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Socialist Party of Maine

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Socialist Party of Maine
IdeologySocialism
Socialist feminism
National affiliationSPA
SPUSA
ColorsRed

The Socialist Party of Maine was a multi-tendency socialist political party in the U.S. state of Maine. During its first incarnation in the early 20th century, prominent members included naturalist Norman Wallace Lermond of Warren, artist Charles L. Fox of Portland, and writer George Allan England of Woodstock, each of whom ran for governor as Socialist Party nominees.

1900-1916

1916

At its 1916 convention in Portland, the Socialist Party nominated James F. Carey of Surry for United States Senate, Frank H. Maxfield of Portland for governor, and Melville A. Floyd also of Portland for state auditor. Carey had previously served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1899 to 1903. The party's platform included equal suffrage, public insurance, pensions for mothers and elders, a minimum wage, abolition of the U.S. Senate, equalization of funding for schools, and conservation of water power.[1] In the September election, Carey finished in third place with 1,520 votes (1%). The party's presidential nominee, Allan L. Benson, received 2,177 votes (1.6%).[2]

2016-18

In August 2016, Socialist Party USA members established a local in Southern Maine. In April of the next year, SPUSA established a second local in Maine, this one based in Eastern Maine.[3] In July 2017, the two locals held a convention and formed a statewide party.[4]

In the 2018 elections, the Maine Socialists nominated Maia Dendinger for Maine Senate in the fifth district. Dendinger drew 1,124 votes, or 7.5%. The winner of the race was incumbent Democrat James Dill. As of 2019, the party was no longer listed on the Socialist Party's directory of local organizations and its website had gone inactive.[5]

Presidential nominee results

In 1956, Darlington Hoopes ran as the final nominee of the Socialist Party of America but was not on the Maine ballot. In 1976, following a split in the Socialist Party, Socialist Party USA began running independent candidates with the Socialist Party label. However, no SPUSA presidential nominee appeared on the ballot in Maine between 1976 and 2016.

Year Nominee Total Votes Percent Notes
1900 Eugene V. Debs 878 0.83% Social Democratic Party of America nominee
1904 Eugene V. Debs 2,102 2.17%
1908 Eugene V. Debs 1,758 1.65%
1912 Eugene V. Debs 2,514 1.96%
1916 Allan L. Benson 2,177 1.60%
1920 Eugene V. Debs 2,214 1.14%
1924 Robert M. La Follette 11,382 5.92% Dual endorsed Progressive Party nominee
1928 Norman Thomas 1,068 0.40%
1932 Norman Thomas 2,489 0.83%
1936 Norman Thomas 783 0.26%
1940 Norman Thomas Not on ballot
1944 Norman Thomas Not on ballot
1948 Norman Thomas 548 0.21%
1952 Darlington Hoopes 138 0.03%
2020 Howie Hawkins 8,230 1.00% Also nominated by Green Party of the United States

References

  1. ^ "Maine Socialists Convene in Portland". The Bangor Daily News. 7 April 1916. p. 12.
  2. ^ "1916 Presidential General Election Results - Maine". uselectionatlas.org.
  3. ^ Shepherd, Michael (April 21, 2017). "Would LePage's lower energy rate for businesses drive up your bill?". Bangor Daily News. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
  4. ^ Lowell, Jessica (July 16, 2017). "Democratic socialists in Maine see opening to make their case". Portland Press Herald. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
  5. ^ "Directory". spusa. Retrieved 13 November 2019.

Other reading

  • Lermond, Norman W., and Scott M. Martin. Autobiography of Norman Wallace Lermond, Maine's Naturalist-Socialist. Humboldt Field Research Institute, Steuben, Me, 2004.
  • Scontras, Charles A., and University of Maine. Bureau of Labor Education. The Socialist Alternative: Utopian Experiments and the Socialist Party of Maine, 1895-1914. The Bureau of Labor Education, University of Maine, Orono, Me, 1985.
  • Special Collections, Raymond H. Fogler Library, University of Maine. Wight (Clement P.) Socialist Party of Maine Papers, 1896–1915. DigitalCommons@UMaine, 2015.