69 research outputs found
Expectations and the 1994 Maine Elections
The 1994 elections at the national and state level resulted in significant changes all across the political landscape. Bowdoin professor of government Christian Potholm analyzes the nature of that change and its implications forMaine
Interview with Chris Potholm by Andrea L’Hommedieu
Biographical NoteChristian P. Potholm holds a chair in government and legal studies at Bowdoin College. He took his graduate work at Tufts University and specializes in Maine politics, warfare, African politics, and international conflict. He previously taught at Vassar, Dartmouth, and the College of the Virgin Islands. He worked on Harry Richardson’s staff and was Bill Cohen’s campaign manager in 1972; he continued to work for Cohen while also teaching at Bowdoin. He is the author of fourteen books on politics and founded Command Research, a national polling firm, and the Potholm Group, a consulting group that specializes in ballot measure initiatives.
SummaryInterview includes discussion of: George Mitchell’s 1974 run for governor of Maine; Potholm’s role working for Harry Richardson in the 1974 campaign; Mitchell’s being appointed to Ed Muskie’s Senate seat in 1980; Mitchell’s reelection campaign against Dave Emery in 1982; the changes Mitchell made in his 1982 campaign from his 1974 campaign; Mitchell’s partisanship compared to Margaret Chase Smith, Ed Muskie, and Bill Cohen; Ed Muskie’s partisanship; Potholm’s position on Bill Cohen’s staff; Mitchell’s and Cohen’s relationship; Mitchell’s 1988 campaign against Jasper Wyman; Mitchell and PAC money; Mitchell’s TV interviewing style; Public Utilities Commission investigation; Potholm’s continuing relationship with Bill Cohen; Bill Cohen’s current projects; and the placement of Cohen’s papers at the University of Maine, Orono
Contemporary Attitudes of Franco Americans
In 2012, the 125th Maine Legislature established the Maine Task Force on Franco-Americans. As articulated in LD 1601,1 the purpose of the Task Force was to gather basic Franco American demographic data, investigate various dimensions of the Franco American heritage in Maine, evaluate the current economic and educational circumstances of this population group, and report to the Legislature its findings by the end of the year. The Task Force was to meet four times. LD 1601 called upon the University of Maine’s Franco American Centre to support the Task Force’s work.
The Task Force on Franco-Americans was chaired by Representative Ken Fredette of Newport and Senator Thomas Martin of Benton. Other members included Representative Brian Bolduc of Auburn, Juliana L’Heureux of Topsham, Yvon Labbé of Greenville, Severin Beliveau of Hallowell, David Madore of Augusta, Daniel Deveau of Van Buren, Susan Pinette of Orono, Gilman Pelletier of Waterville, Raymond Lagueux of Lewiston, and James Lemieux of Pittsfield. The committee staff consisted of two members: Karen Nadeau-Drillen, legislative analyst, and Natalie Haynes, legislative analyst, both at the Office of Policy and Legal Analysis, Maine Legislature.
Given the limits of scientific data specific to Franco Americans in Maine, the Task Force determined that it needed not only to examine existing statistics and research material, but also to inquire into current attitudes among Maine’s Franco American population, to ascertain first- person views on a number of subjects not covered by other data collection methods, including the most recent U.S. Census.
Toward that end, in keeping with the long-term vision Representative Ken Fredette proposed for the Task Force, the Franco American Centre at the University of Maine commissioned a 600-person attitudinal survey carried out by Command Research, a Maine-based, national public opinion survey company, located in Harpswell.
Funding for this survey was made possible by the generosity of a number of people and organizations, especially the University of Maine, the University of Southern Maine, the University of Maine at Fort Kent, the University of Maine System, the Forum Francophone des Affaires (FFA-USA), Representative Ken Fredette, and Juliana L’Heureux.
Command Research conducted field work during late July and early August of 2012. The study consisted of a 55-question survey administered to 600 self-described Franco American adults in Maine who were chosen at random based on the statewide geographical distribution of this population group. The normal statistical margin of error for a study of this type is plus or minus .04 at the 95th level of confidence.
An initial exploration of the findings of this survey, together with important census data and secondary research, provide the basis for this Occasional Paper #1. It is our hope that this paper will stimulate further research into the thousands of pages of findings already generated, and that it will engender further explorations of the attitudes of Franco American communities in Maine—indeed of all communities in Maine—on an ongoing basis
Book Reviews
Reviews of the following books: An Upriver Passamaquoddy by Allen J. Sockabasin; The Murder of Mary Bean and Other Stories by Elizabeth A. DeWolfe; American Silk, 1830-1930: Entrepremeurs and Artifacts by Jackqueline Field, Marjorie Senechal and Madelyn Shaw
One Of Many
On an early spring evening in the year of 1891 a young man stood leaning against the rai I of the steamship Tekla of the Danish Tingvalla Line, his dark hair blowing in the breeze and his blue eyes riveted on the scene before him. He was entirely oblivious to the commotion around him, even to the boisterous calls of his shipmates, We\u27re there - at last we\u27re there - soon we\u27ll be picking up gold from the streets and licking honey from the trees
Book Reviews
Reviews of the following books: The Penobscot Dance of Resistence: Tradition in the History of a People by Pauleena MacDougall; Maine’s Visible Black History: The First Chronicle of its People by H. H. Price and Gerald E.Talbot; Borderland Smuggling: Patriots, Loyalists, and Illicit Trade in the Northeast, 1783-1820 by Joshua M. Smith
Book Reviews
Reviews of the following books: At the Place of the Lobsters and Crabs: Indian People and Deer Isle, Maine, 1605-2005 by William A. Haviland; A History of the Italians in the State of Maine by Vincent A. Lapomarda; Beckets & Hinges: Sea Tales of Old North Yarmouth, Maine by Captain Charles C. and Abbie B. Oakes. Edited and illustrated by Arnold H. Sturtevant; Joshua Bross Rich (1820-1897): The Life and Works of a Western Maine Pioneer and Wildlife Writer by William B. Kroh
Book Reviews
Reviews of the following books: Mill Girls and Strangers: Single Women\u27s Independent Migration in England, Scotland and the United States, 1850-1881 by Wendy M. Gordon; Hauling by Hand: The Life and Times of a Maine Island by Dean Lawrence Lunt; Twelve Thousand Years: American Indians in Maine by Bruce J. Bourque with contributions by Steven L. Cox and Ruth H. Whitehead; Alnobak: A Story of Indigenous People in Androscoggin County by Nancy Coffin Lecompt
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