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The Maine Idea: For presidential campaign clues, look abroad

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The Maine Idea: For presidential campaign clues, look abroad


Those trying to decipher America’s strange but undoubtedly consequential presidential election this year can glean some clues from two of our oldest and strongest allies.

Britain, though diminished by its dubious decision to leave the European Union through Brexit in 2016 and its subsequent succession of inept Conservative prime ministers, is still the most familiar comparison. It’s also one with recent historical parallels.

Ronald Reagan’s victory in 1980 was preceded by Margaret Thatcher’s takeover of the Conservative Party in 1975 and her sweeping victory in the 1979 election. It made her the longest-serving prime minister of the 20th century until her party unceremoniously dumped her in 1990.

Thatcher, like Reagan, aggressively opposed the Soviet Union, and matched his tax-cutting and privatization efforts. In her last year, she played a key role in convincing Reagan’s successor, George H.W. Bush, to launch an international effort rolling back Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein’s conquest of Kuwait.

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In the 1990s, Bill Clinton’s “New Democrat” image and his neoliberal economic policies were echoed by Tony Blair’s “New Labour,” reviving a moribund party that swept to victory in 1997. Blair lasted nearly as long as Thatcher, until Labour regulars turned on him for his unwavering support for George W. Bush’s misbegotten invasion of Iraq.

Labour couldn’t produce another leader with Blair’s appeal, and stumbled from election to election, with a 2019 wipeout reducing the party to its lowest standing in nearly a century.

Then the Conservatives split over Brexit and went through five prime ministers in seven years; one, Liz Truss, lasted just six weeks. The Conservatives’ chaos and Britain’s dismal economic performance opened the door to Labour once again.

In an election later this year, likely either May or October, Keir Starmer, Labour leader since 2020, is the odds-on favorite.

Starmer reminds some of Blair, but he comes from the North, not London, and presents a traditional Labour platform shorn of its excesses. He emphasizes restoring public services and investing in “green energy” to lead an economic revival – ideas reminiscent of Joe Biden.

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In the Middle East, Israel is also certain to hold an election, though when it will fall depends on how long the war in Gaza lasts.

For almost 15 years, Benjamin Netanyahu of the conservative Likud bloc has fought to maintain his authority as prime minister, now in an increasingly desperate attempt to escape accountability for Israel’s disastrous unpreparedness for the horrific Hamas attacks on Oct. 7.

Even worse, Netanyahu cynically funded Hamas in its overlordship of Gaza, dividing it from the much larger West Bank led by the Palestinian Authority – the better to short-circuit any discussion of the “two state” solution leading to Palestinian self-rule. He can’t last much longer.

Netanyahu shares power with opposition leader Benny Gantz along with the defense minister in a “war cabinet.” Gantz’s presence as a check on Netanyahu has kept Israel united following the unprecedented hostage-taking and massacres by Hamas.

When the war ends, Gantz will return to opposition and Netanyahu must call an election he will likely lose. He currently runs 20 points behind – as do the Conservatives under Prime Minister Rishi Sunak in Britain – and estimates are that Likud could lose a third of its seats in the Knesset, Israel’s parliament.

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While almost unknown to most American readers, Starmer and Gantz have similarities.

Both are new to politics. Starmer is a career public prosecutor first elected to Parliament in 2015. He is measured but not colorless, and a welcome contrast to the notorious Boris Johnson, removed by Conservatives despite his 2019 triumph.

Gantz was a career military officer who rose to Chief of Staff – a vital and respected role in a nation at war with its neighbors virtually since it was founded, with U.S. support, in 1948. Gantz entered politics only in 2018, erred in collaborating with Netanyahu after a drawn election, but has since recovered his standing.

As a commander, Gantz was decisive but patient – qualities one observes in the current U.S. president.

History has its cycles; parties rise and fall. That’s why it’s so odd Donald Trump is attempting to turn back the clock and pretend his 2020 defeat never happened.

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A candidate who in 2016 executed a hostile takeover of the Republican Party has now made it a wholly owned subsidiary, even as his financial empire collapses under the weight of countless court judgments.

In Britain, in Israel and in the United States those who attempt to deny reality to pursue or hang on to power are unlikely to be rewarded by voters.

Steady as she goes may not be an exciting slogan, but it may be exactly what our convulsive politics needs.

Douglas Rooks has been a Maine editor, columnist and reporter since 1984. His new book, “Calm Command: U.S. Chief Justice Melville Fuller in His Times, 1888-1910,” is available in bookstores and at www.melvillefuller.com. He welcomes comment at drooks@tds.net.


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Maine veterans find closure, connection on Honor Flight to D.C.

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Maine veterans find closure, connection on Honor Flight to D.C.


WASHINGTON, D.C. (WABI) – Maine veterans returned home Sunday after a weekend in Washington, D.C.

Giving local veterans and their loved ones a visit to the capital of the nation they dedicated their lives to is the aim of Honor Flight Maine.

Marking their second trip of the year, the nonprofit provided about 70 Pine Tree State veterans a free trip to Washington to visit the memorials and monuments dedicated to their service.

For many, this was this first time seeing the capital in person.

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“Unreal,” “a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” and “tear-dropping” were among the sentiments shared by veterans about the Honor Flight. Others remarked on the memories revived by visiting the ceremonial spaces.

“I have some friends that’s over there, so it really was nice,” said Edward Lee, a Vietnam veteran from Bangor.

Lee was able to find one friend’s name engraved on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. Using graphite and a piece of paper, he made a rubbing of the name to take home.

Rose Marie Curtis, a Navy nurse who served in Vietnam, said seeing the three nurses depicted at the Vietnam Women’s Memorial sent her back in time.

“For so many years, you don’t think about something. You’re doing this and doing that and having children, whatever. But this really brings you back,” Curtis described.

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Not only does the trip give veterans the opportunity to see these sites, it allows a chance to connect; with perhaps a past or present self, and with fellow veterans.

“It’s what makes Honor Flight Maine special because you’re with your own kind,” explained Charlie Paul, a Vietnam War veteran who has been involved with Honor Flight Maine for a decade. “We’re a segment of society, they remember us on Memorial Day. They remember us on Veteran’s Day. They remember us on Armed Forces Day. But then they forget about us. And so for us as an organization to take them down here and see their memorials, it just lets them know they’re that special.”

For Lincoln veteran Richard Rollins, the visit gave him “closure,” considering, “…when I got out of the service, I mean, to be honest, even in ’79, I was never thanked.”

Among former servicemembers of all ages, father-son veterans James and Michael Sherman said the trip opened up conversation, sharing stories they had never told each other about their service.

“It means the world that people care, and we shouldn’t wait a moment to tell the people that are important to us what they mean to us,” Michael Sherman remarked.

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Copyright 2026 WABI. All rights reserved.



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Car catches fire on Maine Turnpike in Kennebunk

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Car catches fire on Maine Turnpike in Kennebunk


KENNEBUNK, Maine (WGME) — A car caught on fire on the Maine turnpike Saturday.

It happened in Kennebunk in the southbound lanes of the turnpike.

A car caught on fire on the Maine turnpike Saturday. (Courtesy of Kennebunk Fire Rescue)

You can see a large cloud of black smoke coming from the scene.

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Nobody was hurt.

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Firefighters were able to extinguish the flames.



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In Maine governor’s race, connection is preferable to cronyism | Letter

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In Maine governor’s race, connection is preferable to cronyism | Letter


After Maine’s first Democratic gubernatorial debate, I commented that the candidates seemed to be vying with each other to be agreeable. Would it last? Back then, I thought I’d be happy with any of them as Maine’s next governor.

Not so now, as I observe the cronyism of Shenna Bellows, Troy Jackson and Hannah Pingree, whose plan to rank each other when they vote provides a blueprint for gaming the ranked-choice voting system in the primary. The political insiders are forming an alliance against the outsiders, Nirav Shah and Angus King III.

Shah’s campaign responded that it would stay focused on winning voters’ support, a more principled approach, in my estimation.

I prefer a governor who listens and learns from his constituents over one experienced at alliances and deal-making. I want integrity and leadership, not manipulation and exclusion.

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I no longer believe that Bellows, Jackson or Pingree would make a good governor.

Moriah Freeman
Brunswick

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