As Goes Maine, So Go Health Care and Gay Marriage?
As Jenna Vendil of the Maine branch of the League of Young Voters, a progressive national political organization, told me in an e-mail, Maine is built around small, tight-knit communities that lend themselves to local organization. Campus activists couldn't ask for a better setting.
There are many perks to going to college in Maine. The lobster. The
breathtaking scenery. L.L. Bean. An appreciation for summer weather.
Did I already mention the lobster?
But the rumblings of social, political, and economic debate are boiling
up among Mainers, and upcoming legislative battles in the state have
the potential to burst from our quiet corner of the country like an icy
Nor'easter. It's enough to make a college student from New York cast
off the detached respect of an outsider and embrace the issues with the
engagement of a native (albeit without the accent).
First, take health care. In Obama and Max Baucus' Sisyphean push for
bipartisanship in health care reform, Maine's Republican Sen. Olympia
Snowe has emerged as one of the most powerful politicians in
Washington. A centrist and one of the "Group of Six" in the Senate
Finance Committee, Snowe has been wooed by Democrats, lobbyists, and
Organizing for America phone banks to repeat her aisle-crossing vote to
pass the economic stimulus plan and get on board with health care. Her
support could mean 60 votes for the Democrats and a parry of the pesky
filibuster. As one with the power to stall the legislative process, she
has great sway over the direction of reform.
But as politicians and interest groups buzz around Snowe, as a senator
she will always be drawn to her constituents in Maine. Although she is
as popular as ever and her re-election is assured whether or not she
crosses the aisle, Snowe told the Los Angeles Times
that what matters is what Maine voters think. As much as politicians
push for Snowe's support, at the citizen's level, the power is with the
people of Maine. As the LAT article notes, Maine citizens have some of
the nation's highest per capita medical costs in the nation and
comprise one of the country's largest uninsured populations.
Constituents inundate Snowe's office daily with letters and phone calls
on the direction of health care reform, and she seems to be listening
closely.
Then there's gay marriage. In May of this year, Gov. John Baldacci
signed a bill that legalized same-sex marriage in Maine – the fifth
state to do so. But like an out-of-state vacationer, legalized gay
marriage has only stuck around in Maine for the summer months. It now
faces a hotly contested "People's Veto" in a ballot initiative on Nov.
3. According to a Democracy Corps poll
of registered Maine voters, support for maintaining gay marriage's
legal status – a "no" vote on the veto – leads the opposition by nine
points.
The immediate impact of the initiative – called
"Question One" on the ballot – is of course on the thousands of
same-sex couples in Maine, but many see broad national implications in
the passage or rejection of the veto. No state has ever legalized
same-sex marriage with a popular vote (the judiciary has always gotten
involved), and while there is a general sense of momentum in the
national gay rights movement, the Proposition 8 debacle in California
has shown the difficulty of getting marriage equality bills passed.
With that in mind, the group spearheading the veto effort, Stand For Marriage Maine,
has hired Frank Schubert, who ran the pro-Prop 8 (anti-gay marriage)
campaign in California. After winning an award for his efforts to
repeal gay marriage on the West Coast, Schubert has stuck to what works
in his transcontinental jump from palm trees to pines. "Yes on 8" has
become "Yes on 1." On the side of marriage equality is No on 1, a grassroots organization with the support of the ACLU and Human Rights Campaign.
Issues like these, in which the battleground is Maine but the war
encompasses the nation at large, suggest another perk of collegiate
life in Maine: student activism. Sure, undergraduates are organizing
and canvassing in every state, and there is no indication that they are
any more active in Maine's colleges, but politics here in the Pine Tree
State are uniquely welcoming to student engagement. As Nicole Witherbee
of the Maine Center of Economic Development
said in a recent talk at Bowdoin, the Maine government is a citizen's
legislature with an openness and accessibility that allows anyone to
see literally every
politician in Augusta. Maine publishes its politicians' home phone
numbers and welcomes all residents (yes, that includes college
students) to visit the capital and engage directly with their
representatives.
Perhaps Maine is so receptive to students because it wants them to
stick around after their four years are up. Maine has a very elderly
population and, as the Los Angeles Times notes,
its economy, the poorest on the East Coast, is based primarily on
tourism and never really recovered from the last recession. Maine is
the sow that nurtures her farrow of private out-of-state college
students for four years before seeing the majority of them off in
springtime commencement ceremonies to careers in Boston, New York, or
anywhere but Maine. The state (i.e., the university haven of Freeport)
does benefit economically from having these young men and women, and
the public university system in Maine is also vibrant, but the state
needs an influx of motivated youngsters that will stay. Getting them
legitimately involved in state politics is one way to make college-age
outsiders feel like a part of the state.
As Jenna Vendil of the Maine branch of the League of Young Voters, a progressive national
political organization, told me in an e-mail, Maine is built around
small, tight-knit communities that lend themselves to local
organization. Campus activists couldn't ask for a better setting.
Bowdoin College Democrats have been extremely visible on both No on 1
and the health care overhaul, which has had a disappointingly anemic youth movement behind it. Teamed up with the Bowdoin Queer Straight Alliance, the Dems, as they are known, have mobilized for local (door-to-door) canvassing, informational campaigns to raise awareness, phone banking, and voter registration drives.
Students have been impressed by how tolerant Mainers are on issues like
Question One and encouraged by local communities' acceptance of their
activism. Maine private college organizations also benefit from their
campus bodies' ideological homogeneity in favor of Democratic issues.
Bowdoin observes an unspoken "don't ask, don't tell" policy when it
comes to being Republican, and even the group with the courage to speak
up about its conservatism -- the Bowdoin College Republicans -- is
timidly "not taking a position on Question 1."
What remains to be seen is whether all this
activism will actually work. On health care, Olympia Snowe remains as
quiet and enigmatic as ever. With almost a month to go before Mainers
fill out their ballots, it is still difficult to predict the number of
yes's and no's on Question One. Maine is boxed in its northeastern nook
by four states that have legalized gay marriage – in Massachusetts,
Connecticut, and Vermont, it is currently legal, and in New Hampshire,
it will be in 2010 – and that bastion of all things liberal, Canada.
However, Maine's rural population and reputation as the "Deep South of
the Northeast" suggest a conservatism that may be less responsive to
same-sex marriage.
"As goes Maine, so goes the nation," is a phrase not often quoted these
days (people also once thought "what's good for General Motors is good
for the country"). But as large political issues such as health care
and marriage equality come to the fore in Maine, volunteers, media
attention, and political strategists will likely pour into the state to
take the temperature of the local movements and inject their own
influence. It's a level of attention this state of 1.3 million is not
used to, and it won't last, but it's enough to get even the most
uninterested outsiders thinking about what's brewing in Maine.

