Maine's Political Pulse Steve Mistler, Kevin Miller
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Maine's Political Pulse taps into the expertise of our political reporters Steve Mistler and Kevin Miller.Click here to subscribe to Maine's Political Pulse Newsletter.Maine's Political Pulse is made possible through the generous support of Lee Auto Malls and Maine Public's viewers and listeners.
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June 12, 2024: Political Pulse primary elections recap
A look back at Tuesday's results and what they mean.
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June 7, 2024: A primary primer as parties prepare to pick politicians at polls in Maine
Tuesday is primary election day in Maine (again) as voters head to the polls to select party nominees for Congress, the Legislature and local offices.
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May 2, 2024: Here are the major takeaways from the 2nd session of the Maine Legislature
While lawmakers will return to the State House next week to take up the governor’s vetoes, the 131st Legislature has already left its imprint on some of the issues and challenges confronting the state.
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March 29, 2024: Maine Democrats make last-minute push for 'red flag' gun law
Republicans have described the proposal as a late-session ambush designed to catch gun rights groups and the public off guard.
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March 15, 2024: Politics roundup: Gun bills, Netflix tax
Maine lawmakers are plodding toward a mid-April adjournment with a slew of contentious issues to resolve, including gun safety and a new spending plan. Meanwhile, a divided Congress continues its obsession with the November election in its quest for historically unproductive governance.
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March 1, 2024: What to know about Maine's primary elections ahead of Super Tuesday
Next Tuesday, voters in Maine and more than a dozen other states will cast ballots during the single-largest primary day of the 2024 elections.By presidential primary standards, this year’s Super Tuesday contests are relatively anti-climactic because the Republican and Democratic tickets are pretty much set at this point. Absent some ground-shaking legal or political developments, the nation appears headed for a Biden-Trump rematch this November.But electors are still at stake in Maine. And for the first time this year, thanks to Maine’s switch to a “semi-open” primary, independent voters can join the proverbial party without literally having to join a party.