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MAINE HERITAGE POLICY CENTER HAS RIVAL
Progressives form own think tank
By SUSAN M. COVER
Staff Writer
Kennebec Journal & Morning Sentinel Thursday, August 02, 2007

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AUGUSTA -- A new progressive group plans to push its agenda and provide an opposing view to the conservative Maine Heritage Policy Center.

To help them reach their goals, the Maine Civic Engagement Project, or Maine Blueprint, announced Wednesday that it has hired Maine Democratic Party Chairman Ben Dudley to serve as its first executive director.

"This type of work suits me really well," said Dudley, 37. "There's a nonpartisan political piece and a real strong policy component that I missed when I left the Legislature last year."

Dudley will continue as party chairman until a new leader is selected Aug. 12. He begins his new job the following day.

Maine Blueprint is a collaborative of 40 progressive nonprofits and 100 individuals who began meeting nearly two years ago, said Sarah Standiford, executive director of the Maine Women's Lobby. They have now raised enough money to hire an executive director who will advance the group's profile and its goals.

Although it won't be their main goal, Maine Blueprint will offer its perspective on matters of public policy to counter the conservative Maine Heritage Policy Center in Portland, Standiford said.

"There have been strategic investments made on the right," she said. "Maine Heritage Policy Center has yielded results in the public sphere about what people believe the problems to be."

But Maine Blueprint -- with members from environmental, gay rights and civil rights groups -- will offer a different perspective, she said.

Jason Fortin, a spokesman for the policy center, said Standiford's comments show that his group is a growing political force in Maine.

"If they're forming a new organization to counter our work, it's a testament to the quality of our research and our organization," he said.

Founded in November 2002, the policy center releases regular reports on the state's taxes, health care, income and schools. The group authored the Taxpayer Bill of Rights, a measure that would have capped spending that was rejected by voters last fall, and is hosting former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush later this month at a fundraiser in South Portland.

Maine Blueprint will conduct voter research to help it achieve its goals, recruit and train candidates for office and push to advance public policy. Coalition members said they haven't yet set specific goals, but their Web site names affordable health care, a healthy environment and good wages as part of its mission.

Funding for Maine Blueprint comes from a variety of national, regional and local sources, Standiford said. Among them are the Proteus Fund, a Massachusetts foundation that "supports organizations working to advance social justice and the common good."

She also named the Beldon Fund, which gives money to support environmental groups, and in-state donors who have given the group more than $20,000 each, she said.

This year's budget is less than $600,000, Standiford said.

Standiford, who serves as the group's committee chairwoman, said the group is progressive -- which is now used instead of liberal in political circles -- and nonpartisan.

"As far as I'm concerned, there are progressive Republicans, independents, Greens and Democrats," she said. "This is beyond party."

Christopher St. John, executive director of the Maine Center for Economic Policy, said the coalition will provide training opportunities for members, such as helping them communicate effectively with the public.

Last fall, the group worked with other organizations to defeat the Taxpayer Bill of Rights citizen initiative.

"We come from a variety of perspectives and are interested in developing ways to improve the environment for policies our separate organizations are interested in," he said.

For the Natural Resources Council of Maine, the coalition provides an opportunity to work in a large group.

"It will help us think bigger and be smarter about public policy that gets developed," said Joan Welsh, deputy director of NRCM.

Also, the groups will have a way to continue to work together beyond single-issue campaigns.

"At times in the past, we would come together to work on various issues, but we haven't stayed connected," she said.

Susan Cover -- 623-1056

scover@centralmaine.com

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Reader comments

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Jim Smith of Buxton, ME
Aug 2, 2007 10:29 AM

Jonny,

First off, the recently passed budget did not meet all of the requirements of TABOR. You shouldn't make those claims if you can't back it up. Although we're used to that in your blogs by now.

But secondly, and more hilariously, many of the pieces of the new tax shift plan proposed by democrats would have spit in the face of all of those Mainers who are sick of higher taxes and supported TABOR! It didn't pass because legislators (and yes, mostly republican legislators) knew better and stopped the ridiculous false claims of "making a difference" with a mere tax-shift bad policy. So not only were TABOR guidelines NOT met in the budget, the dems tried to go the other angle and make it even worse with a new tax rule to follow that up.

Facts are facts - this state needs a drastic change from democratic pandering. report abuse
Bunk of Hallowell, ME
Aug 2, 2007 9:53 AM
Children, children, let's not get lost in the morass of ideology and partisan labels. Why don't we do away with silly words like "Conservative", "Progressive", "Right-Left". If an individual or organization clearly states their agenda, so be it. If you like it, support it. If you don't, support one you agree with and work for it. Name calling is easy. Meeting the needs of hungry, medically disadvantaged, chronically unemployed people is not easy in a system designed to keep a certain percentage of its' populace in that condition. The Legislature does an awful job at it, BUT - they are the Senators & Representatives we send to Augusta to try to just that. If we could take our focus OFF the nastiness of bashing another because of his or her politics, and put our focus on the job at hand, wouldn't we all be better for it?

One need not agree with either the Maine Heritage Foundation or the Maine Civic Engagement Project, but at least these organizations are making attempts at finding ways to solve unmet needs.report abuse
Mohron of Gorham, ME
Aug 2, 2007 9:22 AM
There is something fundamentally wrong with a bunch of "non-profits" getting together and pooling monies to pay for a start-up lobbying organization.
This is just a back door way for liberal agendas to be heard, without carrying a specific label.

There should be a law passed to close this funding mechanism in non-profit bylaws.report abuse
Brian of West Gardiner, ME
Aug 2, 2007 8:42 AM
Well said Nonny!!!!!Liberals want to be called somthing else because liberal is associated with a four letter word and it aint..GOOD!

They are just trying to slither their socialist agenda deeper into Maine policy.

I dont believe Mainers will accept it this time, we have been bitten too many times by this snake in the grass!

Remember ...."progressives" means liberal democrats that want to tax you more and take away more of your rights!report abuse

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