PORTLAND — Maine has always been proud of the commodities it claims as homegrown, among them Stephen King, L.L. Bean, lobster, and a host of political icons including Edmund Muskie, George Mitchell and Olympia Snowe.
But no matter what happens in the election this fall to replace the retiring Snowe, Mainers won’t get a native to represent the state. All six candidates — a Republican, a Democrat and four independents — are transplants from other states, or as Mainers say, “from away.”
That’s a bit of a shocker to the natives.
“Holy catfish. I get a chill down my back,” said Maine humorist Tim Sample.
Independent Angus King hails from Alexandria, Va., attended Dartmouth College and moved to Maine, where he has settled in Brunswick. Democrat Cynthia Dill, born in Carmel, N.Y., attended the University of Vermont and Northeastern University and now lives in Cape Elizabeth. Republican Charlie Summers grew up and went to college in Illinois and has transplanted himself in Scarborough.
There also are three lesser-known independents: Steve Woods, of Yarmouth, grew up in Needham, Mass.; Danny Dalton, of Brunswick, hails from Massena, N.Y.; and Andrew Ian Dodge, of Harpswell, grew up in Britain and Florida and spent summers in Maine before attending Colby College and settling in the Maine.
Out-of-staters running for office isn’t anything new, in Maine or elsewhere. Abraham Lincoln was born in Kentucky, moved as a boy to Indiana and settled in Illinois before launching his political career. Hillary Rodham Clinton and the late Robert F. Kennedy moved to New York to run for Senate.
The Maine politician who came closest to a White House run, 1800s newspaperman James G. Blaine, served as U.S. House speaker, senator and secretary of state despite being born in Pennsylvania, said Paul Mills, a lawyer, political analyst, newspaper columnist and historian from Farmington. In modern times, Sen. Bill Hathaway ran against Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, from Skowhegan, and beat her even though he was from Massachusetts.
But it’s the first time in at least 130 years that all the Maine Senate candidates are transplants, Mills said.
Considering the sheer number of candidates, that’s unusual.
King, who once worked for Hathaway, came to Skowhegan in 1969 to put his law degree to work for Pine Tree Legal Assistance, which helps poor Mainers. He fell in love with the state and stayed, serving as governor from 1995 to 2003.
“What I always tell people is that I wanted to be born in Maine but my mother was in Virginia that day. And since it was a big day for her, I thought I should be there,” he joked.
Dill and Summers tell similar stories.
Summers followed his future wife to Maine, taking his first job as assistant manager of the Bangor Motor Inn. After his wife died unexpectedly, he became a single father caring for his children and trying to make ends meet. He’s now remarried.
“People will judge you by the way you deal with them,” said Summers, who grew up in Kewanee, Ill. “If you deal fairly and honestly with them, then they’ll warm to you.”
Dill became familiar with Maine through summer vacations as a girl — and a couple of Grateful Dead concerts as a college student — before getting legal internships in Brunswick and Augusta.
“Intentionally choosing this state to live and raise a family and make a living, even though you could make more money other places, demonstrates a commitment to the state and its way of life,” she said.
Heaping praise on Maine is a good thing, said Sample, of Bath.
The state takes pride in its seafaring and lumberjack roots and its long tradition of independence, which includes parting with Massachusetts in 1820 to become a state of its own.
Here, you can buy “native lobsters” and “native corn.” One general store jokingly touts “fresh native ice cubes.”
The us-versus-them theme is common among hardscrabble states like Maine that have a fierce loyalty to geography, Sample said. At the same time, there’s a summer influx of wealthy vacationers from all over the world, giving rise to the “Vacationland” slogan emblazoned on license plates.
“They come here and they can buy everything, but the one thing they can’t buy is native status. We hold it over them, and it drives them nuts,” he joked.
When it comes to politics, Maine likes its hometown heroes as well.
Muskie was a senator, secretary of state and presidential candidate. Mitchell was Senate leader and peace envoy. Smith, too, gained prominence through her “Declaration of Conscience” attacking McCarthyism. Snowe has been a popular centrist.
As for being from away, King proved that it doesn’t have to be a political liability. He was only the second Maine governor from outside New England and only the third from away in the past 125 years, Mills said.
But he doesn’t pretend to be a native.
He recalls, as a proud new father, excitedly telling a Maine farmer that his newly arrived firstborn son would be a Mainer. The farmer put him in his place. “He looked over his glasses and said, ‘Just because a cat has her kittens in the oven don’t make them biscuits.’”



I just googled the election results from 1998:
Independent Angus King 58.61% Republican Longley 18.9% Democrat Connolly 12%
Apparently Maine is OK with Angus King being “from away.”
We all must be happy with King HA HA. We will be paying off bonds that made him millions off and our grandchildren will be helping pay too. King please go back south and stay there. You have done enough damage in the state of maine. Maine can’t afford to have you in the US Senate and telling us you are helping maine people. Face the facts you are going to Washington DC to line your pocketbook with millons more in windmill farms in Maine. The good old boy’s club.
That ad – by the Republican Senatorial Committee – implying that King made “millions and millions” from that wind farm, it a bald faced lie. But just keep on drinking that Tea Party Cool Aid!
So what you are telling us taxpayers is that King had No special interest on any of the power bonds in 8 yrs. If you think that keep on drinking some of that King cool aid!!!
…and your proof of that ridiculous assertion?
Why, his tax returns of course, curtesy of distant-third-place Dill…
Did you mean King Angus? Do you recall the enormous, unsolved budget shortfall he left after his second term? Champagne tastes, beer budget. They all sound like PFA’s, no wonder we have such a mess. They are just trying to recreate what they learned down south.
That’s a sad headline . . .
King’s a snake-oil salesmen who fooled the people of Maine to be governor, ran the budget off the rails and into the ditch, and made a mint later from political situations he manipulated while in office. Tax-and-spend liberal millionaire, NOT what Maine needs in the US Senate.
So whats wrong with “Tax and Spend” ?
You can’t “Spend” what you Didn’t “Tax” !
Thats what causes “deficits” !
Thats What “Republicans” Do!
I bet budgeting or balancing a checkbook just kills you inside
Obama is a democrat and runs a trillion dollar a year deficit
“He recalls, as a proud new father, excitedly telling a Maine farmer that his newly arrived firstborn son would be a Mainer. The farmer put him in his place. “He looked over his glasses and said, ‘Just because a cat has her kittens in the oven don’t make them biscuits.’”
really? well i hope someone tells tim sample since that has been one of his comic routines for years…
That was around long before Tim Sample ever used it.
Sad state of affairs when the only people who want to be in Maine government are not from Maine. Kind of makes me wonder why.
How many Maine “natives” can afford to run for office?
Apparently Mainers only sit back and gripe.
Move here and make millons in politics on the simplicity of Mainers
No native Mainers? Where are the Abinaki, Micmac, Maliseet and Penobscot, et. al. when you need them? :-) Of course if you look at history there probably have never been ANY native Mainers elected.
I’m one. I’m a Wabanaki who served during the Vietnam conflict and have two degrees; born and raised here, too. I’ll run if you want to write one in? We got 28 days. Anyone for a little bingo?
Yeah, we’re right here … if you need one, we’ll help. After all, we’re bound by our treaty to help.
Promise is a promise.
Yeah, that’d throw a wrench into their gears.
I’ll go start a fire and get my molasses and Maine “yellow eye” beans soaked and cooking for a ” one and only” weekend rally here near the Rez. Twenty bags of beans should do it.
There’s my first $100 commitment to the campaign.
Which Res? Mind if a white guy joins you?
I don’t mind. In fact, I welcome you, especially if you’re willing to help run a “write in” campaign and coordinate press events. What’s your email. Let’s get this thing started.
Mainer for Senate?
Oh. Gotta go. Tea water’s boiling.
Unfortunately it’s too late for all that. The Secretary of State’s office informed me that, despite being contrary to Maine Law, votes for write-in candidates who are “undeclared” will NOT be counted. If you didn’t file a Declaration of Candidacy before the Sep. 24th deadline (45 days prior to the election), then you would be deemed “undeclared” and therefore illegitimate. Which, again, is against Maine Law.
This is an extremely important election and none of the US Senate candidates have what it takes to effectively deal with the enormity of the problems at hand in our State or our country. Sadly, though, it is too late for any “better options” on Election Day. There has to be another way for we, the People, to ensure our voices are heard because none of the 3 major candidates can be bothered and the other 3 “lesser-known,” real Independent candidates (agree with them or not) have been unable to break through the glass ceiling of partisan politics. We Mainers–whether native or “from away”–deserve better.
Thank you, Michael, for doing the legal research on the issue.
But, I was ready, willing and able to give it a good sprint through the north Maine woods to Washington, none-the-less.
I’m back to my cup of tea, in the meantime.
Thanks for making me smahta.
I only know because I was also “ready, willing, and able” to feed myself to the wolves on behalf of all Mainers, but “They” have made it very difficult for us “commoners” to be elected to public office. Drink your tea and regroup. You have some very good ideas and Washington can and must be changed from both the inside as well as the outside. A not-for-profit campaign of some sort might just do the trick. My wheels are turning so I will definitely be in touch. Take care and enjoy the tea!
My email is bearlaw2@yahoo.com if you want to get “lightening-quick serious” about beginning a non-profit campaign that promotes the happiness and well being of all Mainers and protection of our lands and waters from reckless exploitation. Where Mainers have preference in all public contracts, including employment, and supplying goods and services. … and with taxes based on a “progressive scale” after the first $50,000. An immediate minimum wage increase to $10 per hour would suit most Mainers just fine about now, too.
I’ve got my posters ready and am finalizing my campaign mailouts. … and still waiting for the first person to email me with their support. At which time I’ll provide details of my campaign, including a political, communications and organizational vision. But, I won’t just talk. I will listen, too.
I’m ready. Tea’s good, too.
Of course “Abinaki, Micmac, Maliseet and Penobscot, et. al” probablt wouldn’t consider themselves “native Mainers” as “Maine” the entity was created entirely by Europeans.
BUT
You bring up a good point. In my mind I look for cultural similarity when I elect to high office. I want someone who likes Maine as is, and therefore will do little to change it.
Angus (for an instance) comes from a culture of break-neck speed, of asphalt covering every square inch of ground, of privledge and “get mine first.”
Cynthia comes from Westchester County, and in terms of culture, you can not get much further from Maine than that.
Since that is New York, she may even be a Yankees fan.
Charlie comes from the land of the Richard Daleys, Barak Obama, Dan Rostenkowsk, Rod Blagojevich and George Ryan. Check their pedigree out and see if you want this political culture here in Maine.
I may sit this Senate contest out.
My email is bearlaw2@yahoo.com if you want to get “lightening-quick serious” about beginning a non-profit campaign that promotes the happiness and well being of all Mainers and protection of our lands and waters from reckless exploitation. Where Mainers have preference in all public contracts, including employment, and supplying goods and services. … and with taxes based on a “progressive scale” after the first $50,000. An immediate minimum wage increase to $10 per hour would suit most Mainers just fine about now, too
Illinois. Also the Land of Lincoln, Paul Simon, and other very well respected politicians and public figures.
King ended up in Maine by virtue of a job at Pinetree Legal Assistance which gave him a near impossible to get “occupational deferment” that kept him out of the military. While less fortunate sons were drafted and died in Vietnam, young King Angus, who hailed from a very politically connected family inside the Beltway, saved his skin by working on divorce cases.
He now wants to get on the Armed Services Committee and play armchair general.
What a man!
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Reply
4 years of this nightmare aren’t enough?
I hate our do nothing Republican controlled Congress too!!!!!
If a candidate from either party has resided in Maine or any state for a good period of time…so what? If any of them moved in just to run for an office like we see in other states then complain. You see some establish residency just before announcing a run but i don’t think that is the case here.
Apparently we Mainers aren’t nearly smaht enough to rule ourselves.
Fancy that !
Would someone like to suggest a better candidate?
Big Deal…everyone is from away these days
Yup, me too.
Here we go again – birthplace as credential. Good grief! What about brains and energy (perhaps declining qualities among born-in-Mainers?) – do they not matter more in a candidate? If some think one must have been born in Maine in order to represent Mainers, where are the petitions to amend the state constitution? Since none of the senate candidates even begin to qualify as a carpetbagger, what is this article other than a foolish piece printed to stir up foolish people? How about some real investigative journalism?
People move here because it’s a great place to live. Can’t fault em for that.
I will vote a straight ticket for the first time over the last 45 years. There is no guarantee Angus King can’t be swayed to go along with the republican agenda if he gets into office. Especially, if the republican remains in the majority in congress.
They failed the American people the last four years and contributed to driving this country over the fiscal cliff. Nothing personally against King, but after following both houses of Congress for the last 4 years on C-Span, I’ve seen and heard their main focus of an agenda whose priority was to drive Obama out of office, to save the rich from doing their fair share to help save the deficit, and to neglect the American people by voting NO on every bill to stop our economy from climbing out of the hole the Bush administratiion created.
Please; No joking here, this stuff is important.
I will cancel your vote, sorry!
The corporatist funded ALEC agenda is to cancel all their opposition’s votes,
…. but they failed to take away same day voter registration.
The voters vetoed it.
Talk about outta State influences… where would Paulie and Mr. Charley, his straw-boss, be without the outta State smart ALECs ?
How did Maine get so lucky, having so many flatlander’s running for office?
We’re lucky indeed. Must be a good place to live regardless of one some State officials seem to think.
Who cares! What I care about is this Country. I also care that Angus King has so many signs in public spots that no one else can put one up.! What is up with that!
OH YA Vote Summers!!
I hope all those college students that Summers tried to have their rght to vote in- state remember what he tried to do to their right to vote, plus the “voter” fraud issue.No votes for those who really only believe in sufferage for those who agree with them!A vote for Summers is a vote against the right to vote for many!
If you want to vote, you can vote. I have lived in Maine and voted from Florida, and I have lived in Florida and voted from Maine. You have to plan ahead! Take responsibility and do the right thing. Republicans do not want to suppress ANYONE’S vote. They just want to try and prevent people from voting twice, or voting when not legally eligible to. What is wrong with that?
MBE
It’s called being organized and having a lot of enthusiastic supporters!
Vote Angus King, Independent for US Senate, 2012!!
Summers on Election Day.
Not
Not.
Thus these people “from away” have no vested interest in Maine, and as a result they will do nothing for the states benefit, only for themselves. Follow their money trails people!
I think they’ve all demonstrated a vested interest in Maine. Just being born here does not necessarily create a vested interest.
Can’t trust an out-of-stata!
That ol’ folksy King guy retells a Tim Sample staple w/the cat, oven & biscuits routine & he still messes it up. Sure sounds like good ol’ self deprecating humor though don’t it Cappy?
Margaret Chase Smith was also the first woman to be nominated for the presidency (1964), but lost in the initial round of balloting at the Republican convention that year.
So what else is new? People from away have always wanted to “help” Maine natives get it right. Mainers already know what “right” is; politicians from away bring their “right” with them and then try to impose it on the locals–for a price.
I imagine Angus King’s campaign is not too happy that the BDN chose to run his picture and his picture alone next to this rather interesting and attention-getting headline. It is rather shocking – and I’m from away (26 years here, but still….)! Ha!
Purple loosestrife, emerald ash borers, starlings, and politicians — all aggressive foreign pests . . .
LOL
Poor ole’ Angus always looks as though he is asking where he is and when does the buffet start.
Two old men at the funeral for a friend who died at the age of 86:
“Did you know Chahlie was bo-uhn in New Hampsha, and his parents moved heeyah when he was six months old?”
“No…I had no idea he was From Away.”
Quintessential Mainer joke, love it.
OMG, the temerity to move to Maine, contribute to society,and be looked down upon by “real” Mainers. Guess real Mainers can’t home grow enough politicians any more. Your loss (from a fellow “immigrant”).
Authenticity is a tired subject. Unless you are a native, Everyone in Maine is from away, it just depends how far back you go. If I were a native American Mainer, the whole “from away” thing would Pi** me off. There are probably more descendants of early-century Maine families living in Florida right now, after having cashed in the family real-estate, than are actually living in Maine.
As for politics, this state could use a whole lot of new brain-power. Fifty years of economic stagnation and the parties are still fighting over who gets to be in office more than focusing on shaping the future of this state in any meaningful way. Disgusting.
Maine schools the way they are we probably won’t see a lot of our own representing us in the future either.
Why even call them out of staters anymore?
They own the place almost enough of the year to pay taxes here.