The Punxsutawney Spirit

Joe Brennan, Democratic former governor of Maine and US congressma­n, dies at 89

- By David Sharp

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Democrat Joseph E. Brennan, whose hardscrabb­le childhood shaped his working-class views in a political career that included two terms as Maine's governor and two terms in the U.S. House, died Friday evening at his home in Portland. He was 89.

Brennan died with his wife at his side a few blocks from the third-floor tenement housing on Munjoy Hill where his Irish immigrant parents raised a family of eight children, Frank O'Hara, a longtime friend, said Saturday.

Brennan's experience in that neighborho­od, a working-class melting pot, stayed with him when he entered politics with a campaign for the Maine Legislatur­e at age 29, O'Hara said.

An Army veteran, Brennan attended Boston College under the GI Bill and graduated from the University of Maine Law School. He served as a county district attorney and state attorney general, in addition to state lawmaker, governor and congressma­n.

Former Democratic Gov. Joe Baldacci called Brennan “a friend, a mentor and a dedicated servant.”

“He was a man of the highest integrity, who led Maine through difficult times. He believed that he had an obligation to make things better, and he lived that ideal through his commitment to public education and improving the state’s economy,” Baldacci said.

As attorney general, Brennan participat­ed in negotiatio­ns with Wabanaki tribes and the federal government on what became the Maine Indian Land Claims Settlement Act of 1980, which was signed by President Jimmy Carter when Brennan was governor.

Also as governor, Brennan launched education reforms, pressed for tough highway safety measures and helped establish the Finance Authority of Maine.

Current Gov. Janet Mills, a fellow Democrat who was appointed by Brennan in 1980 as the first woman to serve as district attorney, said her selection despite objections from a number of men at the time put her on a path to become Maine’s first female governor.

“Gov. Brennan demonstrat­ed for me and others that politics is about building relationsh­ips, that public service is not about enriching yourself but about enriching the lives of others, and that the most important relationsh­ip is the one we have with the people we serve,” she said.

Another key appointmen­t by Brennan was tapping George Mitchell, a federal judge, in 1980 to fill the seat vacated by Democratic U.S. Sen. Edmund Muskie, who resigned to become secretary of state.

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