View this email in your browser
By Michael Shepherd - Sept. 14, 2023
Was this newsletter forwarded to you? Sign up.
📷 Mitt Romney responds to a heckler during a presidential campaign stop on Feb. 10, 2012, in Portland. The Utah senator announced his retirement on Thursday. (AP photo by Robert F. Bukaty)

What we're watching today


Maine has shown how Republicans have moved away from establishment figures. Utah Sen. Mitt Romney announced Wednesday that he would leave his seat after just one term, a bombshell that came with a Maine angle as Romney unloaded on many of his colleagues on his way out the door.

The Republican told biographer McKay Coppins of The Atlantic that Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, warned Romney of vague threats to his life days before the riots of Jan. 6, 2021. Romney warned Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, of them, and said the leader did not respond.

The point is that Romney sees many in his party have effectively capitulating to former President Donald Trump whether they align with him or not. Depending on your beliefs, you could see this either as a principled stand by the 2012 Republican presidential nominee or a sign that he is simply out of touch.

Over the last decade or so, we have seen Republicans shift away from establishment figures that Romney embodies well. Maine has had a front-seat view to this. He won the 2012 presidential caucuses here, but they are remembered more for a takeover of the state convention by supporters of insurgent candidate Ron Paul and the divisive dispute that followed.

It did not threaten Romney's path to the nomination, but it was a sign that the grassroots was suspicious of him. He lost the election to President Barack Obama after getting Trump's endorsement. As Trump closed in on the party's nomination in early 2016, Romney gave a notable anti-Trump speech in which he called the billionaire a "phony" and "fraud."

Trump happened to be in Maine that day, giving his first reaction in a Portland hotel ballroom. He responded by noting his past endorsement of Romney and giving the infamous line that the 2012 nominee would have "dropped to his knees" for Trump's backing. He slammed Romney as a "choke artist." Then-Gov. Paul LePage said Trump would prove the establishment wrong.

He did, eventually beating Democrat Hillary Clinton. Romney's career continued due to the atypical nature of Mormon-dominated politics in Utah, a deep-red state that is not as enthralled with Trump as many others are. Primary challengers were beginning to line up against him there, with many conservatives noting his votes to convict Trump on impeachment charges.

Romney said he was stepping aside because the country needs younger leaders to step up as an antidote to the shortcomings of Trump and President Joe Biden. King told CNN that Romney will be missed in the Senate, and Sen. Susan Collins, another rare Republican skeptic of Trump, said she learned of his decision to leave the Senate "with deep regret."

We won't know whether Romney would have hung onto his seat. But as the party clatters toward another Trump-Biden election despite the former president's indictments and a lack of popularity for both men, we do know that Romney and others like him have lost their grip on the party. Next year will provide a good look at the results of this shift.

🗞 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

📷 Hurricane Lee continues its west-northwest trajectory across the Atlantic Ocean in this satellite image taken Tuesday. (National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration photo via NASA and AP)

 

🔵 Democrats may have "too many" seats in the Maine Senate.

â—‰ The Senate was the Maine chamber that stood out in an analysis posted Thursday by the University of Virginia's Center for Politics that discussed the Republican "excess seat" advantage in legislatures across the country. One factor is gerrymandering, but it also comes down to candidates that outperform.

â—‰ This was different in Democratic-led Maine, however. Biden won 54.7 percent of votes in the state, but Democrats have 22 of the 35 Senate seats. It means that they have three seats more than they are expected to have, while the Democratic advantage in the House is almost exactly what you'd expect.

â—‰ Maine has one of the fairest redistricting systems in the country, requiring both parties to come to a consensus before plans are finalized. If they cannot, the maps in question would be kicked to a judge, so gerrymandering is not really a factor here.

â—‰ This is a double-edged sword for Democrats heading into 2024. Last year, they won districts that are tough for them on paper, including the northern Maine one held by Senate President Troy Jackson of Allagash. He is termed out in 2024, and these figures suggest that Democrats should lose seats.
📱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


🌊 Coastal Maine girds for a direct hit from Hurricane Lee. Here's how Mainers should prepare and how it's challenging a historic fort preservation effort.

🌴 Trump's former Maine campaign chair is backing Ron DeSantis in 2024.

🙅‍♀️ A judge rejected a settlement to overhaul indigent defense, the Maine Monitor reports.

🗣️ This northern Maine school needs a Spanish interpreter.

đź‘· Brewer High School helps students start construction careers.

🏀 Cooper Flagg's prep school team will play two games in Maine this winter.
💰 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.