Anonymous wrote:Vote for President likely a good indicator of how the Maine Senate vote will go. Latest poll (Oct ‘19) shows Biden leading Trump in Maine by 12 points. Warren and Sanders lead Trump by 10 points.
Help send Collins into retirement. Maine can do better!
Anonymous wrote:Maine, Colorado and Arizona are the most likely Democratic Senate pickups. Fingers crossed.
Anonymous wrote:Collins loses League of Conservation Voters endorsement:
https://americanindependent.com/susan-collins-loses-environmental-endorsement-maine-2020-election-sara-gideon-league-of-conservation-voters/?fbclid=IwAR0J2jAQfCOwxi8Q95p98SZIhA7L2JbMtd0G3Eo1vM_7eVI9IPgmtgC1IRc
Anonymous wrote:Collins loses League of Conservation Voters endorsement:
https://americanindependent.com/susan-collins-loses-environmental-endorsement-maine-2020-election-sara-gideon-league-of-conservation-voters/?fbclid=IwAR0J2jAQfCOwxi8Q95p98SZIhA7L2JbMtd0G3Eo1vM_7eVI9IPgmtgC1IRc
\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has she mumbled inconsequential grumblings about being concerned in response to Trump's declaration of wanting to do crimes with Ukraine and China? Certainly she hasn't gotten to the level of finger wagging contempt she showed for Kavanaugh opponents.
Kavanaugh opponents took finger wagging to an expert level. She was merely doing her job, and doing it with integrity.
+1
I suspect that's how most people in Maine saw it.
Not the DC tourists, I mean the people actually living year round up there.
Anonymous wrote:aw, so sad
https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/465899-poll-50-percent-of-maine-voters-disapprove-of-susan-collins-job-performance
Sen. Susan Collins’s (R-Maine) approval rating is deeply underwater about a year ahead of her reelection race, according to a new poll from the left-leaning firm Public Policy Polling.
Thirty-five percent of Maine voters polled approve of the job Collins is doing, while 50 percent disapprove. Collins trails a generic Democratic candidate 44 percent to 41 percent in the 2020 Maine Senate race, a drop from September, when she led a generic Democrat 44 percent to 38 percent.
Collins, who is one of two Republican senators running for reelection in states former Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton won in 2016, is facing one of the toughest reelection campaigns of her career. Her vote last year to confirm Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh as he faced sexual misconduct allegations infuriated liberals and sparked an intense effort to recruit candidates to challenge the longtime senator.
It's so weird cause I thought I remember the BK fangirls swearing up and down that Collins' support for Bart O'Beer ensured her popularity would just rise and rise and rise
Sen. Susan Collins’s (R-Maine) approval rating is deeply underwater about a year ahead of her reelection race, according to a new poll from the left-leaning firm Public Policy Polling.
Thirty-five percent of Maine voters polled approve of the job Collins is doing, while 50 percent disapprove. Collins trails a generic Democratic candidate 44 percent to 41 percent in the 2020 Maine Senate race, a drop from September, when she led a generic Democrat 44 percent to 38 percent.
Collins, who is one of two Republican senators running for reelection in states former Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton won in 2016, is facing one of the toughest reelection campaigns of her career. Her vote last year to confirm Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh as he faced sexual misconduct allegations infuriated liberals and sparked an intense effort to recruit candidates to challenge the longtime senator.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She stood on principle when she voted for Kavanaugh.
Read Justice on Trial.
What principle? SMH
The principle that one is always innocent until proven guilty - remember that one?
I only wish I lived in Maine so I could vote for her.
-DP
+1
That’s in the criminal justice system. Not necessarily for job interviews. Why is this so compliforcated for you people?
It's not complicated for me. It's the way I think we should approach any situation involving a person--whether rumors, interviews, school-related infractions of rules, possible crimes, etc. Won't be the same as a court of law, but give the benefit of the doubt. And definitely with a situation where the accuser can't provide key facts.
But the person's behavior during the job interview is immaterial to you, it seems. Somehow.
Who among us hasn’t ugly cried and shouted, “I LIKE BEER” to a sitting senator in a job interview and then implied the senator is also a drunk?
Yeah. I do that at every job interview and then I have mysterious people pay my financial debts for me, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She stood on principle when she voted for Kavanaugh.
Read Justice on Trial.
What principle? SMH
The principle that one is always innocent until proven guilty - remember that one?
I only wish I lived in Maine so I could vote for her.
-DP
+1
That’s in the criminal justice system. Not necessarily for job interviews. Why is this so compliforcated for you people?
It's not complicated for me. It's the way I think we should approach any situation involving a person--whether rumors, interviews, school-related infractions of rules, possible crimes, etc. Won't be the same as a court of law, but give the benefit of the doubt. And definitely with a situation where the accuser can't provide key facts.
But the person's behavior during the job interview is immaterial to you, it seems. Somehow.
Who among us hasn’t ugly cried and shouted, “I LIKE BEER” to a sitting senator in a job interview and then implied the senator is also a drunk?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She stood on principle when she voted for Kavanaugh.
Read Justice on Trial.
What principle? SMH