Morning Sentinel
COLLINS VS. ALLEN
Tracking
Campaign 2008
Kennebec Journal & Morning Sentinel

Susan Collins, the junior Republican senator from Maine, is no shrinking violet. While soft-spoken, she's wielded a big stick over federal bureaucrats when, for example, they fatally botched the Katrina rescue and cleanup in Louisiana. She's taken on the Bush administration over homeland security issues as well as intelligence reform. When she gets on television -- which she does often -- that trademark quavery voice of hers is more than capable of delivering a polite sucker punch to her latest targets. The lady from the County is tough.

That's why we were mystified this week when Collins all of a sudden morphed into a wilting victim suffering from the mean and nasty campaign tactics of her brutish Democratic challenger in the 2008 Senate race, Rep. Tom Allen of Portland. It was awfully out of character.

Supporters of Allen in the Maine Democratic Party had arranged to employ one of the latest campaign maneuvers of the digital age, so-called "tracking." That's the polite word for what can easily be seen as hounding a candidate, video camera in hand, to record their every breath, utterance and, presumably, campaign-demolishing stumble that would otherwise have gone ignored. Those video snippets have been used by opposing candidates on YouTube and elsewhere on the Web -- most notoriously in the case of Sen. George Allen, R-Va., who was caught employing a racial slur -- to hurt the candidate.

It's rough stuff and not terribly nice, but nothing out of the ordinary in the modern world of campaigns. It's really just a new version of the old nastiness that has been a hallmark of political races since Cain ran against Abel for the mantle of First and Most Favored Child.

And like it or not, the Maine Senate campaign of 2008 is a big one out in the rest of the country, where it's well-appreciated that the balance of power in the Senate may very well hinge on what happens right here in this state. While many of us in Maine may be inclined to more kindly forms of campaigning, we don't own this race.

That said, we hope that candidate Allen and his friends and colleagues in the Democratic Party and the legions of so-called independent groups that have sprung up to support his candidacy refrain from hanging out in the gutter.

While Allen can technically claim that he had nothing to do with the Collins tracking -- and that he, too, had been the object of a tracker very recently -- that's the kind of explanation that provides a distinction without a difference. And already, the campaign verbiage issuing over the last few months from Allen's friends has been decidedly ugly and personal in tone as it trashes Collins and her record.

There are serious and substantive differences between Collins and Allen.

There's a lot at stake in this race.

There's a lot of time before the election.

In the best of all possible worlds, those three facts would set the stage for a long and thoughtful public discussion by the candidates of the future of this state and country.

But we will almost certainly also get plenty of cheap shots, innuendo and unflattering portrayals of Allen and Collins produced by the most highly partisan segment of their backers. Some of those tactics could employ meaningless missteps and misstatements caught on video by one of these trackers. While that may be momentarily amusing, that's not the stuff we want to base our votes on and we'll lose a boatload of respect for any candidate who uses such tactics.

On the other hand, we're not particularly interested in hearing the candidates whine about each other's campaign maneuvers. Collins did herself no favor by allowing her campaign to portray her as hounded prey; she's running; she's tough; this is a crucially important race. She can ill afford to present herself as the victim -- especially before she's been made into one.

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Reader comments

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jm of Augusta, ME
Aug 16, 2007 7:10 PM
My guess is that we'll see plenty of "dirty tricks" from Collins' supporters before the election season's over. What a surprise!report abuse
MarineVet of Central, ME
Aug 16, 2007 4:42 PM
Chris, get a grip! if you are in public, no matter who you are talking to, it is no longer private. Period. Especially if you are talking with a govt offical. I sure as heck hope people are watching and paying close attention to these little conversations on the side lines. If you want a private conversation dont go to a politcal event and talk with a Senator. Everything they do and say is our business and we pay for it, so dont try a foolish attempt at our freedom of speech crap with me. I want freedom of speech talking with my mother, not my Senator! If you start posting on YouTube what mom and I had for lunch I might not like it, if you post that I want her to fix my road because I have a 1.5 million dollar camp next door to hers, I hope everyone is listening for her answer. Speaking of listening, Collins voted in Favor of Bush's wiretapping recently, so I know she doesnt mind who is listening!report abuse
Chris of Harpswell, ME
Aug 16, 2007 4:27 PM
The fact is a political operative of the Maine Democratic Party was intimidating private citizens by taking video of them talking to Susan Collins at a parade. The private citizens who are on that video have no control over how the Maine Democratic party and Tom Allen's supporters chose to use it.

Imagine Tom Allen's campaign could put you on You-Tube, or worse, for exercising your right to free speech. Of course neither the Maine Democratic party nor Tom Allen's campaign have apologized for their paparazzi-like tactics against private citizens. Why would they - clearly all they care about is winning!report abuse
Kay of Durham, ME
Aug 16, 2007 4:07 PM
I'd like to know if Susan Collins and her staff are participating in unethical behavior:

http://whitenoiseinsanity.wordpress.com/2007/08/16/is-sen-susan-collins-staffers-participating-in-unethical-behavior-on-her-behalf/

Maybe this is why her paid blogger, Lance Dutson of Maine Web Report (www.mainewebreport.com) is going after those "foul-mouthed fem-bloggers" all the time on his website? Maybe he doesn't want to talk about Susan's voting record? Could be.

Everything Lance Dutson says on his blog is a reflection of Susan Collins' beliefs. So far, I've determined that ole Suzie-Q hates the freedom of speech and doesn't like to take questions from her constituents, so therefore, she should not be our Senator.

The End.report abuse

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