Gov. Janet Mills held off a late surge from former Gov. Paul LePage to win a second Blaine House term in a Tuesday election that was the most expensive of its kind in Maine history.
The Democratic governor bested her predecessor in their political rivalry stretching back into LePage’s eight-year tenure as governor. Mills served as attorney general for six of them and won the 2018 election to succeed the Republican by running to overturn much of his legacy.
Her refrain this year was that Maine “won’t go back” to LePage after his divisive tenure. He hammered Mills on the crippling costs and inflation dominating national and global politics, but her approval ratings remained strong over a campaign that LePage teased since before he turned the office over to Mills four years ago.
Mills had 53.6 percent of votes to LePage’s 44.3 percent when the Bangor Daily News and Decision Desk HQ called the race at 11:47 p.m. Tuesday. Independent Sam Hunkler was a nonfactor in the race, pulling 2.1 percent of votes after a low-key run.
“Tonight the people of Maine sent a pretty clear message, a message that we will continue to move forward, not go back,” she told supporters at the music venue Aura in Portland. “We will continue to fight problems, not one another.”
LePage did not concede when he spoke in Lewiston around 10:50 p.m., but he said “the election doesn’t look very well” for his side. It was the first time he has ever lost an election going back to his days on the Waterville City Council. He had not called Mills to concede by 12 a.m., a Mills spokesperson said.
“We missed the message. It’s about abortion, not about heating oil,” the former governor said.
As LePage left the room, it devolved into chaos, especially from supporters who had drank at the bar. Supporters began shouting expletives to disrupt recordings by TV reporters. One woman who loudly wept as LePage spoke began hurling explicit insults at a reporter who had interviewed her. Some attendees raised baseless accusations of voter fraud. LePage did not.
It’s unclear if Augusta will be as friendly to Mills after four years of united Democratic control. Her party looked to be cruising toward keeping a majority in the Maine House of Representatives, claiming at least 71 seats in the 151-member chamber when the race was called. Democrats also looked to be in strong position to keep the Senate.
After a first term roiled by the COVID-19 pandemic and shaped by the billions in federal aid that followed and bailed out Maine and other states, her first priority may be to deliver more relief to Mainers facing another spike in heating and electricity costs. As of last week, heating oil was nearing $6 per gallon in parts of Maine, which is the state most dependent on it.
Nearly $28.2 million was spent between the candidates and outside groups in the race, with Democrats spending $16.5 million of that. The Mills and LePage campaigns themselves accounted for most of that gap, with the governor outraising her rival by $3.1 million.
That frustrated some Republicans who thought a former governor could do better. It left him reliant on the Republican Governors Association and the Maine Republican Party to run ads for him in the early part of the campaign. As momentum shifted toward his party nationally, Democrats rushed ad money in on Mills’ behalf in early October to stifle any uprising.
Costs and inflation were dominating races across the country in the spring, but Democrats got momentum back after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned federal abortion rights in June. Mills and her allies hit the anti-abortion LePage hard on the issue. He responded by downplaying his interest in changing abortion laws, even saying he opposed a 15-week ban.
At the end of the campaign, costs came back into focus. LePage seemed to have some success by harnessing anger from lobstermen over the governor’s support for offshore wind in the Gulf of Maine. Republican ads also stretched to tie Mills to rising consumer costs, including by repeating a false claim that she supported a gas tax increase.
She parried attacks on the subject by returning over and over again in debates and stump speeches to the $850 relief checks for taxpayers that both parties in the Legislature negotiated earlier this year, after stemming from a Republican idea opposed by LePage.
In the end, LePage had a hard road to a third term as governor, which would have been unprecedented in the modern era. The Portland suburbs he was able to win or keep close in his 2010 and 2014 elections have grown and shifted left in the last few years. While he tried to campaign as a toned-down “LePage 2.0,” there were signs of his old bombast, including when he threatened to “deck” a Democratic tracker and revived unsubstantiated voting claims.
At the Reiche Community School polling station in Portland’s West End, 74-year-old Talbot Goodyear voted for Mills, saying LePage “scares the bejesus out of me.” While he did not agree with or understand some of her stances, including her opposition to a sweeping tribal sovereignty measure, he called her smart and capable.
“She’s the former AG, so she knows the law,” he said.
BDN writers Michael Shepherd and Callie Ferguson contributed to this report.