Yup, yup, yup! Old Baldy, the Zombie of Bangor, has the unions talking up Dirigo health for him, not admitting that the program is deep in the red just a year after its launch.
And Baldy's leadership position on heating oil and fuel shortages? It's Bush's fault.
Elected to lead Maine out of her economic doldrums, Baldy has decided that with over two hundred countries in the world to do business with, economic salvation lies in a $10 million deal with Fidel!
What a putz! What a loser!
Maine: Governor's rating down in survey
AUGUSTA Gov. John E. Baldaccis job approval rating plunged over the cliff this week, according to a New Jersey-based polling organizations state-by-state comparison of chief executives.
Although nearly 70 percent of respondents approved of his job performance in a February poll, according to one Maine pollster, Baldaccis approval rating plummeted to 37 percent over the weekend, according to SurveyUSA, one of the countrys largest computerized polling companies.
A subsidiary of Hypotenuse Inc. of Verona, N.J., SurveyUSA conducts numerous bullet polls for 50 television stations across the country, including WLBZ-TV Channel 2 in Bangor and WCSH-TV Channel 6 in Portland.
On the second floor of the State House, the governors office was taking the news in stride Wednesday.
Polls come and go, said Lynn Kippax, spokesman for the governor. The governors worked hard for Maine and he believes the people know that.
The poll was conducted last Friday through Sunday by a computerized calling system that randomly sampled 600 adults. Information at the firms Web site indicated the poll had a margin of error of 4.1 percent.
Fifty-two percent of those polled were women. Twenty-seven percent were ages 18 to 34, 42 percent were 35 to 54, and the remainder were 55 or older. Ninety-seven percent of the respondents described themselves as Caucasians. Politically, 29 percent were Republicans, 30 percent were Democrats, and 40 percent were not enrolled in a party. One percent were not sure of their political affiliation. The results were posted at www.ksdk.com/news/governor_ranking.aspx .
Respondents were asked, Do you approve or disapprove of the job John Baldacci is doing as governor? Thirty-seven percent of those questioned said they approved, 55 percent said they disapproved, and 9 percent were unsure. (Percentages dont add up to 100 because of rounding.)
Maines Democratic governor received the lowest approval rating of all New England governors and ranked 39th in the country, according to the survey. North Dakotas Gov. John Hoeven received the highest approval rating at 71 percent, and Ohio Gov. Bob Taft received the lowest at 19 percent. The average approval rating in the survey was 48 percent.
The poll was taken in the aftermath of intense debates at the State House over a $5.7 billion state budget that was narrowly approved in a party-line vote by majority Democrats. The budget is balanced in part by language authorizing a loan of up to $450 million, to pay down debt on the state retirement system, provide $250 million in additional education funds to municipalities and bolster the states budget stabilization fund.
Republicans at the State House argued the Democratic budget should rely more on spending cuts than borrowing. They since have staged a counterattack by promoting a signature-gathering effort to place the borrowing component of the budget issue on the ballot in November in the form of a peoples veto. Meanwhile, the peoples veto and the budget borrowing plan are both factors that representatives of Wall Street bonding houses said could nudge the states bond rating downward this year.
Not surprisingly, Republicans on Wednesday were quick to seize upon the poll results, which they perceived as a harbinger of the 2006 election cycle and Baldaccis bid for a second term.
These poll numbers seem to reflect what we have been hearing from voters across the state, who are very much aware of the governors lack of leadership on the issues that are most important to them, namely: the size of the state budget and the $450 million borrowing proposal, said Randy Bumps, the GOP state chairman. Those are the issues that resonate with them.
Even Pat Colwell, the state chairman of the Maine Democratic Party, had to admit the governors numbers had probably dropped in the heat of the vigorous budget debate at the State House. But he doubted Baldacci could have fallen to the depths indicated by the SurveyUSA poll.
These bullet polls are notorious for being inaccurate, he said. ``It is just a snapshot. When youre in a position like the governor of the state of Maine and you have to make tough decisions to move our state forward, I think there will always be folks working against you. But I also think people in Maine trust John Baldacci and know hes been growing jobs, investing in education and keeping his promises.
Some pollsters in Maine also were skeptical of the SurveyUSA results. Patrick Murphy at Strategic Marketing Services in Portland released a poll in February that placed Baldaccis job approval rating at 67.5 percent. Murphy questioned the methodology used in computerized telephone polling, saying, I cannot fathom that kind of a drop in Baldaccis approval ratings.
Kevin Fay, at Critical Insights in Portland, shared similar concerns about the reliability of computer-based polling techniques and also found it hard to believe the governors approval rating could have taken such a dive.
Thats the kind of thing you might expect if the states bond rating dropped to junk and there was complete gridlock over property tax reform and that basically nothing was working right, Fay said.
Amy Fried, a political science professor at the University of Maine, said it was important to cross-reference the polls findings with any other existing surveys given the wide disparity in results over the four-month period. She added the Mothers Day weekend also could have skewed the results.
Theres some polling firms that wont do polling over a big holiday because they cant find a lot of folks, she said.
Jay Levee, an editor with SurveyUSA, said the voice used to ask the questions in Maine belonged to Pat Callaghan, a news anchorman at WCSH-TV in Portland. He defended his firms 12-year history in Maine and encouraged Internet users to visit the companys site at www.surveyusa.com .
People can make conjecture about the results, but the reality is our track record is unsurpassed, Levee said.
PORTLAND - Maine Gov. John E. Baldacci and his staff swapped agricultural anecdotes with Cuban dictator Fidel Castro this weekend while closing a $20 million trade deal with the Marxist regime. The visit with Castro has drawn criticism from some state lawmakers.
Arriving Tuesday morning at the Portland Jetport from Montreal, the governor said agriculture was the only topic broached during his meeting with Castro, who served as Cuba's premier from 1959 until 1976 and has since assumed the title of president.
"He wanted to know how Maine dairy cows had produced versus the Pennsylvania cows that had gone there before and which was able to produce the most volume and content," Baldacci said. "It was a very detailed agricultural discussion which former Agriculture Commissioner [Robert] Spear and he engaged in for about 20 minutes."
The United States government broke diplomatic relations with Cuba in 1959 and has maintained a mission in Havana since 1977. The U.S. allows food to be sold directly to the country on a cash basis, but continues to ban Cuban exports.
Maine's Democratic governor said he was aware his visit to Cuba might be perceived as controversial by some, given that government's harsh treatment of dissidents and political opponents.
In its 2005 report, Amnesty International maintained dissidents are routinely threatened, harassed, detained and imprisoned. Castro has barred Amnesty International representatives from the country for the last 17 years.
Baldacci's visit followed the observance of International Human Rights Day on Saturday in Cuba, where wives of imprisoned political prisoners, known as the Ladies in White, joined leading Cuban dissidents who claimed government repression worsened in 2005.
In a Saturday interview with Reuters news service, U.S. mission chief Michael Parmly said Castro was targeting political opponents by dispatching mobs of government supporters to demonstrate outside their homes.
The Havana-based American diplomat described the strategy as a "particularly disgusting" practice that recalled Nazi brownshirts or the Ku Klux Klan.
Human rights violations, however, were not even on Baldacci's radar screen when his plane touched down in Havana. The governor said he was there to do anything he could to bolster Maine's economy.
"As governor of the state of Maine and having businesses that depend on this and being allowed under federal law and being monitored and scrutinized very closely and [with] 37 other states doing the same thing, I thought it was important to be there to support those businesses," Baldacci said. "It had been [Maine's] third mission and [businessmen and the department representatives] had told me, 'Governor, we need you in order to raise the visibility of the Maine delegation so we can get contracts and business.' (The trip) greatly exceeded the expectations, doubling what had originally been the contract price at the beginning."
Despite the fact that the trade mission will benefit numerous Maine industries and businesses, including apple and potato growers and dairy cattle farmers, Baldacci's trip to the communist country was assailed by Republican legislative leaders who claimed the governor's Havana stop amounted to "political grandstanding."
"There was no reason for him to fly all the way down there at taxpayers' expense other than political grandstanding and posturing and to embarrass President Bush," said House Republican leader David Bowles of Sanford in a prepared statement. "It worries me that he's willing to meet with communist rulers who have absolutely no regard for human rights. If trade is the goal, why not go to friendly countries? Also, I question why the governor is spending so much time traveling when we have tremendous problems here in Maine with health insurance costs and other serious issues."
Sen. Paul Davis of Sangerville, leader of Senate Republicans, insisted Maine farmers could have still received the benefits of the trade agreements without Baldacci allowing himself to "become a propaganda tool against our own government."
"People have died trying to escape Castro's Cuba," Davis said. "People are in prison there for disagreeing with his policies. Yet our governor thinks it is important for him to show the world that Maine is willing to hold hands with Fidel. He could have helped the farmers just as much by helping us lower the tax burden they face year after year."
Crystal Canney, communications director for Baldacci, said the Cuba trip had "everything to do with Maine's economy and nothing to do with politics."
Baldacci said earlier that another Cuban trade mission could be on the state's agenda in April.