I can understand her appeal to a point, and there is talk of the Republicans morphing into a small town populist party with folks like her and Huckabee at the helm. Then there's this article, which scares me, although I have no idea how Dobbs would stand up under the microscope.
Maine is predominantly independent. We have two centrist Republican senators, two centrist Democrat representatives, and have alternated between Democrat, Republican, and independent governors for decades (two independent two-term governors during my residence here.) "Republican" and "Democrat" don't mean quite the same thing here as nationally -- ask some hardcore Republicans what they think of Collins and Snowe sometime.
The Republicans are pushing in our more-rural national district, because Maine is one of the few (two?) states that splits electoral votes on congressional district lines. IE, if one district votes contrary to the state majority, our votes can go 3-1 rather than winner-takes-all.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-19 01:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-19 01:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-19 02:43 pm (UTC)(We just had her in Maine for a rally. 5000 cheering screaming fans represent a large crowd for our backwoods.)
no subject
Date: 2008-10-19 02:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-19 03:00 pm (UTC)I can understand her appeal to a point, and there is talk of the Republicans morphing into a small town populist party with folks like her and Huckabee at the helm. Then there's this article, which scares me, although I have no idea how Dobbs would stand up under the microscope.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-19 03:09 pm (UTC)The Republicans are pushing in our more-rural national district, because Maine is one of the few (two?) states that splits electoral votes on congressional district lines. IE, if one district votes contrary to the state majority, our votes can go 3-1 rather than winner-takes-all.