Collins: I want to campaign here in Maine
GOP CONVENTION

Collins: I want to campaign here in Maine


Senator not going to GOP convention
By Bill Trotter
    BDN Staff
BANGOR DAILY NEWS PHOTO BY BILL TROTTER
Sen. Susan Collins speaks Friday with Ernie and Judy Gelinas of Surry while making a campaign stop on her statewide bus tour at the Blue Hill Fair. Collins said Republican presidential candidate John McCain's pick of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate was exciting.

BLUE HILL, Maine — U.S. Sen. Susan Collins said that though it is exciting that John McCain has picked Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate in the presidential campaign, she is not going to attend the Republican National Convention next week in Minneapolis.

Collins attended the annual Blue Hill Fair on Friday afternoon, speaking with fair-goers as she walked the fairgrounds for about 90 minutes. The visit was part of a statewide campaign bus tour that is scheduled to take Collins to Norridgewock on Monday for a Labor Day parade.

Collins said Friday that Palin has executive experience serving as governor of Alaska and that she brings several other advantages to the Republican presidential ticket.

“She appears to share [McCain’s] commitment for reform,” Collins said. “She has a proven record of challenging the old boys’ network.”

Palin’s lack of experience — she has been governor for less than two years and was a mayor in an Anchorage suburb before that — is not a concern, Collins said. Palin is known for having pushed for higher ethical standards in Alaskan state government, she said, and the position with which experience matters the most is president, not vice president. McCain has plenty of experience in Washington and doesn’t always toe the party line, she said.

“He didn’t need to compensate in that area,” Collins said of McCain, who has served in Congress since 1982. “He’s trying to send a message that he doesn’t want business as usual in Washington.”

Collins also said she is glad McCain has picked a woman as a running mate.

“I loved that she described herself as a hockey mom,” Collins said. “That’s something we can relate to here in Maine.”

Collins also defended her decision not to go to the Republican National Convention, which begins Monday in Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minn.

Critics of Collins have said she is not going because she wants to distance herself from the Bush administration and her party, which has not been doing well at the polls this year. But Collins said her decision not to go has nothing to do with the national political climate.

She said she never goes to the event when it coincides with one of her political campaigns. She also skipped the convention in 1996, when she first ran and was elected to the Senate, she said.

A lot of campaigning can be done in a week and there are only about 50 Mainers who attend the national convention, according to Collins. Here in Maine, she said, she has more than a million constituents to connect with.

“Eight weeks before the election, I’d rather be campaigning here in Maine,” she said.

Attempts Friday evening to contact the campaign of U.S. Rep. Tom Allen, the 1st District congressman challenging Collins for her seat, were unsuccessful.

Collins said she is enjoying her bus tour and has spoken with many people along the way. She said the response she has gotten from people she comes across when the bus passes through their town has been enthusiastic.

“I’m very happy with the way the campaign is going,” she said.

Collins’ bus tour is expected to take her to Enfield today to the Windsor Fair and to Boothbay on Sunday and to Norridgewock on Monday for a Labor Day parade, according to Steve Abbott, Collins’ campaign manager. In Boothbay, Collins is expected to attend a ceremony honoring Elle Logan, a local resident who recently won a gold medal in rowing at the Beijing Olympics. Logan’s sister Jessie Logan works in Collins’ Bangor office.

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Comments
2 comments on this item

Tom Allen came, and left; he hasn’t even tried to do anything for Millinocket, most, even Union members are holding out hope for Senator Collins intervention.

Millinocket town councilors push to take back the Millinocket dam that was given to “The People of Maine” by Governor Baxter maybe more of a reality than once thought.

Originally a reporter from the Bangor Daily News Rick Sambides repeatedly misquoted everything that was said at the last Millinocket town meeting, and subsequently that story was pulled from general circulation http://bangornews.com/detail/49802.html

When it became apparent that the Brookfield Power had other plans for the Mill site, including shutting its doors and displacing some 208 jobs, any future plan of site cleanup, but still demanding its tax reduction, that was enough for the Town Councilors, the Unions and most towns people to say its time for action.

Brookfield Power made it very clear to Millinocket by threatening to shut down East Millinocket if they made waves. This beehive of corruption has left everyone asking; what Millinocket Town Councilor was so criminally inept to give a bunch of hockey rink rejects a TIFF that continues, even after they close their doors?

The Democrats have been trying to sabotage the paper industry in Maine for several decades now. I don't think even Susan can help at this juncture.

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