Same-day registration could yield high voter turnout in Maine

Same-sex marriage is returning to the ballot in November, three years after Maine voters rejected the law. Election Day registration, which Maine voters restored last year, could increase turnout among same-sex marriage supporters. And with presidential candidates on the ballot, turnout for both sides is likely to be high.

Marriage rights passed in the spring of 2009 by the Democratic Maine Legislature and governor, then the law was rejected in November 2009 when 53 percent voted to repeal it. The People’s Veto repeated last November when voters restored Election Day registration, which the Republican-controlled Maine Legislature ended five months prior.

Republicans generally oppose Election Day registration, saying that it leaves elections vulnerable to error.

Election Day registration could mean higher turnout for same-sex marriage supporters, said Mike Tipping, a magazine blogger and communications director for the progressive grassroots organization that led the People’s Veto in 2011.

“I think it could affect the vote,” Tipping said. “I think that people who are registering for the first time might be more likely to be young, and might be more likely to support marriage rights.”

The 2011 election was the first in 38 years when Maine residents could not 
register and vote on Election Day. Sixty percent of the 400,000 who voted last November, supported Election Day registration. But the turnout to repeal same-sex marriage was greater, drawing 570,000 voters in 2009.

By Alex Remington, News21

 

Maine primary showcases race for U.S. Senate seat vacated by Snowe

The race for the U.S. Senate highlights Maine’s primary today, but the presumed frontrunner is not even on the ballot.

Voters are choosing among four Democratic candidates and six Republican candidates, all vying to face former Gov. Angus King, an independent who does not face a primary challenge. King is seen by many as the favorite because of the weaknesses of the major parties.

In 2010, Democrats lost both houses of the Maine legislature and the governor’s office, but Republicans suffered defeat in a 2011 special election as voters repealed a GOP-backed law that ended election-day voter registration.

That law was sponsored by Maine Secretary of State Charlie Summers, one of the leading candidates for the seat from which Republican Sen. Olympia Snowe is retiring.

The Waterville Morning Sentinel reported light voting so far, and that officials had predicted less than 20 percent turnout.

By Alex Remington, News21