Six Congressional candidates meet in Bath for debate
Paula Gibbs
Six Democrats sat side by side in the Bath Middle School cafeteria
Sunday night, talking about why they disagree with Republicans, and why
they also disagree with one another on occasion.
Three newspaper editors and residents of the midcoast area quizzed the
candidates, who are all trying to win their party's nomination next month
in Maine's First Congressional District. The seat is now held by U.S. Rep.
Tom Allen, who is not seeking re-election to the seat.
The debate was sponsored and organized by Coastal Journal editor, Geena
Hamilton. Others on the panel were Jim McCarthy, managing editor of the
Times Record, and Paula Gibbs, editor of the Wiscasset Newspaper.
The candidates are Michael Brennan, Adam Cote, Mark Lawrence, Steve
Meister, Chellie Pingree and Ethan Strimling.
One of the common views of the candidates was their opposition to the
Bush administration's "shredding of the Constitution," especially the
passage of the Patriot's Act.
Mark Lawrence, who has been a District Attorney in York County, said,
"You can be tough on crime without trampling people's Constitutional
rights."
Another common theme was, in the words of Ethan Strimling, "the Bush
tax policy set up to benefit the rich."
Predatory lending by some of the banks and mortgage companies came
under fire from several of the candidates, including Adam Cote, who said
Congress should crack down on the practice and provide incentives to
switch over to 30 year fixed mortgages.
Lawrence agreed.
"The Congress should hold immediate hearings on this. Our banking
regulatory system was created in the 1930s - there are lending schemes
outside of this. Credit card companies encourage people to go further and
further into debt. We used to have usury laws the regulated interest
charges.
Chellie Pingree agreed.
"There has been a lack of oversight on the part of the government. The
Democrats are just as much at fault on this as the Republicans are," she
said. Pingree said Congress should look into providing "bail outs" for
areas of the country where there are entire neighborhoods of abandoned
homes.
Michael Brennan called for the establishment of a consumer products
division, "so that consumers have a better way to evaluate problems."
"Congress bailed out Bear Stearns, but they haven't figured out how to
bail out homeowners," he added.
Jim McCarthy asked the candidates which committee they would like to
serve on and why. Brennan said Energy and Commerce or Health Care and
Education.
Steve Meister, a pediatrician, said he would also like to serve on the
Energy and Commerce Committee because of the need to oversee
pharmaceutical companies. Strimling said being on the Ways and Means
Committee would give him an opportunity to influence how revenue is
collected and repeal the Bush tax cuts.
Cote said if he served on the Energy and Commerce Committee, he would
be in a position to "influence major legislation to bring money to the
Brunswick Naval Air Station for re-development - for a green energy park
or a research and technology park."
"I would choose Armed Services," Lawrence said, in order to protect the
shipyards in Kittery and Bath.
Admitting the chance of a freshman getting on the Appropriations
Committee isn't great, Pingree said this would be her choice. "This is
where we spend our money, and where I could do the most for Maine," she
said.
Asked whether they would vote for more money for the war in Iraq,
Pingree, Lawrence, Strimling, and Brennan all said they would not. Pingree
noted that she also opposed the war in 2002.
Both Cote and Meister said they oppose continuing the war, but agreed
there cannot be an immediate pullout. Cote served in Iraq, leading over
100 missions.
"The problem is we tried to transplant a society into another culture,"
Cote said.
Meister, who served in the U.S. Navy in the Gulf War, said, "We can't
just suddenly leave - there would be a horrible humanitarian
disaster."
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