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By Michael Shepherd - Aug. 24, 2023
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📷 U.S. Rep. Jared Golden, a Democrat from the 2nd District, speaks to the Rotary Club of Bangor at the Richard Dyke Center for Family Business at Husson University on Aug. 16, 2022. (BDN photo by Linda Coan O'Kresik)

What we're watching today


Another Republican is considering a 2024 race against Maine's durable congressman. It is getting late for Republicans who want to challenge U.S. Rep. Jared Golden, a Democrat from Maine's swing 2nd District, in 2024. By this time two years ago, former Rep. Bruce Poliquin was already three weeks into a return bid that didn't go well for the Republican.

That election gave Golden a third term and cemented him as a future Democratic prospect for higher office. Right now, the main obstacle to the centrist's standing seems to be that he has angered progressives, including last week when he issued an incendiary and confrontational statement against student loan debt cancellation, one of the top goals for many liberals.

The things that would make him vulnerable in a statewide primary are probably some of the same things that make him hard for a Republican to beat. Only one candidate — former Maine Senate hopeful Robert Cross of Dedham — is running against Golden right now. He has gained little traction, raising an underwhelming $36,000 in the first two months of his campaign.

More candidates are almost certainly on the horizon. Freshman state Rep. Mike Soboleski, R-Phillips, told the conservative Maine Wire that he is considering a run against Golden. The focus of the most speculation in Republican circles has been Rep. Laurel Libby of Auburn, who has proven herself as a good fundraiser from the arch-conservative wing in Augusta.

She has toyed with the speculation a bit, even seeking out Golden for a picture after President Joe Biden's speech last month at an Auburn manufacturing plant while noting many calls requesting that she oppose him in 2024.

To the delight of national Republicans, Golden and other members of the Maine delegation traveled with Biden on that trip. In a speech, Golden embraced the president, who returned the favor with kind words about the congressman. That was notable because a Biden aide once considered trying to primary Golden over his opposition to the president's "Build Back Better" agenda.

But the Republican case against Golden has not really changed since Poliquin tried to prosecute it in 2022. While often citing exact figures, he stressed that despite Golden's high-profile votes against his party, he still voted overwhelmingly voted with Democrats. Soboleski made that argument as well.

"Jared Golden votes with his party the majority of time, I think it’s close to 80 percent, somewhere in that range, yet he tries to pull himself off as a moderate," he told the Maine Wire. "He enables the Biden administration."

The data here is valid, but VoteView calls Golden the most conservative House Democrat on economic issues in this Congress and the last. He put Poliquin through fits by winning a key police endorsement and voting enough on the gun-rights side to keep the National Rifle Association from endorsing in the 2022 race. That lowered the number of issues on the table for Poliquin.

The Republican side has been quiet on this race so far in part because Golden is formidable. But his district voted twice for former President Donald Trump, meaning the congressman is never truly safe. If he is going to be beaten, an energetic challenger needs to come out of the woodwork soon.

🗞 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

📷 Gov. Janet Mills delivers her budget address on Feb. 14, 2023, at the State House in Augusta. (AP photo by Robert F. Bukaty)

 

📖 The governor is on the book circuit in Maine and in the national media.

◉ Gov. Janet Mills was on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" on Thursday to promote "In Other Words, Leadership," a book written by journalist Shannon A. Mullen that chronicles the governor's correspondence with homesteader Ashirah Knapp of Temple during the early part of the COVID-19 pandemic.

◉ The book, which includes many details from the private letters, has been widely covered in the regional media and has gotten some national attention as well. Mills, Mullen and Knapp appeared on WBUR in June to discuss it.

◉ "Nobody runs for public office saying, 'One day, I'll shut down the state and close bars,'" Mills said then, noting the opposition to many of the restrictions she implemented in 2020. "Nobody runs for office to do that kind of thing, so naturally, there are harsh feelings."

◉ Mills and Mullen are back on the circuit in Bangor tonight for a live event at 7 p.m. at BookSpace by The Briar Patch in Bangor.
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What we're reading


🔎 Maine abortion providers expect few changes under a landmark new law.

🗣️ This 15-year-old's criticism of a Bangor hospital is central to a speech case.

🥾 A small Maine town fired its clerk over a legal fee dispute.

🇺🇸 He was paralyzed in a Marine training exercise. Now he has a smart home.

🦟 Maine has 43 kinds of mosquitoes, and some are out to get you. Here's your soundtrack.
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