View this email in your browser
By Michael Shepherd - Feb. 28, 2023
Was this newsletter forwarded to you? Sign up.
📷 Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, left, and Sen. Joe Manchin, D-West Virginia, walk to the Senate chamber at the Capitol in Washington on May 28, 2021. (AP photo by J. Scott Applewhite)
Good morning from Augusta. The Legislature is session at 10 a.m. Here are the House and Senate calendars and the committee agenda.

What we're watching today


A Social Security reform package being negotiated by a Maine senator has pitfalls. The news outlet Semafor has the latest on a proposal from Sens. Angus King of Maine and Bill Cassidy of Louisiana that aims for a grand bipartisan bargain that would put Social Security, which is expected to be insolvent by 2033, on firmer financial ground. It is notable in part because Democrats seem unlikely to embrace the framework the senators have so far.

King and Cassidy have not released their proposal yet, but they are mulling some massive changes, including gradually raising the retirement age from 65 toward 70. They are considering other options as well, including switching a formula to focus on the number of years spent working and paying in. As Semafor reported previously, the pair is also eyeing a sovereign wealth fund that would invest borrowed money to defray some costs.

“This is an example of two leaders trying to find a solution to a clear and foreseeable danger,” Cassidy and King spokespeople told Semafor. “Although the final framework is still taking shape, there are no cuts for Americans currently receiving Social Security benefits in our plan. Indeed, many will receive additional benefits.”

King, an independent who caucuses with Democrats, seems to be alone among the members of his caucus on this item so far, making it unclear whether the nascent effort can gain any traction after being made public in January.

Democrats have long savaged Republican proposals to raise the retirement age or take other actions to slim down the future costs of the program. Cassidy has been more outspoken on the idea than King so far, telling The Times-Picayune in his home state last week that politics is slowing a solution.

“We face a choice when Social Security goes insolvent: massive benefit cuts, drastic tax increases or doubling our national debt. There should be a better option,” Cassidy said.

The political difficulty of the situation stretches all the way up to presidential politics. President Joe Biden's plan for Social Security pairs higher payroll taxes on high earners with benefit increases, while former President Donald Trump is urging Republicans to not touch benefits as other potential 2024 candidates like former Vice President Mike Pence take a more orthodox line.

There may not be a path here in a divided Congress with competing sets of goals on one of the government's biggest programs. King's involvement remains a big deal in the oldest state by median age. Any deal with Cassidy would make for an interesting policy development, but it's a hard sell.
🗞 The Daily Brief is made possible by Bangor Daily News subscribers. Support the work of our politics team and enjoy unlimited access to everything the BDN has to offer by subscribing here.

News and notes

📷 Hannaford worker Connor Ashfield pushes shopping carts back to the store on Broadway in Bangor on Feb. 3, 2023. (BDN photo by Linda Coan O'Kresik)

 

🛒 Only Maine Republicans are on the latest attempt to roll back blue laws.

◉ Maine's religious laws barring big-box stores from opening on Christmas, Thanksgiving and Easter have been the target of nearly perennial repeal attempts in the Legislature. The latest one, from Sen. Peter Lyford, R-Eddington, is up for a public hearing on Tuesday.

◉ It is notable because only Republicans are sponsoring the measure this time in the Democratic-led Legislature. A bipartisan measure in 2019 got close to passing after narrowly clearing the House but failing in the Senate.

◉ That could signal an outside chance at passage, which is good for any Republican-led bill these days, but the sponsor situation here won't help.

🌊 Maine's congressman backs up lobstermen on an offshore wind concern.

◉ At least 18 large whales have been washed ashore along the Atlantic coast since December, an unusually high figure that has coincided with offshore wind exploration in the same area. While theories are circulating that the industry may be the culprit, there is no firm evidence to support the idea.

◉ Gov. Janet Mills weathered criticism of her offshore wind plans from lobstermen during the 2022 campaign. These whale beachings have been concentrated in the mid-Atlantic states so far, but they threaten to add another complicating layer to relations with the fishing industry here. Endangered right whales, one of the species that has washed up in places, have been at the heart of a rules dispute between federal regulators and fishermen here.

◉ Rep. Jared Golden, a Democrat from the 2nd District who broke somewhat with Mills on the subject during the campaign, sent a Monday letter to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration urging it to release how it will investigate the strandings and share information publicly.

◉ "Making the data on these whale deaths public is critical so everyone has a shared understanding of how they are dying and to ensure that regulators are adequately addressing those threats,” Patrice McCarron, executive director of the Maine Lobstermen's Association, said in a statement.
📱Want daily texts from me tipping you to political stories before they break? 
Get Pocket Politics. It is free for 14 days and $3.99 per month if you like it.

What we're reading


🔥 Maine's fire marshal nominee pledges to fix morale problems in his agency.

🔑 Bangor approved a new tenants rights policy shielding renters from fees.

🛍️ The Presque Isle mall's abrupt closure left tenants scrambling, and the owner is in talks with prospective local buyers.

🤐 Bowdoin College's president backpedaled on praise for a former trustee whom a lawsuit alleges had a close relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.

🐈 A Maine bill to fine owners of wandering cats got a frosty reception on Monday. Here's your soundtrack.
💰 Want to advertise in the Daily Brief? Write our sales team.
Twitter
Instagram
Facebook
Copyright © 2023 bangordailynews, All rights reserved.
You're receiving this email because you opted in at our website, or because you subscribed to the Bangor Daily News.

Our mailing address is:
bangordailynews
1 Merchants Plz
Bangor, ME 04401-8302

Add us to your address book


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.