View this email in your browser
By Michael Shepherd - July 28, 2023
Was this newsletter forwarded to you? Sign up.
📷 Kathie Leonard, CEO of Auburn Manufacturing, joins Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, outside the House Chamber in Washington, D.C. prior to attending former President Barack Obama's 2015 State of the Union Address. (Courtesy of King's office)

What we're watching today


A Maine businesswoman shows key intersections between two presidents. When President Joe Biden comes to Maine on Friday, he will be hosted by a businesswoman who has been among his boosters. But she has also helped to show why his rival's policies on foreign trade have appeal in legacy manufacturing states like this one.

This makes Auburn Manufacturing CEO Kathie Leonard, whose company will host Biden's remarks on the sector, an illustrative figure across Maine's political and business sectors. She has been the face of her heat-resistant textile company's yearslong trade war with China over subsidies to competitors.

The company saw a major victory in 2017, when a federal ruling found that unfairly cheap imports were hurting the company. Another positive decision for the company was handed down in February, but it will be a slog toward relief on that front. All the while, Leonard has put forward nuanced political views. 

Former President Donald Trump was known for a hard line on China and has escalated his rhetoric during a nascent 2024 campaign that has him as the prohibitive favorite for the Republican nomination to take on Biden next year. Leonard credited Trump for attention paid to foreign trade in a recent interview with the news arm of the conservative Maine Policy Institute and praised his tariffs for helping her business in 2019.

Yet she has been a vocal Biden supporter. She was on a call with reporters to tout his economic ideas during his 2020 campaign against Trump. Since then, she has also urged policies at the state level to help rebuild a manufacturing base here that has struggled to shift from legacy industries.

"What I like about the vice president's plan is it is based on experience," she said during the last campaign, speaking of Biden. "He's been in government for so long."

These links made her a natural fit to bring Biden to Maine. But all of this also shows how trade and manufacturing policies hit in our unique state. Remember that Trump stormed his party in 2016 by taking a traditionally liberal view against free-trade agreements, including one with Asian countries inked under former President Barack Obama, whose vice president was Biden.

Free trade was generally supported by U.S. politicians in the 1990s into the 2000s, but Maine figures have aligned in favor of protectionism given the hit that foreign competition has caused to the paper and other historic industries.

Leonard's cause has been championed by Maine politicians of all stripes. U.S. Sen. Angus King, a Maine independent who caucuses with Democrats, took her to Obama's 2015 inaugural address. Former Rep. Bruce Poliquin, a Republican who represented the 2nd Congressional District for two terms, often held up her work and did a news conference with her the following year.

National observers have seen links between Trump and Biden policies on Chinese trade. In April, Yahoo News columnist Rick Newman summed it up like this: "Biden's policy toward China differs from Trump's, but the goal is the same: To rework supply chains so more crucial goods come from American suppliers and friendly nations and fewer come from China."

His conclusion was that neither approach may end up succeeding. But this is a very safe policy agenda, and it is one that has always found an audience in Maine. Leonard is a good representative of this in practice, and she also helps show the intersections between Trump and Biden.
🗞 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

📷 President Joe Biden gets into his motorcade after arriving at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland after a trip to South Carolina to discuss his economic agenda on July 6, 2023. (AP photo by Evan Vucci)

 

🛬 Here's everything you need to know about Biden's visit.

â—‰ The BDN's Jules Walkup has what we know about the logistics of the president's visit. He will land at the Brunswick Executive Airport, where armored motorcade vehicles have been seen in recent days.

◉ That could indicate ground transportation to Auburn, which would lead to delays for other travelers because roads are shut down when the president steams through.

â—‰ In Auburn, Biden will sign an executive order aimed at boosting domestic production of American inventions, a White House official said overnight. (When Trump was here in 2020, he signed an order opening a national monument southeast of Massachusetts to commercial fishing.)

â—‰ At least one member of Maine's congressional delegation will be attending the visit alongside Gov. Janet Mills and local officials. After House votes were called off for Friday, the office of Rep. Chellie Pingree, a Democrat from the 1st District, will be attending.

â—‰ Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, will not be going, while King and Rep. Jared Golden, a Democrat from the 2nd District, have not confirmed their plans so far on Friday morning. Auburn Mayor Jason Levesque and Lewiston Mayor Carl Sheline have said they will be attending as well.

â—‰ Golden's posture here is the most interesting. Trump twice won the 2nd District, which is expected to be in play again during the 2024 election. The third-term centrist has been one of the top Democratic critics of Biden policies, criticizing offshore wind's potential effects on lobstering, taking votes against gun control and spending initiatives and opposing student debt relief.

◉ His opposition to Biden's "Build Back Better" plan infuriated the president's camp. One adviser derided the congressman as effectively a Republican and floated a primary challenge to Golden, according to a 2022 book from reporters Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns.
📱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


🛑 Asylum seekers are probably not going to live on this college campus.

🤷 Details of a Maine prison official's bribery arrest are sealed from public view.

✊ Sen. Bernie Sanders endorses Maine's utility takeover referendum.

🥦 A farmer worries tainted broccoli could hurt Maine's entire industry.

📺 A TV station employee is charged with stealing $224,000, partially to fund an online bingo habit. 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.