Storm report from Augusta

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Dear Friends and Neighbors,

Many of you have contacted me over the past few days with concern about Governor LePage’s recent vendetta threatening the funding of a charter school and ill-tempered remarks suggesting shooting a cartoonist and the execution of legislators.

Most of those contacts advocated that the legislature respond with decisive action against the Governor including censure and impeachment.

Here are my current thoughts on that:

As frustrating and challenging as I find the Governor, I understand him to be, like winter weather, an unavoidable part of our state’s political geography for the current legislative session.  At times we need to reef, at times we need to seek sheltered anchorage, and at times we need to lay on the canvas and bolt downwind on the gale before the barometer drops even farther.

Given that in 2014 the citizens of Maine elected a divided state government, I believe my primary responsibility as your representative is to work diligently to seek the best possible policy compromises that still square with my conscience in order to achieve the long-term greatest good.

In that role, I have found and shared some significant success with legislation this session — as have many other legislators who have focused on the territory of the possible rather than the rhetorical.  My experience confirms that, irrespective of party, most legislators work earnestly under trying conditions to navigate by these same lights.

But by far the greatest challenge that we have faced is the negotiation of the next two-year state budget which needs to become law by this coming Wednesday in order to avoid the catastrophe of a state shutdown.

Please understand that some factions would love nothing more than the chaos that would ensue from the failure of this negotiation.  The emergency of a state shutdown would significantly expand the unilateral powers of the Governor and some cheer that prospect.

Because of this, along with a majority of legislators of both parties, I am convinced that our highest obligation over the next few days is to carry the next budget into law over the increasingly livid objections of this governor.

Against great odds, Democratic House Speaker Eves and Republican Senate President Thibodeau jointly have piloted this budget compromise through many shoals with remarkable leadership and diplomacy.  So far, the Governor’s anger at this collaboration has served more to unite the legislature than to divide.  Credit both caucuses in both bodies for cohering, not only to enact a budget but also to overturn an historic number of this governor’s capricious vetoes.

As this has played out, this Governor has only increasingly marginalized his ability to effect policy. The escalating antagonism is little more than an expression of his consequent frustration.

As I see it, as your representatives our sober responsibility is to maintain our collected unity of purpose until this budget becomes law and this session’s final veto is voted.

Once that concludes, I anticipate that the legislature will measure its options in relation to the chief executive and consult on appropriate legal and legislative process.

Over these critical final days and weeks, I expect additional rhetorical ordnance will be lobbed at the third floor of the state house.  I also expect us, and the state, to weather those distractions and carry forward, as Maine people deserve, with civility and prudence under the established rules of process.

With gratitude for your continuing support and confidence,

Brian

Representative Brian Hubbell,
Maine House District 135
Bar Harbor, Lamoine, Mount Desert
http://www.rephubbell.com/

5 thoughts on “Storm report from Augusta”

  1. Thank you, Brian for your report of these matters that greatly affect the constituents of our State. The diligence of most of our state elected is greatly appreciated and respected. Keep up the good work!

  2. Thank you Brian, for telling us how the Legislature will stay on point and pass the budget. I appreciate it very much.

  3. Thank you for your clear, even-handed overview of the current situation in Augusta. Although you are not my rep I always appreciate your insights as they are concise, to the point and free of vituperative overtones in spite of our Governor’s inappropriate, bullying style. Keep up the good work along with your fellow Downeast legislative reps. Good work.

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