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Political party strength in Maine
Politics in the US state of Maine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The following table indicates the party of elected officials in the U.S. state of Maine:
This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2021) |
The table also indicates the historical party composition in the:
- State Senate
- State House of Representatives
- State delegation to the U.S. Senate
- State delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives
For years in which a presidential election was held, the table indicates which party's nominees received the state's electoral votes.
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History
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The Republican Party controlled the governorship from the American Civil War to 1932, with the Democratic Party only winning four times. The Greenback Party was active in Maine and its gubernatorial candidates had their vote totals rise from 520 votes in the 1876 election to 41,371 votes in the 1878 election. The Greenbacks aided in the election of Democratic gubernatorial nominees Alonzo Garcelon and Harris M. Plaisted. The Democratic Party did not control the state legislature between 1847 and 1911.[1]
The Maine Republican Party supported Theodore Roosevelt during the 1912 Republican presidential primaries against President William Howard Taft. The Maine Progressive Party was founded by Roosevelt supporters on July 31, 1912, at a convention in Portland, Maine. The Republicans were weakened after losing members including Charles H. Hitchborn, who was the treasurer of the party, although Warren C. Philbrook, the chair of the party, remained. Woodrow Wilson won Maine in the presidential election while Roosevelt received more votes than Taft.[1]
On April 5, 1916, the Progressives held their convention and nominated Edwin Lawrence for governor under the coniditon that they would follow the path of the national party. The national Progressive Party attempted to nominate Roosevelt for president against, but he declined and the party returned to the Republicans. The Maine Progressives withdrew their candidates and supported the Republicans. B. F. Lawrence, who ran for a seat in the Maine House of Representatives, was the only Progressive elected in 1916, but later joined the Republicans.[1]
Robert M. La Follette, who ran as the Progressive presidential nominee in the 1924 election, told Gilbert E. Roe, who was running his campaign in the eastern United States, that the conditions for his campaigns were good in the eastern United States except for in Maine and Vermont. Republican nominee Calvin Coolidge received over 70% of the popular vote while La Follette only received six percent.[1]
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Table
- Resigned to take appointment as a minister to negotiate a treaty with Spain.
- Elected at-large on a general ticket.
- Resigned to take an elected seat in the United States House of Representatives.
- A Democrat, Nathan Clifford, was elected as Speaker.
- A Democrat, Hannibal Hamlin, was elected as Speaker.
- A Whig, Josiah S. Little, was elected as Speaker.
- Resigned to take an elected seat in the United States Senate.
- A Democrat, David Dunn, was elected as Speaker.
- A coalition of Republicans and Whigs elected Sidney Perham, a Republican, as Speaker, and organized the chamber.
- A Democrat, Josiah S. Little, was elected as a minority-party Speaker.
- Resigned to become Vice President of the United States.
- A coalition of Democrats, Greenbacks, and Independents supported Melvin P. Frank, a Democrat, as Speaker and organized the House.[2]
- A power-sharing agreement was negotiated between the Democrats and Republicans, with a Democrat, Mike Michaud, becoming Senate President for one year in 2001, and a Republican, Rick Bennett, becoming Senate President for one year in 2002.
- As Senator, King has consistently caucused with the Senate Democratic Caucus.
- The Democratic ticket received Maine's two at-large votes and one vote in the First Congressional District while the Republican ticket received one vote in the Second District.
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References
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