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Close to the edge

Politics and Other Mistakes
By AL DIAMON  |  October 25, 2006

The last time Republicans won control of both chambers of the Maine Legislature, the country was engaged in an unpopular foreign war, Washington was on the verge of a major scandal, Congress was meddling with social issues, and the vice-president was calling his critics unpatriotic. Also, the Red Sox didn’t make the playoffs.

In Maine, the Democratic governor was unpopular because of his stand on taxes, the Republican US senator was being criticized for ignoring her constituents’ concerns about the war, and there was a battle being waged over alternative power.

So, all the conditions required for a GOP victory seem to be in place.

Republicans last ran the Legislature in 1972, a year remembered for Vietnam (instead of Iraq), Watergate (instead of Mark Foley), the Equal Rights Amendment (instead of same-sex marriage), and Spiro Agnew’s “nattering nabobs of negativity” (instead of Dick Cheney’s daily diatribes). Closer to home, Governor Ken Curtis (instead of John Baldacci) struggled to regain credibility, US Senator Margaret Chase Smith (instead of Olympia Snowe) acted as if she were owed another six-year term, and environmentalists split on building the Dickey-Lincoln dam (instead of wind farms).

One more possible similarity: 1972 saw the release of Last Tango in Paris and the GOP’s last gasp in Augusta; among 2006’s top movies are Running Scared and The Departed, neither of which bodes well for the Dems.

With less than two weeks before election day, Republicans are poised to make gains in both the state Senate and House, although winning a majority in the latter will take more luck than the average historical analogy usually provides. But with enough adult supervision to avoid the last-minute screw-ups for which the GOP has such a well-deserved reputation, the elephant party could reverse the trend set by the last 16 elections.

Before I go any further, I should disclose what my longtime readers already know. For the better part of a decade, I’ve been predicting Republicans would take control of the state Senate. The nearest I came to being right was in 2000, when the two parties each elected 17 senators, and a single independent held the balance of power. Other than that aberration, voters have regularly ignored my prognostications.

So don’t place any bets on Republican hegemony with money you were saving to pay your property tax (hey, wasn’t that supposed to be lower by now?) or your state income tax (hey, wasn’t that supposed to be lower by now?) or your use tax on out-of-state purchases (hey, wasn’t that — wait a minute, what use tax on out-of-state purchases?), based on my track record. Unless you get odds.

Here’s why I’m once again prophesizing this will be the GOP’s year in the Senate. Republicans need to pick up just two seats to gain a majority in that 35-member body. They’ve got the opportunities. The Dems don’t.

Two examples: Democrat Joe Perry of Bangor used a stealth campaign to ambush an incumbent Republican senator two years ago, but this time he’s being taken seriously by the GOP’s Frank Farrington, a former Bangor mayor. And Democratic Senator Art Mayo of Bath deserted the Republican Party right after the last election, alienating supporters and handing GOP challenger Paula Benoit of Phippsburg an advantage in a district that’s never elected a Democrat.

As for open seats, the race to replace retiring Democratic Senator Scott Cowger of Hallowell is a toss-up between Democratic Mayor Brian Rines of Gardiner and Republican state Representative Earle McCormick of West Gardiner. No GOP open seat seems seriously threatened (the Republican candidate has the edge to replace Dean Clukey in Aroostook County), and no GOP incumbent appears to be in trouble, while Dem Senator Lynn Bromley is struggling to hold off Republican state Representative Kevin Glynn in South Portland.

Democrats originally thought Somerset County Commissioner Paul Hatch of Skowhegan had an excellent chance of picking up the Senate seat held by Republican Peter Mills of Cornville, who was running for governor. But Mills lost the gubernatorial primary and decided he still wanted to be a senator. Hatch, unpopular for supporting an expensive new jail, is fading fast.

At the beginning of the year, Democrats were convinced they could knock off Republican state Senator Lois Snowe-Mello of Poland, because her district, which includes all of Auburn, has traditionally voted Democratic. Except for the last election, when Snowe-Mello upset the incumbent. And this election, when, thanks to her relentless campaigning, she seems to have the edge over donkey-party-stalwart Ed Desgrosseilliers of Auburn.

In Oxford County, incumbent Republican David Hastings of Fryeburg faces a rematch against Democrat Marjorie Medd of Norway. He won narrowly in ’04. No reason to think he won’t do the same in ’06.

It feels like 1972 all over again.
DDT.
The Sonny and Cher Show.
Richard Nixon.
Oops.

Email the author
Al Diamon: ishmaelia@gwi.net

Related: Ways not to lose, We sing, we dance, we steal things, Save it for the next one, More more >
  Topics: Talking Politics , U.S. Government, U.S. State Government, Earle McCormick,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY AL DIAMON
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   SINS AND PROMISES  |  September 09, 2009
    Let's suppose you wanted Maine's next governor to be somebody who'd create jobs.
  •   HEY, HEY, WE'RE THE MONKEES  |  September 02, 2009
    The law of averages says if you put 100 monkeys in a room with 100 computers, they'll eventually write a workable national health-care bill. Apparently, that rule doesn't apply to 100 US senators.
  •   FICTION OF HER DREAMS  |  August 26, 2009
    If you promise to read this column all the way to the end, I'll give you $50,000.
  •   DOWN IN THE FLOOD  |  August 19, 2009
    A few years ago, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (motto: Cornsistently Rong Abowt Everyting) informed me I was buying a house in a flood zone. FEMA had a map that showed where the waters of the semi-mighty Carrabassett River had surged over its banks a decade or so earlier and inundated my property.
  •   ESCAPE FROM THE CHICKEN COOP  |  August 12, 2009
    In olden times, before unlimited numbers of free-range office-seekers were allowed to be-fowl — er, befoul — the airwaves with messages less clever than that poultry — er, paltry — pun, the general rule of politics was that one dumb cluck per election season was plenty.

 See all articles by: AL DIAMON

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