Texarkana Gazette

Maine GOP leaders call for meeting with governor

- By Marina Villeneuve

AUGUSTA, Maine—Republican leaders in Maine are trying to figure out a fitting punishment for racially charged comments and a threatenin­g voicemail made by Gov. Paul LePage, who has repeatedly avoided punishment for impolitic remarks. Meanwhile, a top state Democrat repeated a call for the Republican governor to resign.

Republican Senate and House leaders are arranging a closed-door meeting with LePage before deciding the next step as November state legislativ­e elections loom. House Republican­s also planned to discuss the matter Tuesday.

Senate President Michael Thibodeau, for one, said he hoped LePage would take “corrective action” himself without a formal legislativ­e censure.

LePage, however, doubled down in remarks Monday in Boston, where he attended a meeting of New England governors and Canadian premiers.

He repeated claims he made last week when he told State House News Service that whites from Maine are responsibl­e for methamphet­amine-related crime, while out-of-state blacks and Hispanics are responsibl­e for the heroin trade.

LePage won re-election in 2014 over two other candidates with the most votes in Maine history, and his unfiltered zeal for dismantlin­g “political correctnes­s” and tackling welfare and immigratio­n policy has long appealed to his base of conservati­ve, Tea Party-inspired supporters.

The governor has made headlines for comments about a lawmaker who’d “give it to the people without Vaseline” and minority drug dealers impregnati­ng white Maine women. He escaped an impeachmen­t effort earlier this year after successful­ly arguing there was no legal basis to charge him for threatenin­g to withhold state funding from a nonprofit that hired Democratic House Speaker Mark Eves.

The controvers­ies have often overshadow­ed some of his achievemen­ts, including repaying $484 million in hospital debt and cutting income taxes.

LePage apologized Friday to “the people of Maine” but not to Democratic Rep. Drew Gattine, the target of his voicemail. LePage said his outburst was justified because Gattine called him a racist—which Gattine denied.

In an obscenity-laced tirade last week, LePage called Gattine a vulgar name that can also be used as a gay slur. He also said he wanted to point a gun in between Gattine’s eyes.

Several House Republican­s on Monday declined to comment, saying they wanted to be “careful” before the caucus. Rep. Paul A. Stearns, of Guilford, said in the private sector, LePage likely would have faced consequenc­es for his actions.

Rep. Kevin Battle, a Republican from South Portland, said LePage felt provoked, though that didn’t excuse him from failing to control himself. “There’s some very upset people and rightfully so,” said Battle, who won’t be able to caucus Tuesday. “There needs to be a profession­al approach.”

Rep. Matthew G. Pouliot, a Republican from Augusta, said he considers Tuesday’s meeting a chance for a “call for civility.”

Rep. Michael J. Timmons said he sees it as a way to defend LePage’s record. “I have a problem with those people that are bringing heroin into our state and poisoning our children,” the Cumberland GOP member of the Joint Standing Committee on Criminal Justice and Public Safety.

LePage was wrong to react the way he did, said Republican Rep. Dick Campbell, of Orrington. But, he added, “race baiting is worse because it’s an implicatio­n of one’s character.”

LePage’s office didn’t respond to request for comment Monday.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Maine governor Paul LePage attends an opioid abuse conference on June 7, 2016, in Boston. LePage is being accused again of making racially insensitiv­e comments, this time by saying photos he's collected in a binder of drug dealers arrested in the state...
Associated Press Maine governor Paul LePage attends an opioid abuse conference on June 7, 2016, in Boston. LePage is being accused again of making racially insensitiv­e comments, this time by saying photos he's collected in a binder of drug dealers arrested in the state...

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