Maine saw a spike in new voter registrations last month in a sign that enthusiasm for the presidential election may be building after President Biden dropped out of the race and endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris.
A total of 3,793 people registered to vote in July, with the number of registrations significantly jumping in the two weeks following Biden’s July 21 announcement he was exiting the race.
That’s more than any month in the past year with the exception of November 2023, according to data from the Maine Department of the Secretary of State.
The state doesn’t ask people for the reason they are registering to vote, but department spokesperson Emily Cook said election officials often see surges in the lead-up to elections.
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“The recent spike lines up with President Biden’s withdrawal from the presidential race,” Cook said.
It’s not clear how the registrations beak down by party, however, because Maine doesn’t track the data according to party or demographic information, such as hometowns, gender or age.
Nationally, some voter registration data in recent weeks has pointed to signs that Democrats energized by Harris’ candidacy is translating into new party registrations.
The battleground states of North Carolina and Pennsylvania saw a jump in Democratic voter registrations in late July, the New York Times reported. But there was also a big spike in Republican registrations in those states during the week of July 14, when the Republican National Convention was held on the heels of an assassination attempt against Donald Trump, the Time reported.
Data for Maine shows a small increase in new registrations during the week of July 14 – from 701 the week before to 757 the week of the assassination attempt and convention.
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Maine has about 955,285 active registered voters and has enrolled 31,328 new voters in the past year.
More than 5,000 people registered to vote last November, and the state also saw a spike in registrations in March, around the time of the presidential primary.
In the first three weeks of July, 1,884 people registered to vote in Maine, while that number almost doubled to 3,221 registrations in the three weeks following Biden’s announcement.
Jason Savage, executive director of the Maine Republican Party, said in an email Wednesday that he didn’t have the latest data on Republican registrations in Maine yet, but that anecdotally, the party is hearing strong enthusiasm for the Republican ticket of Trump and Ohio Sen. JD Vance.
“We are hearing from voters that they will be supporting Republicans to fight inflation, secure the border, bring energy costs down and make our streets safer,” Savage said.
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Harris’ husband, Doug Emhoff, visited Maine in late July for a campaign stop and fundraisers, and the Harris campaign in Maine has said that it saw a spike in volunteer interest following Biden’s decision to leave the race.
Annina Breen, a spokesperson for the Maine Democratic Party, said Wednesday that the party doesn’t yet have a registration breakdown for the period following Biden’s exit from the race.
But she said the party has seen a “huge grassroots groundswell of support” since Harris entered the race and that thousands of Mainers have signed up to volunteer to help elect Harris and Maine Democrats up and down the ballot.
“We’re excited that so many Mainers are registering to vote and are making plans to cast their ballots on Nov. 5,” Breen said.
In Portland, which has about 50,781 registered voters, City Clerk Ashley Rand said there have been 571 new registrations and changes to registrations since July 1.
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The city’s data does not break down between new registrations or updates made if someone moves, changes their name or switches parties.
“We haven’t heard of any particular event or movement spiking new registrations,” Rand said in an email.
She noted that the secretary of state’s office advertised that the election is upcoming in July and publicly shared an online voter registration link.
In addition, Rand said the city announced last week that voters can now request an absentee ballot for November, and included the online voter registration link in its news release and social media posts to remind voters to make sure they are registered and that their addresses and names are up to date.
Despite retaliation from their employer, nurses affirm their commitment to their patients and their union
Over two years since Northern Maine Medical Center (NMMC) first formed their union and began bargaining in good faith for a first contract, nurses remain committed to the patients they serve, and to making their hospital the best place it can be for everyone. Union nurses at NMMC signed the letter they released today, which says in part:
“Over the past two years, you have no doubt heard about the conflict that has grown between the hospital and us.
We want you to know that we never asked for this fight. The initiative to organize our union was to protect ourselves and our patients, not to punish any individuals or the hospital as a whole.”
The nurses’ letter goes on to say that their immediate goals as a union include: winning safe staffing for nurses and patients, promoting transparency and accountability at NMMC, retaining our local providers and staff, and making their hospital sustainable for the long term.
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Terry Caron, RN and member of the nurses’ bargaining team said: “Two years ago, we decided to have a voice for ourselves and our patients by forming our union. The NMMC administration could have met us halfway, but it did not. It has only fought us and tried to punish us for speaking up. But we are as committed to our goals as ever. We will never stop fighting for our patients.”
NMMC nurses were joined today by Maine Senate President Mattie Daughtry, gubernatorial candidate Troy Jackson, and U.S. Senate candidate Graham Platner. They echoed the nurses’ call for NMMC CEO Jeff Zewe to stop his retaliation against the nurses and to finalize the union contract for which the nurses have been bargaining for most of the past two years.
Maine State Nurses Association is part of National Nurses Organizing Committee, representing 4,000 nurses and other caregivers from Portland to Fort Kent. NNOC is an affiliate of National Nurses United, the largest and fastest-growing labor union of registered nurses in the United States with nearly 225,000 members nationwide.
Max McClung scored 12 of his 33 points in the fourth quarter, and the Windy City Bulls went on a 15-2 run in the fourth quarter to pull away for a 121-106 win over the Maine Celtics in an NBA G League game Friday night at the Portland Expo.
Kevin Knox II added 30 points, 21 in the second half.
Amari Williams led the Celtics with 26 points, nine rebounds and eight assists. Jalen Bridges made six 3-pointers and finished with 22 points, but the Celtics dropped to 2-8 in their last 10 games. Maine has lost four straight games at the Expo.
Press Herald sports writers nominate high school athletes from the prior week’s games.
Readers vote for their top choice and the winner will be announced in the newspapers the following Sunday all season long!
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