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By Michael Shepherd - June 12, 2023
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📷 Republicans in the Maine House of Representatives, including Minority Leader Billy Bob Faulkingham of Winter Harbor (bottom), look up to see how their colleagues voted on a heating assistance package on Jan. 4, 2023, at the State House in Augusta. (AP photo Robert F. Bukaty)
Good morning from Augusta. The Maine Legislature has floor votes scheduled all week for the first time this session with committee business all but done except for budget work. Here are today's House and Senate calendars.

What we're watching today


Big-ticket items and major questions loom over the Maine Legislature's last few weeks. The Democratic budget power play back in March left lawmakers with no formal date in sight to leave Augusta for the year. While nobody knows when they are going to leave, they are racing to finish work now.

The biggest items of 2023 are awaiting floor votes. That includes the controversial abortion-rights bill from Gov. Janet Mills that was sent to the floors by.a committee strong Republican opposition on Friday, plus a Democratic paid leave proposal that aims to forestall a 2024 referendum on the subject but comes wit business opposition and concerns from Mills.

Lots of other items are tied up in budget negotiations that have been strange so far. The Democratic governor rolled out her $900 million supplemental spending proposal in May, something that was followed a day later by House Speaker Rachel Talbot Ross, D-Portland, relaying a message to the governor that she would not support a budget without Mills supporting tribal-rights bills.

Mills did not move in her opposition to those measures, and lawmakers have gone right on crafting a budget. The big question all along is whether Democrats could pivot from angering Republicans by passing a majority-only budget in the spring to bringing them into a consensus package now.

The odds have not looked good. The budget committee has been mostly working behind closed doors over the past few weeks, with several public sessions canceled over the last week. Last month, Rep. Sawin Millett, R-Waterford, said it was unlikely that the sides could get together by July 1.

There are other big-ticket packages that we have not even seen yet. For example, the gun-rights Sportsman's Alliance of Maine was convening negotiations with Mills and Talbot Ross this spring on gun reforms after the April shootings in Bowdoin and Yarmouth, but no legislative product has come through yet.

Talbot Ross and progressives, meanwhile, have stricter gun control bills coming up for votes soon. United Democratic control of Augusta has been generally predictable over the last few years, but this Legislature is full of surprises.
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News and notes

📷 House Speaker Rachel Talbot Ross receives applause after winning her leadership position on Dec. 7, 2022, in Augusta. (AP photo by Robert F. Bukaty)

 

🚪 The governor and House speaker united to help a Democrat on Tuesday's ballot.

◉ Mills and Talbot Ross have disagreed publicly of late, but they were together in Waldoboro on Sunday to canvass for former state Rep. Wendy Pieh, D-Bremen, who is facing former Rep. Abden Simmons, R-Waldoboro, in Tuesday's election. Republicans held weekend canvasses as well.

◉ Pieh has an uphill climb to hold the seat vacated in February by former Rep. Clinton Collamore, D-Waldoboro, who resigned after pleading not guilty to signature fraud charges. It's a Republican-leaning district, and Republicans have invested nearly $19,000 in outside money to Democrats' $4,000 or so.

◉ A victory would give a little momentum to Republicans, who have not won a truly competitive legislative special election since 2015 and were stalemated in a high-hopes election last year, cementing six straight years of united Democratic control of Augusta.

☀️ Manufacturers take a tough line on Maine's solar policies.

◉ Lawmakers are being targeted with digital ads urging them to support a Republican effort to end certain solar subsidies. Public Advocate William Harwood has urged lawmakers to rein them — although he does not want to totally end them — while projecting major electric rate increases in the near future. His line has prompted a fight with the solar industry. 

◉ The ads comr from the Industrial Energy Consumer Group, an influential group of large power consumers including mills that is represented in Augusta by Democratic lobbyist Tony Buxton.

◉ It has a unique role in the debate over Maine's energy picture. For example, it is behind a bill this year from Sen. Nicole Grohoski, D-Ellsworth, that would give energy regulators a major role in increasing electrification on a broad scale in Maine and shift away from fossil fuels. But it also calls solar policies "broken" and encourages an embrace of Republican policies there, though a smaller set of reforms from Democrats seems to be a likelier bet for passage.

◉ "Tell Representative William Bridgeo [D-Augusta]: Stop the price spikes caused by Net Energy Billing!" one ad reads.
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What we're reading


⛓️ Mainers who were sexually abused by priests still face barriers to justice.

💼 Here's how Portland mayor became "one of the hardest jobs in Maine."

🤏 Weapon restrictions under Maine's "yellow flag" law surged in 2023.

🤖 Artificial intelligence is helping Mainers manage health from home.

🥇 Her James Beard award has this small town buzzing. Here's your soundtrack.
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