iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Maine Republicans Backing Away From Tea Party-Inspired Platform

GLENN ADAMS   06/ 4/10 09:31 PM ET   AP

Obama San Francisco

AUGUSTA, Maine — A tea party tempest is losing steam in Maine, a state that prides itself on its independence and moderation.

With inspiration from tea partiers, Republicans there adopted a party platform last month that raised eyebrows nationally, with planks calling for the elimination of the Department of Education, a reference to global warming as a "myth" and a declaration that health care "is not a right. It is a service."

But even Republican candidates for governor have backed away from the platform, which replaced a pro-forma document up for+ adoption at the state party convention.

That ambivalence creates a mixed bag for tea partiers, who advocate little government interference in citizens' affairs – a concept attractive to many Democrats and Republicans alike but one that has been overshadowed by some of the movement's louder voices.

In a state that favors centrists such as Republican Sens. Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe and former independent Gov. Angus King, adhering to a rigid platform may be a turnoff to voters who will be choosing party nominees Tuesday.

After the convention, Democrats gasped and demanded that the Republican candidates repudiate it. None of the seven GOP hopefuls went for the bait, but most later expressed reservations, parsed their words or simply sidestepped inquiries.

"I support the spirit behind the new platform, though the letter of the document does leave room for improvement," conservative candidate Bill Beardsley said.

The most moderate of the GOP candidates, Peter Mills, borrowed tea party rhetoric to defend his belief that health care is indeed a right, calling it "a part of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."

"That platform is an expression of anger about government," Mills said. "And what I'm seeing as I visit with people in their homes and in their kitchens is even moderate voters are fed up, they're frustrated, they're exasperated. And they don't think that they're getting value for their tax dollars."

Outside Maine, the tea party movement has already had an impact on major political races in more conservative states, including Florida, Kentucky, Texas and Utah, while contributing to a heavy lineup of congressional challengers.

At the same time, tea partiers nationwide are debating whether to endorse candidates, a step the movement's leaders discourage, said Andrew Ian Dodge, Maine coordinator for Tea Party Patriots.

How much influence they'll have among registered Republicans and Democrats is unknown.

"I don't think anybody can say with any degree of certainty how big the movement is and how united they are," said Mark Brewer, a political science professor at the University of Maine. What Brewer, Dodge and others are sure of, however, is that the tea partiers will be among those voting.

They are forcing Democrats as well as Republicans to re-examine their positions, said Eric Lusk, a Republican activist from Portland.

Democratic governor candidate Rosa Scarcelli believes the tea party movement is not just a Republican phenomenon, but also a reflection of frustration by Democrats who feel disenfranchised, said Dennis Bailey, a worker for her campaign.

Democratic Gov. John Baldacci, who also has a centrist reputation, is completing his second four-year term and is constitutionally barred from seeking a consecutive third term.

Scarcelli, a businesswoman, has staked out the right and the outsider's role in the four-way Democratic race. The other three are government insiders – Senate President Libby Mitchell, former Attorney General Steve Rowe and Pat McGowan, a former legislator who also served in Baldacci's Cabinet.

The seven-way Republican primary bridges the political spectrum, from Waterville Mayor Paul LePage, who's been wooing tea partiers, to moderate Mills, a state senator. The others include Beardsley, Steve Abbott, Matt Jacobson, Bruce Poliquin and Les Otten. Most stress themes of reducing state government and creating jobs – and avoid references to the party platform.

Poliquin said he agrees with some parts of the document but finds others "unnecessarily divisive."

Abbott acknowledged his dislike for the more extreme planks, but added, "When you get past some of the rhetoric, what I do see is support for the Constitution (and) fiscal responsibility."

Jacobson, asked whether he supports it, sidestepped the issue, as did Otten. LePage didn't respond to a query.

Snowe and Collins are often swing votes in the Senate and occasionally stray from Republican Party lines – Snowe most famously during the congressional debate over health care. Neither is announcing a favorite in the GOP race, although Abbott was Collins' chief of staff for the past 12 years.

Both senators play down the furor over the state GOP platform and say there's seldom universal agreement over the planks.

But through a spokeswoman, Collins noted, "The tea party's emphasis on fiscal responsibility is consistent with a core Republican principle."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST POLITICS
Subscribe to the HuffPost Hill newsletter!
AUGUSTA, Maine — A tea party tempest is losing steam in Maine, a state that prides itself on its independence and moderation. With inspiration from tea partiers, Republicans there adopted a par...
AUGUSTA, Maine — A tea party tempest is losing steam in Maine, a state that prides itself on its independence and moderation. With inspiration from tea partiers, Republicans there adopted a par...
Filed by Jeremy Binckes  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 1,660
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Highlights
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (23 total)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
07:26 PM on 06/12/2010
I guess they were ok with their candidates urging them to wear those little tin foil hats and channeling the neanderthal shamans, but when it came to abolishing their social security benefits, well, that was a leeetle too far out there for a lot of them.l
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blueinannarbor
My micro bio is now full
01:56 PM on 06/07/2010
C'mon, 'baggers, are you gonna take that? Whatever happened to that "Don't Tread on Me" stuff? Fight the establishment!
08:05 PM on 06/09/2010
How will a Government with no money pay for decent health care? I would not count on it.
10:49 AM on 06/07/2010
"a declaration that health care "is not a right. It is a service."

A patently obvious statement, and yet the pols run away from it.

YOU CAN'T HANDLE THE TRUTH!

lolz
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
dawgspiel
Never, never, never give up.
12:18 PM on 06/07/2010
From the Declaration of Independence: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

How can you have "life" without access to health care? You can't. The vast majority of us would be dead by 40 without it.

One of the little fallacies of all this is the assumption that health care is to be given away. Except for the very poor, it isn't. We're all still going to be paying premiums to somebody, make that private concerns.

As for the poor, unless we're prepared to let them die on the street, it's cheaper to insure them so that they can visit a doctor to treat a problem with a prescription than it is to fix it with a team of emergency surgeons after it goes critical for tens of thousands of dollars.

You can't handle being practical.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Renifer
Tea-Partiers are really Neo-Birchers
11:13 PM on 06/07/2010
Teabaggers should not have access to antibiotics. None of them would live to age 50.
10:47 AM on 06/08/2010
You don't have a right to anybody's labor. You certainly don't have a right to demand that some sucker put themselves through 10+ years of school in order to become a doctor and then serve you.

You simply don't understand what rights are.

Healthcare is no more a right than auto care. Both require the services of trained professionals using specialized equipment. Just because health care is important to you doesn't change the fundamental nature of the relationship between doctor and patient. Which is one of a professional selling their skills, and a customer who wants to benefit from those skills.

You have no right to make a doctor into your slave.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blueken
Finger Picking blues man
10:47 AM on 06/07/2010
Ask Bobby Jindel about fiscal responsibility. He was all about gambling with the ecology of the Gulf as long as it kept big oil spending money and creating jobs in his state. Now who wants to spend whatever it takes to save his state? Who wants big government to come to LA and clean up the mess? One more case of private profits, socialized losses. Does anyone in their right mind think that BP can pay for the total bill? Does anyone in their right mind think that the Gulf coast is ever going to be the same? Ask Bobby "drill baby drill". He has all the answers.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
11:37 AM on 06/07/2010
Democrats are always asked to clean up the messes irresponsible Republicans create...at every level of government...the GOP is the destroyer party.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Welib
Peace on Earth!
12:08 PM on 06/07/2010
You nailed it! Yep, financial and war messes both.

I think every agency and institution in the USA has been infested with these termites that have eaten away at our foundation for decades.

We really cannot afford Republicans anymore. Finally we know exactly what they are and we don't need the division and conflict. We need to learn to live and let live in peace.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
dawgspiel
Never, never, never give up.
11:59 AM on 06/07/2010
I have nothing but contempt for Jindal. He's all for "drill, baby, drill" in the midst of the disaster for his state created by BP while screaming for the feds to bail out Louisiana. (Not that the federal government shouldn't, that's what it's for). Still, this comes from Mr. Small Government himself. Talk about being duplicitous.

What about all the fishermen whose businesses and livelihoods are being destroyed? What about the hotels that need tourists to book their rooms to survive? What about the property owners? The bar owners who have seen their businesses empty as tourists stay away? The fisheries that supply the rest of us with the seafood the fishermen catch? The resort communities that sell vacation and retirement homes to folks? Not to mention the cruelty inflicted on all that wildlife. And on and on.

What about them, Bobby? Don't they count?
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
TeaLady005
10:02 AM on 06/07/2010
Tea Party candidate Sharon Angle SURGES ahead in Nevada poll just out this morning!

http://www.lvrj.com/hottopics/politics/polls/june_2010_2_polls.html
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kevin1961
10:47 AM on 06/07/2010
I thought the chicken barter lady was the Tea Party candidate.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
dawgspiel
Never, never, never give up.
12:00 PM on 06/07/2010
Nah, she's the "establishment" favorite.

Looks like Harry will defy the odds and be returning to Washington next year.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blueinannarbor
My micro bio is now full
01:59 PM on 06/07/2010
She counted her chickens before they were hatched.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
11:38 AM on 06/07/2010
Fine...and I think a fair number of these tea party candidates won't win statewide election...so the Democrat will get in.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RSKaz
Impact not ego.
09:24 AM on 06/07/2010
There's an old Maine saying, "A cat can have kittens in the oven but that don't make 'em biscuits." The same holds true for the 'baggers ever being considered a legitimate party.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
dawgspiel
Never, never, never give up.
11:47 AM on 06/07/2010
My brother-in-law is CFO for a very red state. IOW, he's right on the firing line. The teabaggers that have been elected to the state legislature drive him nuts because their connection with cause and effect in terms of funding a state government is, shall we say loose.

Told him a week or two back that I thought the teabagger phenomenon is losing steam. He agreed and he should know.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Welib
Peace on Earth!
12:06 PM on 06/07/2010
Oh I like to hear this from your brother-in-law.

I read a few weeks ago that someone counted all the 'registered' baggers on the various sites. He came up with 67,000 only registered. However, he thought they might number another 10 - 20 thousand more. I think it's even more than that but I don't honestly believe their numbers are significant.

I just think they make so much noise, carry signs that offend almost everyone other person on the planet and the media thinks a circus has come to whatever town they are invading so they better cover it.

What do think?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Seaglass
08:56 AM on 06/07/2010
As a rule, just the southernmost end and coastline of Maine is Democratic, while the entire inland is staunchly Republican. If you want to see the tea-crowd's "independence" and "moderation" at work, surf over to the message boards on the daily papers (especially in and around central Maine). There are more than enough xenophobic, misspelled, mentally-constipated statements there to keep you busy as long as you can stomach it.

It's also interesting that Maine's entire population in 2009 was about 1.3 million--approximately the size of Austin, TX or Sarasota, FL.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Welib
Peace on Earth!
08:52 PM on 06/06/2010
'But through a spokeswoman, Collins noted, "The tea party's emphasis on fiscal responsibility is consistent with a core Republican principle." The Republicans have principles? Naw!

I love that line! What Republican has ever been fiscally responsible? Historically they have added to the deficit many times over.

How many times does this party have to bankrupt us before we run them out of DC?

We just can't take this anymore. We can't afford Republicans. They spend like drunken sailors and leave nothing but garbage for Americans to clean up. Democrats clean up their financial messes all the time and now Obama is having to clean up their wars.

Gawd, everything Republicans touch turns to chit!
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
dawgspiel
Never, never, never give up.
03:31 AM on 06/07/2010
We've had 12 post WWII presidents.

The ones where national debt decreased as a percentage of GDP: Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, Clinton.

The ones where national debt increased as a percentage of GDP: Reagan, George H.W. Bush, and George W. Bush.

Bush I receives a partial pass because he inherited a mess from his predecessor and was blindsided by Iraq's invasion of Kuwait. Obama inherited an even bigger mess from his predecessor and an economy in freefall. Government revenues shrank from 17% of GDP to 14% in one year.

Clinton inherited a huge deficit, had a Democratic Senate and House for two years and a Democratic Senate and Republican House for 6 years. He left office with a $238 billion surplus and projections that the national debt would be paid off by 2013.

Dubya turned that surplus into a huge deficit in two years. He also managed to start two wars, one completely trumped up, passed two huge tax cuts for the rich that his first Sec Treasury objected to that he was fired and passed a new entitlement (Medicare D) without bothering to figure how to pay for it.

We can't afford any more Republican fiscal responsibility!
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Welib
Peace on Earth!
07:45 AM on 06/07/2010
Very well said. You couldn't be more right. Republicans wouldn't know fiscal responsibility if it hit them in the face.
photo
Democrat in the South
Empathy, the most important word
10:24 AM on 06/07/2010
How could this country have been duped for so long. There's ONLY one answer. The Republican party has been lying to the American people for so long. You cannot convince people to go along with committing suicide unless you are deliberately deceiving the public. Remember Jim Jones? By the time his followers realized they had been duped, it was too late. It may be too late for Americans. Elections really do have consequences.
04:49 PM on 06/06/2010
Being fiscally responsible, not spending more than the state takes in, getting value for programs and running state like a business with profit and loss is real world no matter what party you are in here in Maine, any state...
skykam
Sarcasm is a dish best served bitter.
03:50 PM on 06/06/2010
== "I support the spirit behind the new platform, though the letter of the document does leave room for improvement," conservative candidate Bill Beardsley said. ==

The spirit was lunatic-paranoid. What could you possibly want to improve?
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
dawgspiel
Never, never, never give up.
03:38 AM on 06/07/2010
Dump the paranoid part leaving only lunatic?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lindaj3884
03:31 PM on 06/06/2010
Finally, some sanity within the Republican Party. It certainly won't be tolerated for long before the national party starts hammering them. The extreme right wing should not be the voice of the party the way it is now. But with the purging going in of moderates in the party that may well be all that's left.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JessWonderin
12:28 AM on 06/07/2010
The problem is the 'activism" of the fundie Baggers is driven by "passion" where most Republicans seem driven by power and money . . . the more the better

. . . the "passion" of the Baggers concentrated in taking over the ground work positions and pushing their own brand of "conservatism" . . . much the same as the Christiban had focused on controlling School Boards to give us "creationism as science", and re-written textbooks . . .

Unless carefully monitored and exposed, BOTH present a great threat to the Republican Party and America . . . .
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rainkitty
04:27 AM on 06/07/2010
yes, truth is... they scare the hay outta me.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
dawgspiel
Never, never, never give up.
03:45 AM on 06/07/2010
If it's all that's left, they're going to join the Whigs in U.S. political lore as extinct.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
levibatgirl
the tparty is down the turlet
03:21 PM on 06/06/2010
They guy with the sign that reads, 'LOL Change?'

LOL
Don't Tread on Me?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
levibatgirl
the tparty is down the turlet
03:26 PM on 06/06/2010
'The' guy....
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rainkitty
02:18 PM on 06/06/2010
The republicans are showing some discernment? They don't want the extreme right wing running the show? Hmmm... we'll see. I think social movements always start in chaos and I am hoping the republicans can and will cleanse themselves of the worst of the bagger ideology. Perhaps then we'd see a Tea Party that is a legitimate voice in this country expressing people's concerns. Naw... just wishful thinkin.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
dawgspiel
Never, never, never give up.
04:22 AM on 06/07/2010
"Keep our socialist government hands off my Medicare!"
- Teabagger at a rally

One of the great comic moments of political ignorance on display in the last half century.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ipanemagirl
progressive
02:09 PM on 06/06/2010
Does Maine of the north have smart reasonable people or are they just like the southern states where they breed viruses like the tea parties?
Those people dont want to pay taxes but still expect to get all the services,,,its best to come back down to earth people! No pain, no gain!
photo
essbird
IOKIYANO
07:26 PM on 06/06/2010
Folks are pretty reasonable here. We don't have a lot of wingnuts, and those we have are a lot politer than they are in the red states.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ipanemagirl
progressive
08:21 PM on 06/06/2010
thanks for the reply essbird. I figured as much! lol.
photo
Democrat in the South
Empathy, the most important word
10:31 AM on 06/07/2010
Hey, I'm in the deep south and I agree with you. There are a lot of smart people here but right now it's the nuts that have the spot light. I have a new friend ( in the south ) and she said she would still probably vote Republicans for President. She doesn't know why, though. I told her I was going to keep asking why until she could give me an answer. Sadly that's most all of the Republicans story in the south. They don't know why they vote Republican.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ipanemagirl
progressive
11:47 AM on 06/07/2010
i believe you. most teabaggers when asked, dont knw what they are rebelling about either... sotherners would best be served by democats who care about people problems , not corporations like republicans. The rep, just use those people to help their vote!
Cant be too smart to let yourself be duped like this, dont you aggree?
Also, they probably listening to fox news.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cbat
11:41 AM on 06/06/2010
Teabaggers - Please. spare us your phony outrage.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
archdragon2002
12:45 PM on 06/06/2010
AMEN!!!
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Welib
Peace on Earth!
08:55 PM on 06/06/2010
Oh GAWD thank you! I can't stand listening to the T-Tards anymore.