Anyway, if Democrats want to prove Susan Collins is vulnerable in Maine--the Governor, the State Senate, and one of the two House members are all Republican, and all of those offices are up for election in a month.
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(Yes, often the lower-level stuff flips after the high-profile federal stuff...but given Collins' past popularity and election margins...)
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I'd make some spreadsheet with D and R fundraising numbers for the Maine State Senate but I did that before 2016 and it was pretty useless (because elections AREN'T JUST ABOUT WHO BOTHERS RAISING MONEY WHICH BOTH PARTIES OFTEN DO BTW).
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Sigh, that said, I can't help myself. These are all R-held Maine Senate districts, which Republicans control by one vote. Which means nothing except I'd better not hear "Democrats never invest down-ballot" if they lose (and yet, I still will hear that, as I have for a decade).pic.twitter.com/LZ1bH46yY9
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Maine has that clean elections law, though, which complicates the calculus. Candidates can choose to take state funding which is politically popular with voters
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