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By Michael Shepherd - Sept. 8, 2023
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đŸ“·Â Mainers on both sides of the abortion debate line a hallway as legislators exit the House chamber for a break at the Maine State House in Augusta on June 27, 2023. (BDN photo by Linda Coan O'Kresik)

What we're watching today


Maine has seen a post-Dobbs abortion bump, but it is relatively small. The last year has brought a seismic shift in abortion access, with roughly half of states enacting bans or being likely to do so after the U.S. Supreme Court's June 2022 decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

After a campaign marked by that issue, Democratic-led states have made their laws more permissive. That includes Maine, where Gov. Janet Mills and Democrats took on Republicans and religious conservatives in a bitter fight over a new law that will allow doctors to perform post-viability abortions that they deem necessary. Providers expect few changes under that law.

Data from the abortion-rights Guttmacher Institute released this week suggests bans in conservative states have pushed the number of abortions higher in states where access has been protected. There were more abortions nationally in the first six months of 2023 than there were during a comparable period in 2020, and virtually all states lacking bans saw their numbers go up.

That was true in Maine, although the 13 percent increase accounting for 150 more abortions was one of the smaller rises in the nation, according to Guttmacher's statistical model based on provider data. Both New Hampshire and Vermont had slightly higher percentage-wise increases, while the biggest ones were in southern and midwestern states that border ban states.

This suggests that the figures for now heavily depend on geography. This may even out over time as other states institute bans or change their laws in other ways that either restrict abortion access or open it up as Maine has over and over again during a five-year period of full Democratic control of Augusta.

The Guttmacher study is the first sweeping look at what's likely happening on the ground in Maine since the Dobbs decision. The state has not even released annual abortion data for 2022 yet, with data for this year not expected until late 2024. But we know that abortions have been on an upward trend here.

A Guttmacher study released last year found that Maine saw a 16 percent jump in abortions in 2020 compared with three years earlier, which was the seventh-highest increase in the country. Experts here pointed to a Mills-backed law that allowed state Medicaid dollars to pay for abortions. It was opposed by legislative Republicans, even the few more friendly to abortion access.

Mills and her fellow Democrats won a 2022 campaign in which Republicans were shy to take on abortion and generally argued that Maine's permissive laws should stay on the books. This year's legislative fight has the minority party trying to flip the script on this subject, arguing that Democrats have gone too far even though abortions late in pregnancy are rare across the country.

Policy implications and the raw politics of abortion access are going to have both sides of the debate watching the annual data closely. For now, it's clear that Maine is standing firmly with states that are expanding access, but geography is making it less of a factor in the national sea change.

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News and notes

đŸ“·Â From left, Rep. Jared Golden, Sen. Angus King, Gov. Janet Mills, and Kathie Leonard, CEO of Auburn Manufacturing listen as President Joe Biden in Auburn on July 28, 2023. (AP photo by Susan Walsh)

 

đŸ“» The governor and Maine's swing-seat congressman go on the radio.

◉ Gov. Janet Mills and U.S. Rep. Jared Golden of Maine's 2nd District, two of the state's most powerful Democrats, did rare full hours of radio on Thursday. Mills was on Maine Public's "Maine Calling," while Golden went on with conservative host Matt Gagnon's WGAN morning show.

◉ Among the highlights were Mills' continued skepticism of the utility takeover that constitutes Question 3 on Maine's November ballot. She vetoed a similar bill in 2021 and teased a formal statement that is coming soon, but she worried that it was a "simple solution to a complex problem." The governor also said she's entertaining laws aimed at fighting neo-Nazis organizing in Maine.

◉ Golden's hour was more freewheeling. He made some interesting comments on his recent disagreements with fellow Democrats, including his opposition to President Joe Biden's student debt relief plan, by noting that he is 41 years old and does not plan on serving in Congress "forever."

◉ "I believe one of my sources of strength in Congress is not letting this become the center of my universe or my ego, that there is a life beyond service," he said, followed by a pregnant pause. "In Congress, anyway."

◉ This could fuel speculation that Golden may come home and run for governor as soon as 2026, when Mills is term-limited. He may have to contend with a difficult primary and is not even assured his own seat until then. Golden could be in one of the nation's most competitive 2024 races. National Republicans are rallying around state Rep. Austin Theriault of Fort Kent and others are either in or considering a run next year.
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