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π· Rena Newell, center, the chief of the Passamaquoddy at Sipayik, watches alongside other tribal officials as lawmakers sustain Gov. Janet Mills' veto of a tribal-rights bill on July 6, 2023, in Augusta. (Portland Press Herald photo by Ben McCanna via AP) |
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π£ Maine's lower-key referendums get a little more attention. β Most of the focus ahead of the November election has been on the first four questions on the ballot. Questions 1 and 3 are on the aforementioned utility issues, while Question 2 targets foreign electioneering and Question 4 is the "right-to-repair" referendum. β But there are four more questions that were put on the ballot by the Legislature. All of them are constitutional amendments that had a certain level of consensus between the parties, since two-thirds of both chambers had to authorize them for the ballot. β Two of those questions β 5 and 7 β have to do with low-key elements of petition law. It is 6 and 8 that are starting to get a little more attention en route to Election Day. Respectively, they would print Maine's treaty obligations to tribes alongside the state Constitution and allow people under guardianship for mental illness to vote in state elections. β Tribes will rally in support of Question 6 at the State House on Monday, which is Indigenous Peoples' Day in Maine. Matt Gagnon, the CEO of the conservative Maine Policy Institute, used his BDN column this week to oppose Question 8, which attempts to conform to a 2001 court decision. |
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What we're reading π» Short-term rentals aren't the big culprit in Maine's housing crisis. βοΈ One number placed 22 of Maine's school shooting hoax calls. π₯ This potato chip company can't keep up with demand after expanding. π Bangor is letting a family keep its emotional support chickens. 𧑠Rumors of a bad Maine bird hunting season may be exaggerated. Here's your soundtrack. |
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