Activists from the Maine Tea Party can largely be credited with
Gov. Paul LePage's election in 2010. And Maine supporters of
libertarian presidential candidate Ron Paul took over the state's
Republican convention in May and chose a slate of Paul supporters as
Maine's delegates to the National Republican Convention next month
in Florida.
But the Republican nominee for Maine's open U.S. Senate seat,
Charlie Summers, seems unlikely to benefit from the energy of those
two segments of the Republican party, which have played a growing
role in Maine Republican politics in recent years.
Summers, Maine's secretary of state, prevailed in a six-way
Republican primary last month and is facing Democrat Cynthia Dill
and three independents, including former Gov. Angus King, in the
race to replace retiring Maine Sen. Olympia Snowe.
"Certainly out of the candidates running, Charlie Summers is the
best one running, but not somebody I'm getting behind or endorsing,"
said Brent Tweed, a Paul supporter from North Berwick who was
elected chairman of this year's state Republican convention. "Right
now, there are a lot of important issues, and I don't really hear
anybody talking about them."
Tweed said he's concerned he hasn't heard more about serious
deficit reduction and returning the United States to a "non-
interventionist foreign policy."
"When we do get involved overseas," he said, "we need to follow
the Constitution and actually declare war before going to war."
Activists who have been involved in Paul's presidential campaign
and the Maine Tea Party say they're more likely to vote for Summers
in November than any other candidate, but not with a level of
enthusiasm that would motivate them to get involved in his election
efforts.
"I'm certainly not going to vote for Angus King or the Democrat,"
said Pete Harring of Auburn, who founded the Maine Tea Party and
runs a Maine Tea Party website. "That doesn't leave me much of an
alternative, does it? Basically, that's what it boils down to."
While Tea Party members don't have an ideal choice on the ballot
in November, Harring said they'll stay involved in Republican
politics and remain focused on their long-term objectives.
"Many Tea Party and Ron Paul people have put ourselves into the
structure of the Maine Republican Party with a long-term goal of
getting good, constitutional, liberty-minded people," he said. "In
order to do that, you need to maintain a Republican presence."
For his part, Summers said he's not sensing a significant
enthusiasm deficit among Republicans.
"I think that the party is incredibly enthusiastic," he said.
"The perspective which I come from, I think, is much more in line
with the average working-class person whether they consider
themselves to be a member of the Republican Party, the tea party,
the Ron Paul faction."
While Summers has the vote of Eric Brakey, the former Maine state
director for Paul's campaign said he'd be more excited about the
Republican Senate candidate if he supported a full audit of the
Federal Reserve and favored bringing all U.S. troops home from
overseas.
"We're not judging Charlie Summers based on his personality,"
Brakey said. "We're judging him on the issues. If he does come and
meet us on those issues, I would be happy to support him."
Summers said he's open to a full audit of the Federal Reserve, a
move supported by Paul as a way to bring more transparency to the
country's monetary policy. But he said job creation and government
spending come first on his agenda.
"Once we tackle those issues, I think we move to No. 2, No. 3,
No. 4, on down the line," he said. "There's obviously a myriad of
issues and concerns to deal with."
But bringing all U.S. troops home from overseas assignments is a
separate matter, said Summers, who serves in the U.S. Navy Reserve
and has been deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq.
"It's easy to say, 'Let's bring all the troops home,'" he said.
"It's a much different thing to actually effect that and do it in a
way that doesn't jeopardize our national security interests."
For Maine state Rep. Aaron Libby, a Waterboro Republican and Paul
supporter, bringing the troops home is a financial matter.
"We can't afford it," he said. "The country's broke, and we're
putting this debt on future generations."
While Libby will vote for Summers, he said, "I'm probably not
going to be too involved in the race."
And if Summers succeeds in November, Harring said, "we'll see
what happens with him, and if he doesn't cut the mustard, then we'll
get rid of him in six years."
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News Column
Tea Party, Ron Paul Activists Aren't Enthusiastic About Charlie Summers
July 9, 2012
Matthew Stone
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Source: (C) 2012 Bangor Daily News Bangor, ME.
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