As this Forum has previously noted, in New Jersey the abrasive style f Republican
Gov. Chris Christie has the socially redeeming undertone of a man of
principle. In Maine the same style that personifies
Republican Gov. Paul LePage has the un-redeeming
undertone of just a plain mean and nasty person.
The governor, Paul R. LePage, a Republican who won office in
2010 with the backing of the Tea Party, has been giving
the Democratic leaders the cold shoulder. He has refused to meet or speak with
them since the Democrats took back the Legislature in November.
Joel Page/Associated Press |
The problem it seems is that during the recent election
somebody with a camera was following Gov. LePage. And of course in Mr. LePage’s view being an
elected official means that he should not have to allow any access to the
public. And like most Conservatives, Mr.
LePage doesn’t let the lack of truth get in the way of his positions or
pronouncements.
In early December, the governor was set to meet
with the new Democratic leaders, the Senate president, Justin Alfond, and
speaker of the House, Mark Eaves. But he canceled, saying he objected to the
cameraman, who, he said, filmed him at a Veterans
Day event in November
while he was talking with an elderly veteran in ill health. Mr. LePage said the
people of Maine
should not be used as “props” to score political points.
The video, released by the
Democrats, showed no such encounter between Mr. LePage and an elderly veteran.
Democrats have tried to make it up with the Governor,
Shortly afterward, Mr. Alfond sent the governor
a handwritten invitation to dinner. But the invitation landed in the hands of
the news media before it got to the governor, prompting the governor’s office
to brand the invitation a stunt.
And the Governor has acted so offensively that not only is he
losing the support of some independent lawmakers,
The rising tensions over the budget were
evident last week when the governor met with
three independent House members who do not caucus with either the Democrats or
Republicans. When they told Mr. LePage that municipalities could be forced to
raise property taxes by hundreds of dollars, the governor grew angry, pounded
the table, called them “idiots” and later swore at them, according to The Bangor Daily News.
“He went right through the
roof when I asked him the question,” Representative Jeff Evangelos told the
newspaper. “He flew up like a jack-in-the-box and ran out of the room and
slammed the door.”
even some Republicans have abandoned him.
Senator Roger Katz, the assistant minority
leader, has complained before about Mr. LePage’s approach to governance. He
wrote a column in 2011, signed by some fellow Republicans, saying that Mr.
LePage’s penchant for demeaning comments lowered the bar for civil discourse.
Mr. Katz said last week that
the governor’s problem was still one of tone, though he was unhappy with the
budget proposal too. “As a general rule,” Mr. Katz said, “the more people of
good will talk to each other, the better. I don’t know why it hasn’t happened
yet.”
Of course, the real news is why anyone would expect ideologically
driven Tea Party politicians, the ‘my way or the highway’ crowd to act any
differently. And the situation in Maine may show that the
real way to defeat these people is to let them win a few elections so the
voters can see what they really are.
That reality is the most powerful weapon against them, as evidence by the fact that just a few years after Maine put Mr. LePage in office they turned the state legislature back to Democrats. Sometimes voters have to see to believe.
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