News

My Concession Speech

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Dear Supporter,

At noon today I will announce at a press conference here in Portland that I have spoken with Mayor Paul LePage and congratulated him on his victory. The results that are available to us this morning are unofficial and informal, but I believe that it is unlikely that there will be a material change in the outcome.

Although we all will await the official tabulations by the Secretary of State, I do not want to make it more difficult for Paul to assemble the team he needs to govern the State of Maine and to prepare a budget for the next biennium. In all likelihood, he will be the next governor for all the people of the State of Maine, and all of us who love the State of Maine should give him our support as he sets out on a difficult journey.
I am unendingly grateful to you for your investment in the effort we have made and your support for our vision for Maine.

I am proud of the fact that we came from literally zero to just a few thousand votes short of winning in a mere 16 months. And I am prouder still that we stuck a dagger in the heart of negative campaigning in the State of Maine, that we never ran a single negative attack ad nor made a single personal attack, that we withstood an onslaught of lies, slander and deception directed against us and that we emerge from this race with our heads held high and our integrity intact.

You should be proud of your participation in this campaign, and I hope that you are, as I am. I am indebted to you and grateful to you.

Thank you.

Eliot Signature


ENDORSEMENT: Bangor Daily News Endorses Eliot for Governor

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

Bangor Daily News has endorsed Eliot Cutler for Maine Governor:

“Maine has a rare opportunity to remake its government. State finances demand it. The public, increasingly aware that big changes are needed for the state to prosper, wants it.

Only one candidate for governor — Eliot Cutler — has the skills, vision and detailed plans to lead this work.

Faced with a $1 billion budget shortfall, Mr. Cutler understands that programs and services must be cut, but in a way that does not harm the state’s most vulnerable residents nor its businesses, which can meet tough environmental and safety regulations if they are clear and consistent. To reduce state spending, for example, he proposes a commission, modeled on the federal Base Realignment and Closure Commission, to review all government programs and agencies and recommend what should be changed or eliminated. The Legislature would approve or disapprove the entire package, eliminating the usual tearing apart of proposals to cut spending and change departments.

While Republican Paul LePage, the mayor of Waterville, has common-sense-sounding proposals to improve education and to help those on welfare find and keep jobs, he undermines those ideas with false promises and angry outbursts. Saying you’ll frequently tell the president to “go to hell” may play well with angry audiences, but it is not a smart policy for a state heavily dependent on federal revenues. Mr. LePage’s pledge to reduce the state’s income tax rate to 5 percent is pure pandering. It would more than double the state’s deficit, and it won’t happen.

Democrat Libby Mitchell made history as the first woman in the country to lead both a state House and Senate. But her proposals to nibble around the edges of the state budget gap don’t match the severity of the problem.

Simply put, Maine has more government than it can afford. The remedy is to reduce government (and hence government spending), but in a smart, strategic way.

Mr. Cutler is the only candidate with specific plans to reduce inefficiencies in the social service and education sectors, which account for 80 percent of state spending.

“Our state government is too remote, too big, too unfriendly and too expensive,” he says on his website. “We pay for too many things that we don’t need or can’t afford, and we pay too much to deliver what we do need.”

One of the biggest criticisms of Mr. Cutler, a Bangor native, is that he did not spend his career in Maine. It is odd to say that experience at the highest levels of government and industry, nationally and internationally, is a disqualification for running state government. Mr. Cutler’s work with Sen. Ed Muskie and the White House Office of Management and Budget give him hands-on experience and perspective the other candidates lack.

Likewise, his work with businesses in China makes him better positioned to see new markets and opportunities for Maine.

Another concern is that, as an independent, Mr. Cutler will not have party backing in the Legislature. This is valid. However, candidates for the Legislature across the state are hearing from voters who are angry and expect lawmakers to work together to make government smaller but still responsive to public needs for well-maintained roads, a clean environment and a safety net that protects the elderly, poor and ill.

To rise to the huge challenges that await them in Augusta, lawmakers will have to work collaboratively and support the best ideas, no matter where they come from and what their political affiliation.

Maine faces crucial decisions in the next four years. The state can continue to limp from budget crisis to budget crisis with Libby Mitchell, or state spending can be slashed in haphazard and counterproductive ways under Paul LePage. A better way would be to elect a governor who will remake government so it is focused, effective and affordable.

The Democratic and Republican choices this year — between one candidate who wants to largely maintain the status quo and another who wants to blow up state government — reflect a failure of these parties. In both party primaries, candidates toward the extremes emerged. Neither Libby Mitchell nor Paul LePage is in line with the majority of voters who are in the middle of the two party extremes. This situation should be a wake-up call to party leadership to build a better cadre of potential gubernatorial candidates in future years.

Despite this misalignment of party candidates and voter sentiment, and despite his superior qualification and plans, independent Mr. Cutler is slow to catch on with voters, according to recent polls. In the remaining weeks before the Nov. 2 election, voters must take a close look at the candidates (including independents Shawn Moody and Kevin Scott) and their plans. They will see that Eliot Cutler is the only candidate with the vision and skills to match Maine’s challenges.

As his campaign literature asks, “How about just voting for the best candidate?”

On Nov. 2, that candidate is Eliot Cutler.”

Click here to read the full endorsement at www.bangordailynews.com.


ENDORSEMENT: The Portland Press Herald Endorses Eliot Cutler for Governor

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

The Portland Press Herald has endorsed Eliot Cutler for governor. You can read the full endorsement below:

In an election year when voters in Maine and around the country are feeling fed up with partisan bickering, angry that their elected representatives would rather argue about problems than solve them, and disillusioned by the paucity of qualified candidates offering serious ideas, Maine has a candidate who offers hope.

Among the field of five vying for governor of Maine, one has the potential to bridge philosophical divides, heal political wounds and conquer daunting problems that are confronting state government and Maine’s overburdened taxpayers.

That candidate is independent Eliot Cutler, and he is our choice for governor.

Cutler receives our endorsement because we believe he has leadership qualities that will enable him to transcend the self-focused concerns of any single political party and guide Maine and its people toward a brighter future.

This independent has been a Democrat in the past – some believe he still is, at least at heart – but he has pursued the Blaine House with ideas and proposals that cut across partisan ideology. His vision for Maine is not just words wrapped around high-minded purpose. His vision is a plan, a detailed blueprint to progress and jobs and fiscal responsibility.

His plans for Maine are thoughtful, logical and, most important, doable. And doable plans are what we need.

The most recent reminder of Maine’s economic woes came in a doom-saying report from Forbes magazine, which declared this state worst in the nation for business and careers. There’s been dispute over how that ranking was calculated, but its conclusion is not debatable: Maine’s economy, once merely stagnant, is now in freefall.

Cutler is quick to say that government does not create jobs. But government does create the conditions under which business can thrive. He is the only candidate with the requisite experience in the public and private sectors to bring sense to Maine’s fragmented and ineffective efforts at economic development, which are expensive and unaccountable.

Cutler’s detractors say his recent experience as a lawyer in Beijing, China, should disqualify him to serve as governor; we consider this experience an asset. We believe that of all the candidates, Cutler understands best what drives businesses away from places like Maine, and will therefore know how to keep them here.

Note we say “keep,” not lure. While we have high hopes for increased economic activity, much of that will depend on the national economic recovery. In the meantime, Maine must do more to preserve and grow the businesses that now call our state home.

There are two ways to do so: cut taxes and reduce energy costs. We believe Cutler has sound proposals for both, through reforming government operations toward maximum efficiency and instituting a public power authority to assist business with energy needs.

Such things are easier said than done, of course. But the need is dire. Maine’s energy costs put our industries at a disadvantage against the states where their competition is greatest, and our spending on government is greater than other rural states in too many categories.

Outgoing Gov. John Baldacci did admirable work in keeping Maine stable amid the most turbulent weather for state government since the 1930s; now, the person who succeeds him must be poised to restore the workings of the state, almost from the ground up.

In our opinion, neither of the partied candidates possesses the plans to do what Maine requires. Paul LePage, the Republican, has an admirable life story and a sterling fiscal record as mayor of Waterville.

But LePage’s proposals for Maine rely too much on doing less, instead of doing more. This state needs a smaller but also responsive government.

LePage’s temperament, as well, gives us pause about his decision-making. A governor can’t make snap decisions, or play loose with facts or rhetoric. LePage has done too much of both during this campaign, and it’s damaged his credibility.

Sen. Elizabeth Mitchell of Vassalboro is a candidate of distinction. Her experience in the Legislature has given her invaluable insight into how Maine works.

Unfortunately, we believe this tenure also precludes the creative thinking now needed in a chief executive.

Mitchell’s proposals for the state too closely echo the policies of the past, at a time when we believe a divergent course is needed. Maine must change to thrive, and Mitchell – although a dedicated public servant – is not the agent of change Maine requires.

(One other in this race deserves mention: Shawn Moody. He’s a breath of fresh air, and there’s a place for him in public office somewhere.)

We believe Maine needs an independent in the Blaine House, not just because he’s got the sharpest proposals, but also because the parties currently in power talk glowingly about bipartisanship, while failing miserably at it.

Last year, the Legislature enacted an eminently sensible reform package that lowered the income tax rate and expanded the sales tax. The Democrats got it passed; the Republicans got it repealed at the polls. It was a good idea, stillborn because of pure partisanship.

There are allusions to working together, such as passing five budgets, but in reality, the strong Democratic majorities in the House and Senate made bipartisanship a luxury instead of necessity. On important items like taxes, the parties gave Maine a stalemate.

Why should Maine voters reward them by electing one of their candidates to the state’s highest office, and continue this posturing going forward? The challenges are far too great, the costs much too high and opportunities too scarce to allow that to happen.

There is one candidate in this race with the plans to move Maine forward that we most agree with, and who we believe is most suited to serve as our next governor.

The fact that he’s also an independent only solidifies our thinking that he’s the right choice.

On Nov. 2, we urge a vote for Eliot Cutler for governor.

Click here to read the full endorsement at www.pressherald.com.


ENDORSEMENT: The Lewiston Sun Journal Endorses Eliot Cutler for Governor

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

The Lewiston Sun Journal has endorsed Eliot Cutler for governor. You can read the full endorsement below:

Reform Maine’s health care system.

Trim the size and scope of government.

Stop shifting state costs to municipalities.

Reduce welfare spending and require welfare recipients to work for their checks.

Improve schools and student achievement.

Stop taxing Mainers to death.

These are all items on gubernatorial candidate Paul LePage’s to-do list. They are also all on candidate Eliot Cutler’s must-do list.

These two candidates are remarkably similar in their clarity of purpose to curtail spending and improve Maine’s business climate.

The difference between the men, though, is profound.

LePage is correct on the issues, but his bare-knuckle style and bully tactics will not produce the change Mainers so desperately need. In fact, his combative stance will further entrench Maine’s woes.

We need a practiced executive in the Blaine House, a person who has the skills and experience to be an administrator of progress. A person determined to improve our schools, reduce our taxes, fix our roads and vastly shrink government spending.

Cutler is that person.

A Harvard grad, Cutler worked for Sen. Edmund Muskie before shifting to the world of business. His public service provides a strong background on environmental and energy issues, and his business background is distinguished in its geographic reach and diversity of development. He has established multiple successful businesses, and advised other entrepreneurs to thrive.

His career, like many highly successful careers, is not without controversy, but Cutler has been overwhelmingly successful in his public and private enterprises.

Isn’t that what Maine needs? Someone who has a worldview of what is needed to drive us toward prosperity?

LePage’s message of radical systemic changes is solid, but his threat to reject any help from the federal government is unnerving. If Maine were really to reject federal funds, how would we pave our highways, fund our schools, purchase emergency equipment for our fire departments and fund police resource officers without raising taxes?

It just couldn’t be done.

LePage’s message is welcome, but his strategy is greatly flawed.

Cutler not only has a solid message, he’s got a strategic plan for Maine that makes sense.

His strategy, he says, is built on candor and confidence. It focuses on creating jobs and lowering the cost of living and the cost of doing business here, and he’s the only candidate who seems to recognize these problems are especially difficult with our aging population.

Cutler has a plan to lower the cost of electricity, reduce health care costs, lower the cost of government, and rebuild Maine’s educational system to produce students who will be able to compete in a global economy.

Cutler’s strategy isn’t sugarcoated and it’s not going to be easy to implement, and we need his statesmanship to negotiate the pitfalls that have plagued Maine government in recent years.

He’s the only leading candidate qualified to navigate Maine through this process.

LePage is too confrontational.

Libby Mitchell is too status quo.

According to Mitchell, Maine needs change, especially in improving what she calls the state’s “pathetic business climate.” But, she says, “change takes time.”

Mitchell has been in the Legislature for 30 years, much of that time in leadership positions. How much more time could she possibly need?

We’re out of time and we need a crisis manager to pull us through the next four years — no more excuses.

Cutler can do that with precision, authority and poise.

His life experiences are dynamic, ranging and intellectual, and his view of Maine is thoughtful and sincere, formed from being on the inside looking out and on the outside looking in.

He’s the right choice for Maine.

Click here to read the full endorsement at www.sunjournal.com.


ENDORSEMENT: The Portland Phoenix Endorses Eliot Cutler for Governor

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010



We’ve said before that it’s time for change in Augusta. We need some new ideas — and by new ideas, we don’t mean cockamamie loony initiatives like tea partier Paul LePage is proposing, such as a regressive flat five-percent income tax for all Maine residents and corporations, which would put a estimated $800 million annual hole in a budget already saddled with a $500 million hole before a new governor takes office. And we don’t mean Libby Mitchell’s ideas to tweak the failed policies of the ruinous Baldacci era.

We mean real ideas, like Eliot Cutler’s suggestions for a public power authority, a practical, effective, cost-saving way for Mainers to invest in Maine’s future. We mean ideas like Cutler’s plan to eliminate the duplicative bureaucracy of the Board of Environmental Protection, which simply adds to the calcification of Augusta’s entrenched power brokers. We mean ideas like Cutler’s plan to contribute state money to bring natural-gas pipelines up the state’s major rivers, to provide power now-dismantled dams once generated to drive local economies all over Maine. It’s time for something new.

Cutler has deep experience in the federal government and international business and law, fresh ideas that could help foster a return to prosperity by laying the foundation for a better Maine at the local community level where it belongs, and a common-sense approach to tackling the state’s problems that would be a welcome breath of fresh air in Augusta.

The Portland Phoenix urges Mainers to vote for Eliot Cutler.

via The Portland Phoenix.


Find Your Polling Location. Then Vote Cutler on November 2nd.

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Use this handy tool to find your polling location and make sure to vote CUTLER on November 2nd.


The Eliot Cutler Jobs and Opportunity Bus Tour

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Friday, October 29

5:30 am – 7:00 am: Mill-Gate at Twin Rivers Paper Company (formerly Fraser Paper), 82 Bridge Ave, Madawaska

9:00 am – 10:00 am: Downtown Tour of Presque Isle

12:00pm – 1:00pm: Downtown Tour Houlton

3:00pm – 4:00 pm: Downtown tour of Old Town

4:45 pm – 5:45 pm: Bangor Hometown Homecoming Rally at the Victory Memorial at Norumbega Park

6:30pm – 7:30 pm: Quarter-final High School Football Game: Edward Little at Bangor

Saturday, October 30

5:00 am – 7:00 am: Old Town Hunters Breakfast

8:30 am – 9:30 am: Eastport Meet-the-Candidate, Waco Diner, 47 Water St., Eastport

10:45am – 11:15 am: Stop at Helen’s in Machias, 111 Main St, Machias, ME (255-8423)

12:45pm: – 1:45 pm: Hancock County Rally, 192 Main St., Ellsworth

2:45 – 3:45 pm: Waldo County Meet-the-Candidate, 111A Church St., Belfast

8:00pm – 9:00 pm: Televised debate, Irish Heritage Center, 34 Gray St., Portland

Sunday, October 31st (Halloween)

10:00 am – 11:00 am: Breakfast Rally with Eliot at the Brass Compass, 305 Main st. Rockland

12:15pm – 1:15pm Kennebec County Rally in Hallowell, at the bandstand

2:15pm – 3:15pm: Androscoggin County Rally in Festival Plaza, Main St., Auburn

4:00pm – 6:00pm: Brunswick Halloween Parade (watching, not participating)

Monday, November 1st

8:00 am – 9:00 am: Breakfast at The Sunrise Grill, 182 State Rd., Kittery

10:15 am – 11:15 am: Downtown Tour of South Berwick

12:00 noon – 1:30pm: Downtown Tour of Sanford (and lunch)

2:00 pm – 3:00 pm: Downtown Tour of Kennebunk

3:30 pm – 4:30 pm: York County Rally in Saco Amtrak Station, 130 Main St., Saco

5:15 pm – 6:15 pm: Jobs and Opportunity Rally in Monument Square, Portland, ME


Campaign Diary: Negative Ads Play as Positive as Independent Hits Mill Town

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

The Portland Press Herald published an article covering Eliot Cutler’s visit to Millinocket. Eliot met with workers at the Katahdin Paper Company and spoke with members of the Millinocket Rotary. Negative campaigning was a recurring theme for both Cutler and voters:

“‘I haven’t done any negative advertising. I won’t,’ Cutler told members of the Millinocket Rotary Club. ‘I think it’s an insult to the voters of the state of Maine.”
More often, voters are bringing up the issue first.
‘I was just talking about you down at the garage,’ Mike Bragdon said when he ran into Cutler during breakfast at the Appalachian Trail Cafe. ‘Thanks for not putting the negative ads on.”‘

You can read the full article here.


RELEASE: Maine Military Leaders Support Cutler

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

October 26 2010

CONTACT:
Ted O’Meara
(207) 699 4401
(207) 653 2392 (cell)
ted@cutler2010.com

MAINE MILITARY LEADERS SUPPORT CUTLER

Candidate affirms his commitment to veterans and to military security

PORTLAND, Maine – Three of Maine’s most senior retired military leaders today endorsed Independent candidate for governor Eliot Cutler and encouraged all Maine veterans to join them in supporting his candidacy.

Major General Earl Adams, U.S. Army Retired, of Pittston, Major General Nelson E. Durgin, U.S. Air Force Retired, of Bangor, and Major. General (Me.) Joseph Tinkham, U.S. Army Retired, of South Gardiner, the three most recently retired commanders of the Maine National Guard, each said Cutler will provide Maine with strong, steady leadership.

“I am proud to have the support of these exceptional leaders and of other veterans from around Maine,” Cutler said. “Maine men and woman in uniform have a long and distinguished heritage of service to our country and our state. We have one of the highest percentages of veterans of any state in America, and as governor I will honor their service and sacrifice.”

In announcing their support for Cutler, the three generals offered the following statement:

“Under our state’s constitution, the governor serves as commander-in-chief of the Maine National Guard. We are confident that Eliot has the temperament, skills and experience to be a strong and effective commander in chief. We are convinced Eliot has the best program to strengthen the state’s economy and educational system, which will benefit the state as a whole, and should enhance the ability of our military forces to fulfill their many important missions. We are certain of his commitment to the welfare of Maine’s veterans. We strongly support Eliot Cutler for governor.”


Sam Spencer, Democratic National Committeeman, Denounces Democratic Attacks on Cutler

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

Statement from Sam Spencer, Democratic National Committeeman for Maine October 27, 2010

Contact: Sam Spencer 232-8263
sam@samspencer.org

Today I speak as Maine’s Democratic National Committeeman, as person who has devoted much of his life to the Democratic Party, and as Eliot Cutler’s close friend and godson.

Despite my close relationship with Eliot Cutler, I told him I could not support his independent candidacy for Governor. It was a painful decision for me because of our friendship, but it was the right decision for me, as I am an elected representative of the Democratic Party and believe in it as an institution.

Last week, a campaign mailer was distributed under the auspices of the Maine Democratic Party stating that Cutler had served as a lobbyist for the oil industry for most of his career, and that his election might hasten a BP Horizon style oil spill in the Gulf of Maine. Both of these assertions are untrue. He has never once been a lobbyist for an oil company and he is strongly opposed to offshore drilling in the Gulf of Maine.

The first mailing has been followed by two others related to Cutler’s work in China and his supposed intention to ship Maine jobs to China. The mailings feature pictures of fortune cookies and Communist symbols and make a number of outrageous statements, including, “With Cutler as Governor, Mainers looking for jobs have two choices – learn how to drill offshore or learn Chinese.” The claims are absurd and indefensible. They are fundamentally dishonest. The Maine Democratic Party should not engage in fear mongering and xenophobia.

These mailings include smears that go far beyond normal hyperbole, healthy combativeness, or the customary give and take of Maine political campaigns.

Such tactics are unworthy of the Democratic Party I believe in. I cannot stand-by and implicitly support them. My conscience compels me to publicly disassociate myself from these misleadingmailings. The Maine Democratic Party should not go down the same road that Karl Rove has pavedfor the Republicans.

I call on the Maine Democratic Party to restore its commitment to honesty, civility, and decency. It is my hope that in the remaining days until November 2nd, the campaigns and political parties will conduct themselves in a spirit of fairplay that is worthy of Maine’s political traditions.