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By Michael Shepherd - May 1, 2023
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📷 Rep. Reagan Paul, R-Winterport, speaks to a crowded conference room on medication abortions during anti-abortion events on April 4, 2023, at the State House in Augusta. (Kennebec Journal photo by Joe Phelan via AP)
Good morning from Augusta. A long list of legislative committee meetings is highlighted by hearings on Democratic abortion-rights bills before the judiciary and insurance panels. Here's the full agenda.

What we're watching today


Expect hours of passionate testimony over the governor's signature abortion-rights measure. An emotional set of hearings on abortion policy is set to make Monday a late one at the State House. Lines are already long ahead of a hearing on the biggest proposal on the subject from Gov. Janet Mills and her fellow Democrats in the Maine Legislature.

It would allow doctors to perform abortions after Maine's current viability cutoff — around 24 weeks into pregnancy — if they deem the procedure necessary. It is targeted at rare situations in which fetal anomalies are discovered late in pregnancies. Maine's permissive set of abortion laws only allows post-viability abortions if the life or health of the mother is in danger.

This measure marked a reversal from the governor, who built her 2022 campaign against former Gov. Paul LePage largely on her pro-abortion rights record after the U.S. Supreme Court's June decision ending federal protections for abortion. But she also said then that she did not want to expand abortion access provisions, calling Maine's current laws sufficient.

That has been one of the key points in the anti-abortion attacks on Mills' measure, which was called "radical and extreme" in January by Maine's Catholic bishop in a rare rebuke of a big-name politician. Republicans have taken to saying this measure would allow abortion up to birth, although abortions past 20 weeks are rare. Maine saw none in 2021, for example.

Those on both sides of Maine's abortion divide held news conferences and other events at the State House on Monday, with Mills joining Planned Parenthood and other proponents of the bills. Anti-abortion advocates were also flooding the halls.

A clerk expecting a 12 p.m. hearing in front of the Judiciary Committee to begin with a few hours of testimony from proponents followed by several hours more from opponents. It is going to be a long day in the State House. Other abortion bills were being heard by the insurance panel on Monday, with Republican anti-abortion measures on tap for Friday hearings.
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News and notes

📷 Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., left, and Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, talk during a break in a Senate subcommittee hearing on June 9, 2021, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (New York Times photo by Stefani Reynolds via AP)

 

🩸 Two bipartisan duos battle over rival insulin relief measures.

â—‰ Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Jeanne Shaheen, D-New Hampshire, are jousting with another bipartisan pair for the attention of Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-New York, who holds the keys to a health care package that could cap insulin costs at $35 per month, Politico reported.

◉ Proposals from Collins and Shaheen as well as Sens. John Kennedy, R-Louisiana, and Raphael Warnock, D-Georgia, would put that price cap into place, though the New England senators' bill would go further to require rebates and discounts be passed on to consumers and seeks to increase competition in the insulin market.

â—‰ Collins has spoken privately with Schumer, Politico notes, which is notable given their rivalry over Democrats' loud 2020 campaign against the Maine senator. But Warnock has said he has a promise for his measure to be included in any Senate health care package. It may fall to Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vermont, the health panel chair, to reconcile the ideas.

🤑 Proposed business tax breaks attract conservative and liberal criticism.

â—‰ When Mills moved last week to roll out a package of souped-up business tax cuts to replace breaks that have been often criticized, top legislative Democrats, one budget committee Republican and industry groups were quoted in a news release in support of the new "Dirigo Business Incentive."

â—‰ It was a political chess move by the governor, who benefited the next day from news that state forecasters are projecting more short-term revenue surpluses that she wants to use to partially fund her new program. The new tax cuts are expected to cost $54.5 million in the first full year, nearly three times more than the current suite that Mills is looking to phase out.

â—‰ These kinds of programs have critics on both sides of the political spectrum. The conservative Maine Policy Institute called the old and new programs "corporate welfare" in a statement supporting legislative Republicans' desire for income tax cuts, while the liberal Maine Center for Economic Policy published a report critical of business tax break programs on Monday.

â—‰ "Rather than expanding existing tax giveaways or implementing new ones, Maine should reform its approach to business tax giveaways," the liberal group said.
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What we're reading


đź’° Continued state surpluses rekindle Republican tax-cut demands.

🪓 The Supreme Court looks ready to ax a long-debated Maine law allowing towns to profit from home seizures.

⛷️ A Maine ski town's building boom leads to worry over short-term rentals.

🍏 Despite its failure, Maine sees a rural regional high school as a model.

🎣 This invasive fish that took over lakes now threatens the rest of Maine. Here's your soundtrack.
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