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ShazzieB

(23,143 posts)
11. Nobody wants a repeat of what happened in 2024, but I think this situation is a lot different.
Thu Jul 9, 2026, 01:05 PM
Yesterday

Maine is just one, largely rural state with a population of less than 1.5 million, and the people whose names end up on the November ballot will be running to represent the people of Maine in the US Senate. That's a very different dynamic from a nationwide presidential election.

I know we feel like we all have a stake in this (and we do), but at the end of the day, this is up to Maine, and Maine Democrats have the right to handle this as they see fit, whether the rest of us agree or not. Frustrating as that may be, it is what it is.

We also don't know yet know all the details of how this is going to work. As Party leaders have said, "the full timeline, details for how the nomination process will move forward, information about how to participate, and requirements for candidates" will be released soon. I suggest we wait for more information before we panic, and thst we not assume this is going to be a repeat of the 2024 presidential election.

Recommendations

3 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

I'm glad it's a larger pool of people. GPV Yesterday #1
No ordinary voters? MichMan Yesterday #2
Your point? They are bringing in 500 Democrats in Maine Easterncedar Yesterday #3
I'm expecting those chosen to have party connections, big donors, or as current elected officials MichMan Yesterday #4
Party members, sure Easterncedar Yesterday #5
A true caucus allows many people from all walks of life to participate; it isn't limited to a select group. MichMan Yesterday #6
The timeline to select a replacement and get them placed on the fall ballot is small and arranging a statewide caucus 33taw Yesterday #8
Exactly, Sioux Falls is going through that predicament right now in mayor's race... IthinkThereforeIAM Yesterday #13
Nobody wants a repeat of what happened in 2024, but I think this situation is a lot different. ShazzieB Yesterday #11
There are only 18 days until we need a nominee. SamuelAdams Yesterday #12
Collins Jughead Yesterday #7
This is not a DNC decision. This is a decision by the state party. 33taw Yesterday #9
I doubt Planter would have been.... reACTIONary Yesterday #10
"Depending on what course the state party follows, the expedited nomination process could allow the party sop Yesterday #14
Now they're talking! A convention. The right approach to pick a candidate who can hopefully win. n/t PatrickforB Yesterday #15
Platner has an opportunity radical noodle 22 hrs ago #16
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