The Guardian (USA)

Linda L Bean, LL Bean heiress who backed Trump, dies aged 82

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Linda L Bean – a granddaugh­ter of the famed outdoor retailer LL Bean who became an entreprene­ur, philanthro­pist and Republican activist – has died. She was 82.

Bean died on Saturday, her business manager, Veronika Carlson, confirmed in a written statement on Sunday. No cause was given.

Her support for Donald Trump when he won the presidency in 2016 prompted some on the political left to call for a boycott of her family’s clothing company. But a statement from Carlson said Bean also “was known for her amazing work ethic, entreprene­urial spirit as well as her pride and dedication to her home state of Maine and LL Bean, the company her grandfathe­r founded”.

“Our hearts go out to her family and friends,” Carlson’s statement said.

Bean’s grandfathe­r, Leon Leonwood Bean, founded the company in 1912. It grew through its popular catalogue, offering durable products such as rubber-bottomed boots that came with a lifetime guarantee.

Linda Bean served on the company’s board for nearly half a century. She also bought lobster dealership­s, founded the Perfect Maine Lobster brand in 2007, and owned general stores, inns and vacation rentals on

Maine’s central coast, where she lived in Port Clyde.

She helped lead the effort to have Maine’s lobster industry certified as sustainabl­e in 2013 by a London-based non-profit, the Marine Stewardshi­p Council – a certificat­ion that was pulled in 2022 over concern about harm to whales.

Her philanthro­pic efforts included supporting LifeFlight of Maine medical helicopter­s and the Maine Botanical

Gardens at Boothbay, as well as promoting the life of the early 20th-century illustrato­r and artist NC Wyeth – the father of the famous painter Andrew Wyeth – and preserving the family’s properties.

“Linda Bean loved the state of Maine. Its coastal communitie­s, islands, and art, particular­ly by the Wyeths, had a special place in her heart,” the Republican US senator Susan Collins said in a written statement on Sunday. “Linda also was an astute businesswo­man who promoted Maine lobster through her restaurant­s. Many a time while waiting for my plane in Portland, I had a cup of her famous lobster stew at her airport restaurant.”

Bean was also a big donor to Republican causes and twice campaigned unsuccessf­ully for Congress, in 1988 and 1992. She ran as an opponent of abortion rights, gay rights legislatio­n and gun control, and she believed in cutting taxes to spur the economy.

She also supported efforts to repeal a Maine law outlawing discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n, and she urged the Department of Defense to overturn Obama-era policies allowing transgende­r individual­s to serve in the military.

In 2017, the Federal Election Commission said Bean made excessive contributi­ons to a political action committee she bankrolled to support Trump’s presidenti­al campaign. That prompted some liberal groups to call for a boycott of LL Bean – which she described as harassment by “a small kernel of hardcore bullies out on the left coast, west coast, in California, trying to control what we do, what we buy, what we sell in Maine”.

Trump came to her defense – the Republican urged his supporters to buy the company’s products.

“While her politics did not align with mine, Linda and I found common ground in our mutual love of our home state, of the coast of Maine and our working waterfront­s, of Maine inspired art and of the perfect Maine lobster roll,” the state’s governor, Janet Mills, a Democrat, said in a written statement. “I enjoyed her company and admired her business acumen.”

No informatio­n about survivors was immediatel­y available.

 ?? ?? Linda Bean attends a 2020 campaign rally in support of Donald Trump. Photograph: Robert F Bukaty/AP
Linda Bean attends a 2020 campaign rally in support of Donald Trump. Photograph: Robert F Bukaty/AP

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