
left, Robert A. Taft, the Republican leader in
the Senate and conservative favorite for
President, called McKeldin and warned him not to
be swept off his feet. The two men and their
wives lunched with the Eisenhowers, after which
reporters asked McKeldin whom he would support.
McKeldin replied that he had commitments from
the Maryland delegation to support his favorite
son candidacy on the first ballot, but added
that he always followed the lead of Tom Dewey.
Several months later, Sobeloff wrote the speech
with which McKeldin nominated Eisenhower at the
Republican convention.
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