Paging Dr. Saunders… Paging Dr. Saunders…
Can anyone from Maine explain to me what the deal is with their governor?
As you’ve likely heard by now, Gov. Paul LaPage made national headlines yesterday when, after being asked about the state’s drug trafficking issues during a town hall meeting, he said this:
Now the traffickers … These are guys with the name D-Money, Smoothie, Shifty, these types of guys. They come from Connecticut and New York, they come up here, they sell their heroin, and they go back home. Incidentally, half the time they impregnate a young, white girl before they leave, which is a real sad thing because then we have another issue that we’ve got to deal with down the road. We’re going to make them very severe penalties.
And the thing of it is, this might be the least bizarre thing I have read about LaPage over the past five years.
As Bangor journalist Mike Tipping notes in As Maine Went, LaPage has met regularly with leaders of the Maine branch of the Sovereign Citizens Movement (SCM). The SCM believe that the U.S. government was taken over by a secret cabal of foreign government leaders in the 19th century, shortly after the Civil War. They engage in a number of criminal activities designed to prepare the way for a coming revolution; these activities include illegal gun trafficking, bank fraud, identify theft, and money laundering. They are viewed by the FBI as a potential terrorist organization.
According to the SCM members who have met with LaPage, the governor has told them that he believes the state legislator was conspiring to assassinate him. They also say LaPage agreed with them that Maine’s Senate President Justin Alfond and House Speaker Mark Eves were, by assisting with executing the laws of an illegal federal government, guilty of “high treason” and perhaps in need of a good hanging.
And if the rest of LaPage’s legacy is not nearly as scary as his SCM dealings, it is certainly no less colorful. There is for example his policy of vetoing all bills from the legislature out of spite. To be clear: Not just ones he disagrees with, or ones he thinks are bad policy, or ones written or supported by Democrats. All of them.
There is also the matter of his hiring family members at high-paying entry level positions. Or the time he threatened to withhold state money to a charter school that employed a Democratic opponent of LaPage’s, unless the school fired that opponent. (The school, needing the money, did in fact do this.) Or any one of the seemingly countless things LaPage has uttered to the press — be it related to vaseline, a New Gestapo, Obama not liking white people, shooting newspaper cartoonists, or tiny beards — that make one wonder whether his issue is simply no filter, or if he suffers from an actual mental health issue.
I’m not sure that there is another sitting American elected official in any major office that compares with Paul LaPage. The only politician I can think of that even comes close to LaPage is Toronto’s Rob Ford. And it’s not just that Maine elected the guy. They re-elected him in 2014.
Is there someone in Maine who can explain any of this to me?
Seriously, I am not asking this question with snark. I truly want to understand what the deal is.
[Image: Screenshot of Paul LaPage town hall meeting, via Youtube.]
I mean, the simple answer is when you have to only win 40 or so percent of the vote to win an election because of a third party, you can get away with a ton more. It’s that last five to ten percent that keeps the GOP from going completely off the rails.Report
Maine should absolutely adopt IRV, but given that he won 48% of the vote, it’s not positive it would have made a difference here.Report
As I understand it, LePage comes from the more extreme and adamant parts of the Tea Party movement. He is also willing to say the silent bits outloud and seems willing to see his governorship as a way of enriching himself and his family and holding vendettas against real and imagined opponents. He comes from the section of the Republican right that honestly believes the Democratic Party is not legitimate, liberalism is a threat to freedom*, and real Americans are white and rural. Think of him like Rob Ford for Maine.
Jesse has it right on how he got reelected. A rich guy ran a third party campaign as a vanity project and was able to take enough votes from the Democratic candidate that LePage won reelection. LePage is taking a school from the Karl Rove playbook and treating the narrow victory as a huge mandate. He basically won by the crazificayion factor.
A few days ago I read an article on how increased polarization is destroying all the old rules of politics. Politicians manage to be massively unpopular in their home districts and states but keep winning reelection by playing to committed ideologues. It would have been unthinkable a while ago that people like Sam Brownback or Rick Scott could get reelected with massively unpopular decisions.Report
The SCM believes that the US government is a bunch of gits that practice subversion, and needs to be overthrown perforce.Report
They’re a very mercurial bunch, aren’t they?Report
My, but Downeasters must be so very proud today!
As I understand it, LePage is where he is because of a three-way party split cause by Tea Party folks breaking away from mainstream Republicans, which is as good an argument as any that I can think of in favor of a two-party system with strong party discipline.
And as good an argument as I can think of for Democrats looking at a similar fissure occurring in their own states or even, absit locutus, nationally, to not rest on their laurels and simply assume that a split of the opposition vote will result in their own gal winning the plurality.
The real question is why would the Downeaster Tea Party have a guy like this as its leading light? They’ve got a particular set of ideological parameters, which is one thing, but not keeping the paranoia element in check and turning a blind eye to the obvious abuses of power which the Tea Party was supposed to be objecting to is something else.
Well, other states have survived nutballs as governors before. I mean, look at Louisiana. So Maine will get through this too.Report
I reject saying that what the area Party says they stand for is what they actually stand for. They have shown themselves to be rather fond of conspiracy theories from 2010. Agenda 21 being a prime example.Report
Do I want to know what Agenda 21 is? Will that knowledge make me any happier?
…I doubt it.Report
Agenda 21 was a non-binding UN resolution about sustainable growth and ecology. It became a fever dream for the right wing on the UN takeover of Ametica and forced bike paths or something like that.Report
“Ametica” sounds veddy, veddy British.Report
I think you mean “Byitish”.Report
Don’t forget making us move out of the suburbs and our single family homes and turning everything into a giant Manhattan.Report
Yep.
I was right.Report
Anyone here ever watch the Jack Van Impe shows? His biblical lessons on how President Al Gore and the UN were going to usher in the anti-Christ were grade-A entertaining. Also, the only thing on in its 1am timeslot on broadcast television.
Creflo Dollar and Joyce Meyer give some really great sermons. But Van Impe… he’s something else. Not really sermons, even. He was more like a Biblical News Caster. (I guess Pat Robertson would be the best comparison.)Report
Jack and Rexella knew my parents back before they became *THE* Jack and Rexella Van Impe. When they were merely Jack and Rexella, they were acquaintances with my folks.
So many memories.
Anyway, the best part of any given Jack and Rexella show nowadays is the old schooly “I sets them up, he knocks them down” that always begins with Rexella reading the news “There was an earthquake 40 miles south of Mumbai, India. Jack, does the Bible talk about earthquakes?” “Why, yes it does, Rexella! In the Book of Revelation…”Report
I thought of you when I saw that he was based out of Detroit.Report
Man, I used to catch the van Impes in the middle of the night. Entertaining thieves those two are.Report
My mind boggles on how anybody could believe that stuff or how nominally Catholic Belgium immigrants could produce a son so entrenched in Anglo-Protestant conspiracy mongering.Report
Well the actual Agenda 21 is just a UN document that emerged from the Earth Summit in 1992. It’s a non-binding sustainable development plan.
Then there’s what the conspiracy crackpots think it is, for which you’d have to wade through pages and pages of whack-a-doodle text with multi-page paragraphs, sentences without discernable subjects, predicates, or objects, heavy use of all caps, and even then you might come away none the wiser.Report
To add to that:
As Fred Clark persistently reminds us in his deconstruction of “Left Behind”, a huge proportion of right-wing crank fantasies can’t be understood without constantly reminding ourselves that these guys (the conspiracists) really believe that the UN is like the Federation in Star Trek.
Its laws and rulings supersede those of member nations, its military arm is used to enforce its policies without regard to territoriality, and the Secretary-General is not a glorified bureaucrat who has trouble getting the UN translators to stay awake during speeches, but a God-Emperor who is the single most powerful being on the planet.
So Agenda 21 isn’t fart-in-the-wind wishcasting that they might be able to help someone, somewhere, avoid avoidable mistakes. It’s a blueprint for violations of sovereignty on a massive scale, to be implemented by blue-helmeted force of arms.Report
It’s just one more flavor in the Neapolitan ice cream that is right-wing conspiracy-mongering.Report
@burt-likko, Yeah, but we are finally finished with our most recent “nutball”, voted against diaper boy and elected a very conservative democrat, so things are improving a tad.
Soon to be ex-governor Jindal and his very serious delusion that he would someday be president will soon be gone. The last time Jindal was elected, he received 65% of the vote which sounds impressive until you notice that only 36% of the people voted.
Totally off subject, but how big a deal is that blowout?Report
Not sure what blowout you’re referring to, @dexter . Jindal’s? It gives him a degree of street cred.Report
@burt-likko ,Sorry to be so vague. The blowout I was asking about is the huge methane leak that I thought was in your area.
As far as Jindal having cred, I really don’t think he will ever be elected to anything again. Vikram may disagree with me, but I think Jindal did a great deal of damage here while using our state as a stepping stone for his failed bid to be president.Report
As I mention above, it’s not clear that it was the third-party candidate who threw the election. If we assume a Nader-like distribution, where 60% support the Democrat, 30% stay home, and 10% support the Republican… LePage wins.
If there is an IRV setup and more of the participants have to choose, you might get enough to result in a Mike Michaud (D) victory. He would have had to win roughly 79% of the Cutler (I) vote if we count every vote.Report
Stereotypes thrive on ignorance, and are challenged by adequate information.
Separation has been something of a class distinction for awhile now, which constricts the flow of information.
From the ignorant, to the ignorant, with the added factor of unsavory connotations for those in disagreement.
Not really what I would call a recipe for good governance, but it does seem to be a fairly astute electoral strategy.Report
Maybe Paul LePage is the New England’s answer to Tom Ford, and he’s smoking crack in office. It would explain why he knows D-Money’s routine so well.Report
How flattering to be called out by name. I fear you’ll find my insights disappointing, however. In the parlance of the region, I’m “from away,” so take anything I say about Maine with a grain of salt.
First of all, we got stuck with LePage in the first place because of a split in the non-GOP vote in 2010. Maine has a pretty robust history of voting for Independent candidates (witness the success of Angus King), and LePage was elected when a relatively weak Democratic candidate and a relatively strong Independent one ran against him the first time around. With that, he had the power of the incumbency.
And that’s all it took. I think nobody needs reminding of the success a certain xenophobic real estate heir is having in the current primary race. Does anyone doubt that his success is because he is validating the fears and resentments of his fans?
When LePage makes his comments about (let’s just be honest with ourselves) black drug dealers impregnating white girls, he’s giving voice to the same fears and resentments. When I saw this morning that a black man from New York had been arrested in South Portland for selling heroin, I rolled my eyes because that is sure to justify for LePage supporters the supposed honesty of his little slip of the tongue. Never mind that in an overwhelmingly white state the drug dealers are also overwhelmingly white. Resentments need not be anchored in reality.
Finally, keep in mind that Maine elects its governors in non-Presidential off cycles. Which tend to favor conservative candidates. So LePage need not do all that much better than Trump with his share of the electorate to win. Which he did.
Also read this by Jamelle Bouie.Report
And hell, if you’re noodling around the Internet you may as well also read this thing that is not about Paul LePage that I wrote this week, too.Report
“…an overwhelmingly white state…”
99% seems to need an even stronger term than “overwhelming”.Report
Maine is only 95.2% white according to the 2010 census.Report
Hm… The guidebook I got there said 99% but the census is probably more accurate (if not overestimating). It’s the whitest state, I do believe.Report
The remaining 5% are red lobsters.Report
Ahem. Native Crustaceans.Report
+1.Report
Also, some Denny’s and Olive Gardens.Report
Does Maine even have Red Lobster? Seems a bit like opening a Taco Bell in Tijuana, eh?Report
It does not (anymore)Report
A Google searched revealed that there used to be one in Bangor, Maine but it closed. I wonder why that could be the case. ;).Report
Where I live, we have wonderful. family-owned Mexican restaurants mixed in with Taco Bell and Chipotle, and all sorts of authentic Asian food as well as Panda Express. Go figure.Report
Finally, keep in mind that Maine elects its governors in non-Presidential off cycles.
Us too, but we only elected the guy who played the Terminator, not the real thing.Report
“…xenophobic real estate hair…”
ftfyReport
Paging Dr. Saunders,
The Maine Explorer
Did someone call me schnorer?
Horray Horray HorrayReport