I used to live and work as a reporter in Maine, at a time when the state Republican Party considered itself to be a true big tent. Generally, that held true for the Democrats as well. Governing in Maine was all about moderation and competence. You may not have agreed with governors like John McKernan (R) or Angus King (I) or John Baldacci (D), but you knew they weren't going to tank the state.

Then, in 2010, Republican Paul LePage won a three-way race for governor with less than 40 percent of the vote. Life under the Tea Party favorite has not gone so great. Today the New York Times -- far from the capital of Augusta -- homes in on Governor LePage's difficulty dealing with the new Democratic majority in the legislature. LePage has refused to meet with Democratic leaders since December. The NYT reports:
The rising tensions over the budget were evident last week when the governor met with three independent House members who do not caucus with either the Democrats or Republicans. When they told Mr. LePage that municipalities could be forced to raise property taxes by hundreds of dollars, the governor grew angry, pounded the table, called them "idiots" and later swore at them, according to The Bangor Daily News.
"He went right through the roof when I asked him the question," Representative Jeff Evangelos told the newspaper. "He flew up like a jack-in-the-box and ran out of the room and slammed the door."
Governor LePage is notably hot-headed, a style that perhaps works better when your state is not suddenly broke after you cut taxes, and when you're not asking working- and middle-class families to pay more, and when even members of your own Republican Party are saying it's time to raise state taxes on the rich. Today Fitch ratings downgraded Maine's credit, citing "an increasingly contentious decision-making environment." Fitch sounds OK with some of LePage's policies, but the rancor with lawmakers is a no go.
LePage is up for re-election in 2014. The other news in Maine today is that the same independent who finished second last time is again thinking of running, making for another three-way race. A new survey from Public Policy Polling (pdf) shows the unpopular LePage winning in that scenario -- which is why the lefties at Daily Kos are trying to game out some way to talk the independent, Eliot Cutler, out of running. "[H]ope is not a plan, and Democrats will have to find a way to deal with Cutler," writes David Nir. "Perhaps they can terrify him into imagining what another four years of LePage would look like. "
Adding: This afternoon, Governor LePage released this statement about the credit downgrade:
"Fitch's recent announcement notes the budget gap in our welfare system, and this comes to no surprise as the major reason why Maine is downgraded. Without flexibility from the federal government, and growing Medicaid expenses, Maine will continue to be plagued by massive shortfalls in its budgets as a direct result of expanded welfare programs."
Background: While Fitch notes Maine’s slow emergence from recession and oldest median age in the nation as contributing factors to uncertainty about future workforce growth, the rating agency recognizes the Governor’s jobs bill which will pump $700 million into Maine’s economy and pay its debt to hospitals.
Among other positive comments, Fitch credits recent pension reforms to improving Maine’s fiscal outlook. However, the Governor has emphasized more of this kind of structural reform is needed to bring long-term financial stability to the State of Maine.





I swear that the Tea Party thinks it's possible to run a Government of any level or kind without review...evidential they thought that money just magically "appeared" in the treasury and when they are forced to deal with the reality that isn't possible they have no idea what to do...It must bee like that cliche sort of nightmare where you are late for a math test and in your underwear...
And just like Jindal, don't adjust... double down! The ignorance is mind boggling.
LePage may be an idiot, but Cutler is a moron. A moron who is obviously "a legend in his own mind."
Another "Nader" who didn't see the damaging effects of his running, so...paid GOP divider?
NADER! you don't know what you're taking about. Nader never made the elections fail. Check it out and you'll see Nader never made a difference..at all....and only ran because the issues he represented were being ignored. He got progressive ideas on the table...but did not affect the outcome of the election. That's an urban legend...you should know this coffee.
I would find this more persuasive if there were one citation to a serious analysis of Nader's effect.
"Governing in Maine was all about moderation and competence."
There was a time when the GOP was about moderation & competence, but those days are long gone. WE now live in a time where incompetence, lazy intellectualism, faux religuluousness, fear-mongering, and being wedded to failed ideology are the ideal! One can only hope that the current GOTP do US all a favor and hurry up and implode! On the other hand one can also hope that Americans of good conscious and with an understanding of "the collective WE" awaken and start voting these miscreants, charletons and traitors to WE the PEOPLE out of office!
The Dems and all sane people must mobilize, mobilize, mobilize. Get a really good candidate, get out the message. Get those who vote for the independent to vote for the Dem. We the voters (I live in Colorado, not Maine) all over the country are responsible for the governments we elect. In 2010 we Democrats and reasonable independents dropped the ball. We went back to our private lives and left Obama and all the state governments to do our job, which was to keep behind our elected officials. It is time consuming and a nuisance, but if we are to have a democracy it must be tended.
bflynch,
Yes! We're seeing their intent pan out right before our eyes, and we're seeing they aren't planning to stop either.
This isn't covert ops, this is overt ops.
I feel for the people in Maine, and not knowing these candidates very well, I hope they make the right decision for their state and their families.
Don't vote party, vote for your future and families. Ideology from parties (especially the Tea Party) will ruin you and your next generation.
Governing like a spoiled brat... wow, that's a new nadir, even for the Tea Party.
LePage sounds rather like LePetomaine. I wonder, does he require a "harrumph" from his cabinet?
"Harrumph" said the Senator.
So you know what would fix this problem? Requiring the chief executive to win a majority and holding run-off elections.
Laura - read Bill Nemitz in today's Press-Herald for a snorting good account of LePage's latest tantrum.
All I can add is that if Steven Cutler is so intent on running in 2014, then, the Democrats should concede the race, which should help Cutler. I cannot imagine why Lepage is still a favorite in a three party race, It seems to me, if this is the case, then there are not enough Democrats coming out to vote in the gubernatorial. At any rate, Cutler would be a far cry better than Lepage, of course, this all depends on who was polled with Lepage and Cutler in 2014?
Maine, I think, is caught in a position where they have few choices for executive lesdership postions; Good, Bad, or Indifferent (Democratic, Republican, or Independent not necesarily in the same order ;-0}.
I will apologize here for my mea culpa of Mr Cutler's first name. Names, unfortunately, are not my forte and I mistook Elliot for Steven. My apologies to Mr. Elliot Cutler!
I remember last year when Olympia Snowe announced her retirement from the Senate in my haste to forget about the John McKernan administration, as Maine governor, I married her off to Angus King. I could never apologize enough to Angus King, or his wife Mary Herman.
What can I say? I guess I'm just used to the impersonal world of, "Hey, you!"
So Fitch would be OK with LePage's fiscal policy if the legislature rolled over for him? File this under "Why no one should ever give a flying f*ck at a rolling donut over what rating agencies think."