David Sinclair won an uncontested special election for Bath’s lone state representative seat, keeping it in Democratic hands.
Maine house
Pierce, Kuhn will meet with constituents in Falmouth
Sen. Teresa S. Pierce, D-Falmouth, and Rep. Amy Kuhn, D-Falmouth, will be available to meet with constituents from noon to 1 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 18, at Falmouth Memorial Library. Pierce is serving her first term in the Maine Senate, representing Senate District 25, which includes Falmouth, Cumberland, North Yarmouth, Yarmouth, Gray and Long Island. Kuhn […]
Democrat running unopposed in Bath special election for Maine House seat
Democrat David Sinclair will be the only candidate on the ballot in special election for the House District 50 seat.
Some Maine lawmakers missed 1 in 5 votes; others had perfect attendance
State legislators’ voting records varied widely last session.
Former Bath city councilor wins Democratic nomination for House seat
Bath Democrats chose lawyer David Sinclair over author Peter Macdonald Blachly to run for Sean Paulhus’ seat in the Maine House of Representatives.
Former Bath city councilor faces off with author for Democratic nomination for House seat
Former Bath city councilor and lawyer David Sinclair is running against author/musician Peter Macdonald Blachly to finish the remainder of Bath state Rep. Sean Paulhus’ term.
Bath Democrats to choose candidate to run for House seat
Former Bath City Councilor David Sinclair and author/musician Peter Macdonald Blachly are vying for the House seat held by Sean Paulhus, who resigned last month to take a government job.
Maine Legislature makes history despite tensions between, and within, parties
Major new laws were passed, bringing Mainers paid family and medical leave and expanded access to abortion.
Rep. Murphy advances healthcare bills
LD 603 would increase access to electric breast pumps for MaineCare recipients, and LD 999 would expand family medical leave protections.
Maine law change will require details of misconduct in police disciplinary documents
Specific information about misconduct must be disclosed in the disciplinary records of police officers and other public employees under law changes signed by Gov. MIlls, but recommendations to require record retention were not included.