π Maine's senior senator jokes that she's wearing a bikini on the floor. β Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, assailed a Monday move from Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-New York, to direct staff to not enforce the chamber's dress code. Senators can now wear whatever they want on the floor. β Collins and others in the chamber's more formal wing said the change debases the Senate as an institution, although supporters including the famously casual Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pennsylvania, told the Associated Press they don't plan to avail themselves of the rule change. β βI plan to wear a bikini tomorrow to the Senate floor,β Collins joked to reporters. β‘ The utility takeover campaign is coming down to hope vs. risk. β This morning, E2Tech held a forum in Augusta on Question 3, the utility takeover referendum. It was one of the first times seeing the sides in the same room after a one-sided event before the Portland Regional Chamber of Commerce last week. β The yes side was represented by former state Rep. Seth Berry, D-Bowdoinham, and Lucy Hochschartner of Our Power, while lawyer Jim Cohen and former Rep. Tina Riley, D-Jay, spoke on behalf of the utilities on the no side. β "Our choice is between hope and fear," Berry said in his closing statement, calling it a "David and Goliath election" after noting the millions that the utilities have spent on their campaign against the question so far. β "You are rolling the dice," Riley said, echoing the theme that the political groups representing utilities have hit in campaign ads to date. β The yes side's basic argument is that the elected board created under Question 3 would provide more responsiveness to the public at a better cost due to lower rates of borrowing. The no side has noted the up-front risk of buying out the utility infrastructure, and Cohen also referenced Public Advocate William Harwood's assessment of the unknowns in the referendum. |
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