A lot of people didn't want Tea Party darling Paul LePage to become Maine's next governor; he squeaked to victory with just 38 percent of the vote -- one point higher than independent Eliot Cultler -- winning not a single daily newspaper endorsement. Prone to
temper tantrums and the utterance of
erroneous statements, Mr. LePage's animus against environmental regulations, health care reform, and the Maine Human Rights Act alienated a great many independents, who form the plurality of Maine voters. Democrats and Greens were a lost cause.
I've been curious who liked LePage enough to not only vote for him, but to actually bankroll his campaign. There are two ways to explore this. The first is to examine lists of donors who gave directly to his campaign, which provides a sense of his grassroots support here in Maine. The second is to look at the sources of the real corporate-scale cash that poured in from the Republican Governors Association, paying for many of the negative ads aimed at undermining his opponents. I've had a quick look at both.
Direct campaign donations are limited to $750 per real or corporate person, making it hard for any one interest group to dominate a candidate's war chest. Even so, a few names and interest clusters stick out.
Pre-primary donors -- people who thought LePage was the best Republican candidate -- included
Linda Bean, her sister Diana Bean, and her mother Hazel Dyer ($750 each) and Eric, Peggy, Tucker, Michael, Kenneth, Erica, and Emily
Cianchette ($750 each, except Emily who gave $500).
General election donors included James, Robert, Darin, and John Quirk of the
Quirk Auto Group ($750 each), Sandi, Sam, Corey, Toby, and Sandra Knight of the
Knight Auto Group ($750 each); , David, Sigrid, and Jane Marden of
Mardens ($750 each), incoming House speaker
Robert Nutting ($750), state Sen.
Peter Mills ($750),
Caspar Weinberger Jr. ($350), Portland developer
Joe Boulos ($750);
Rite Aid ($250);
First Wind LLC ($750),
Emerson Toyota of Auburn ($750),
Central Maine Motors and their owner ($750 each); Howard Dana of lobbying powerhouse
Verill Dana ($750),
Maine Health president William Caron
($750); Linda Bean and
Diana Bean again ($750 more each); Peter, Eric, Mac, Kenneth and Priscilla
Cianchette ($750 each), Matthew, Lori, Jennifer, Lon, Christopher, and Kerry Sue Walters of
Woodlands Assisted Living ($750 each)
; and Dean Scontras ($200). Amusement parks also like LePage, who got $750 donations from
Palace Playland in Old Orchard Beach and the owners of
Aqua Boggin. So do
anesthesiologists, including their state association ($750) and their main employer here, the Spectrum Group ($500). (If you want to browse Mr. LePage's disclosures yourself, you'll find them all
here.)
But
the really big cash behind LePage was funneled into the race via the Republican Governors Association's Maine PAC, which spent nearly a million dollars on media buys supporting LePage or attacking his opponents. Who really brought those ads? Fifty out of state corporations and industry associations to whom LePage owes a great debt including:
- Drugmakers AstraZeneca (donated $344,000) Pfizer ($94,000) Amgen ($74,000) and Glaxo-Smith Kline ($99,000) and their industry association, Pharmaceutical Research (PhRMA; $144,000).
- The members of the Michigan Chamber of Commerce ($225,000)
- The Corrections Corporation of America, operators of private prisons ($25,000)
- Weapons firms EADS North America ($44,000) and Demmer Corp. ($44,000)
- For-profit charter school curriculum developer K12 Management Inc ($19,000)
- MAXIMUS and ResCare Inc. ($50,000 each) , firms specializing in for-profit outsourcing of social services.
- Offshore oil services firm Alliance Marine Services (which donated $25,000 early on, some of which was used to pay video tracker Lauren Chatmas.)
(Those wishing to research the RGA Maine PACs donors and expenditures on their own can do so via
this page.)
I'll be keeping an eye out to see if any of these firms show up in Maine, looking for contracts or legislation.
[
Update, 1/20/2011: I've
taken a more detailed look at these donors and their interests in Maine for the
Portland Phoenix.]
[
Update, 1/24/2011: LePage has
nominated a CCA warden to head the Dept. of Corrections.]