Some people say they find Gov. Paul LePage refreshing. The governor says what he thinks, they say, and he comes across as a plain spoken, regular guy, talking politics like someone you’d meet at the local coffee shop. But we have a right to hold the governor to a much higher standard than we have for any local loudmouth blowing off steam.
Editorials
VIEW FROM ELSEWHERE: Time to fix Social Security is now, not later
The Social Security trustees projected this week that funding for retirement benefits will run short in 2033, three years sooner than had been estimated a year ago. After that, the program will be able to pay only about 75 percent of the amount now promised to retirees and the disabled.
OUR OPINION: On infrastructure bonds, lawmakers need to push back
We have a message for everyone who travels on a crumbling road to get to work, or hopes to get a job putting some of those roads back into shape: Gov. Paul LePage is holding you hostage.
OUR OPINION: Candidates seem warier of using public financing
The jury is coming back into the room, and the verdict doesn’t look good for the Clean Elections law.
VIEW FROM ELSEWHERE: Domestic violence is not a political issue
The first time Congress reauthorized the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA), in 2000, it expanded the reach of the law, better meeting the needs of older victims and disabled individuals.
OUR OPINION: No place in politics for words evoking violent images
This shouldn’t have to be said again, but unfortunately it has become necessary: Sadly, amid all the criticisms of figures in public life that now surround us, it would be a great advance in civility simply to stop using violent images about harming or even killing people with whom we disagree.
Stop, look and listenmore relevant now than ever
As our experience with the ever-increasing busyness of life grows greater, so do worries that our focus on technological gadgets is slowly shutting out the world around us.
Budget compromise:Fear of LePage trumps GOP’s word
The last eight days saw a historical first in Maine government as Gov. Paul LePage cast a pair of line-item vetoes to dilute a bipartisan budget compromise.
Tax ideas span partisan divide, not wealth gap
If they are not careful, President Barack Obama and the man who wants to take away his job are in danger of coming to a consensus on the right direction for America’s tax policy.
Feds crack downon cooking ebooks
There’s a tradition in the publishing industry of paying writers “by the word,” but a group of the nation’s largest book publishers, along with one of its major computer makers, is now accused of making readers pay excessive prices for their words.