Posts Tagged ‘Interview’

Exclusive Interview with Eliot Cutler (Third Party and Independent Daily)

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Political blog, Third Party and Independent Daily, recently conducted an email interview with Eliot on the independent political movement and key issues in the upcoming Maine gubernatorial election. Please see the complete interview below:

TPID: Why do Maine voters appear to be so open to competitive three-person races and independent governance? Given national trends, the state’s history of independent governors and competitive three-person races is anomalous.

Cutler: The people of Maine pride themselves on their independence and this affects how we vote as well. Independent, or unenrolled, voters are the largest single voting bloc in Maine and the vast majority of those who belong to a political party in Maine are “independent” voters in the sense that do not always vote a straight party ballot. Two of the last five governors in Maine have been Independents, and I believe the voters will make it three for six this fall. While you characterize Maine as anomalous, I prefer to characterize Maine as being out in front of the rest of the country in terms of putting the person ahead of the party!

TPID: Ahead of the Democratic and Republican primaries, the race is wide open, with many undecided voters. What are going to be decisive issues in this campaign?

Cutler: The decisive issues will be who has the best plan to get Maine’s economy moving again and creating jobs, and who has the experience, competence and leadership skills to turn our state around. I have put forth a plan to lower the cost of energy, healthcare, and government — our major barriers to job creation — and to invest in Maine’s competitive advantages (much more at cutler2010.com). Party labels and ideology will be irrelevant, or at least secondary issues, in this year’s race.

TPID: Why have you opted to run outside of the two-party system? How will an independent governor work with a state legislature dominated by Democrats and Republicans?

Cutler: I am running as an Independent because I am one. When I worked for Sen. Edmund Muskie and President Jimmy Carter, the Democratic Party was the party of reform. I believe that at least in Maine, it no longer is. I left the Democratic Party in 2005 when the current Democratic governor tried to borrow money in the bond market to pay current government operating expenses; I thought that was fiscally irresponsible. I also had become increasingly dissatisfied with the straightjacket in which the state Democratic Party found itself as a consequence of the Party’s increasing servitude to public employees’ unions.

I supported a moderate Republican who lost his party’s primary to a social conservative in the 2006 governor’s race. I have since concluded that the leadership of both parties has become captive to the various special interests that control them and that they are both incapable of governing from the moderate center. I am committed to doing that and to giving voice and representation to what I believe is an overwhelming majority of independent and moderate Maine voters who want to see Maine government work again.

I will work with a state legislature dominated by Democrats and Republicans by providing strong leadership, outlining a clear vision for our state, embracing good ideas regardless of which party offers them, and making my case directly to the people of Maine whenever I need to. My whole career has been about bringing people together to accomplish things that others said couldn’t be done.

TPID: What are your stances on Tuesday’s various ballot measures?

Cutler: Question 1 — tax reform. I will vote to sustain the new law because to the extent that it moves Maine towards taxing consumption, as opposed to income and investment, it is moving the state in the right direction. I believe we should give the law a chance. Neither supporters nor opponents of the repeal can predict with real certainty what the impact will be, but I have pledged that if the law does not live up to its promise of reducing the overall tax burden on Maine people or proves to be a detriment to job creation and investment in our state, then as governor I will be the first to call for changes.

Bonds – 2, 3, 4, 5. Although I am concerned about the state’s indebtedness, especially unfunded pension liabilities, I will vote for the various bond issues in hopes that the money will attract additional investment that will have a positive impact on the state’s economy.

TPID: In recent weeks and months, the Democratic and Republican Governors Associations have strongly attacked promising independent candidates for governor in the northeast, specifically Tim Cahill in Massachusetts and Lincoln Chafee in Rhode Island. In April, there was some tension between your campaign and the RGA because of the video “tracker” they had hired to follow you. Has anything come of that, have they let up or doubled down, or has is just become part of the campaign’s backdrop?

Cutler: As for the RGA and DGA, we expect similar attacks here in Maine. The tracker issue was around the woman lying to me about who she was and what she was doing at a candidates’ forum far from her home. The insiders thought it was no big deal, but we sure heard a lot of disgust from regular voters. It’s just part of the backdrop for now.

TPID: Thank you for taking the time to answer these questions!


VIDEO INTERVIEW: Eliot and Derek Viger Discuss “The State of Education in Maine”

Monday, April 26th, 2010

Eliot Cutler, Independent candidate for Maine Governor, recently sat down with Derek Viger from Augusta Insider to discuss the State of Education in Maine. The complete conversation is listed below in 4 parts:


INTERVIEW: Eliot Talks with WGAN 560 AM about Republican “Tracker”

Friday, April 9th, 2010

Independent Candidate for Governor, Eliot Cutler, visits Mike and Ken to talk about his recent experience being ‘tracked’ politically by the Republican Governor’s Association.

To listen to the full interview, please click on the link below:


VIDEO: ELIOT SPEAKS OUT AGAINST REPUBLICAN-HIRED POLITICAL ‘TRACKER’

Friday, April 9th, 2010

Eliot has received a tremendous response to the letter that he sent to the Chairman of the Republican Governors Association regarding the RGA’s use of a paid tracker to videotape Eliot and other gubernatorial candidates.

While partisan insiders see all of this as “part of the game,” the Maine voters that Eliot and the campaign office have heard from over the last two days agree that this practice has no place in Maine politics.

Below are two interviews in which Eliot discusses the ‘tracking’ and why he believes it is corrosive to our state politics and distracts us from the key challenges facing Maine today.

1. TV INTERVIEW: WGME 13 WITH GREGG LAGERQUIST

Please click on the below link to watch the interview.

http://www.wgme.com/newsroom/top_stories/videos/wgme_vid_3133.shtml

2. RADIO INTERVIEW: WGAN 560 AM WITH MIKE AND KEN

Please click on the below link to hear the interview.


INTERVIEW: Eliot Chats with Lewiston-Auburn EZ 1240

Friday, March 26th, 2010

Eliot appeared on Lewiston-Auburn radio station EZ 1240 to talk about his experiences on the campaign trail talking to Mainers around the state:

To listen to the full interview, please click on the link below:


INTERVIEW: Eliot Sits Down with Drive Time Bangor WMEB 91.9 FM

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Eliot recently sat down with Drive Time Bangor — UMaine radio station WMEB 91.9 FM — for a second time to discuss his Independent run for Maine Governor in ‘10.

To listen to the full interview, please click on the link below:


VIDEO: Eliot Speaks with ABC-7/FOX Bangor About His ‘Plan for Maine’

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Eliot recently sat down with Tony Consiglio from ABC-7/FOX Bangor as part of of ‘Race for the Blaine House’ series. Below is the entire three-part interview:

WVII INTERVIEW: PART I

WVII INTERVIEW: PART II

WVII INTERVIEW: PART III


INTERVIEW: WGAN Maine Points with Eliot Cutler

Monday, December 28th, 2009

TO LISTEN TO THE FULL INTERVIEW, PLEASE CLICK BELOW:


INTERVIEW: Eliot on WGAN’s Ken & Mike show

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Click here to listen


INTERVIEW: Eliot Talks with Mike Tipping from DownEast.com

Friday, November 27th, 2009

Eliot sat down with Mike Tipping from Downeast.com about his run for the Blaine House. The entire interview is posted below.

– Eliot Cutler has had a career that’s taken him from his home state of Maine to Washington D.C. to Beijing and back again. He’s now seeking to use that experience to claim the Blaine House and become the third independent governor in Maine’s history.

Two other independents, James B. Longley in 1974 and Angus King in 1994, have successfully navigated the path that Cutler is hoping to follow.

Both King and Longley had similar, significant advantages that put them head and shoulders above other, unsuccessful independent candidates in Maine. Both men had relatively good name recognition, King from his time on Maine Public Television and Longley from his work heading the “Longley Commission” on government efficiency for Governor Curtis, a post he turned into a PR bonanza.

Both candidates had financial parity with their partisan competition, Longley because of a new law limiting campaign spending and his network of business supporters and King due to his own personal wealth.

Both also had a strong personal drive to seek the office and turned out to be good campaigners, despite their lack of previous political experience. Longley was particularly driven, barely slept, and was manically focused on retail campaigning, sometimes shaking the hands of mill workers twice in one day as they both began and ended their shifts.

King and Longley were also each running on a specific plan for the future of Maine, a useful tool for an independent without the ideological grounding of a political party. Longley had the recommendations of his commission report, which he said would save the state $24 million. King had his book, Making A Difference, that he used to define himself as a “compassionate pragmatist.”

Both Longley and King also had the advantage of running in years where, like 2010, the governor’s race is an open seat, with no incumbent in the race and primaries in both parties.

Eliot Cutler has some of the strengths that saw King and Longley reach the Blaine House, but in other areas the candidate and campaign aren’t quite there yet.

Cutler says he’s willing to spend enough of his own money to make sure he’s competitive and has enlisted real estate developer Bobby Monks as his campaign treasurer to help raise even more. Monks has a wide range of business interests in Maine and recently led President Obama’s fundraising in the state.

Cutler is already putting some of this money to work. He has begun hiring staff, including veteran campaign manager Ted O’Meara and has rented office space on Commercial Street in downtown Portland, where I recently sat down with him and O’Meara to discuss the campaign. (The offices were empty except for three chairs at the time, but they assured me that real furniture would be arriving soon.)

While he’s unproven as a politician, having never run for elective office before, in our discussion Cutler seemed to have a good grasp of campaign basics and gave some hints of a very aggressive strategy.

“People need to know that I’m real, that I’m here through 2010, and that I’m competitive,” said Cutler. “I’m not running a quixotic campaign.”

Unlike several of the other 2010 candidates who have never run for office before, Cutler at least has some experience on the ground in a high-stakes political race. He did media relations and scheduling for Ed Muskie during his 1968 and ‘72 national campaigns.

According to a series of interviews Cutler gave to the Muskie Oral History Project at Bates (transcripts of which can be read in full here), he saw firsthand the personal commitment that it takes to win an election, something he says Muskie lacked in 1968.

“…he blamed all the ‘nameless, faceless bastards’ as he called them in the back room who, NFBs we used to say, who he didn’t know and who he thought were just going to kill him by over-scheduling him and over-committing him to do things. Well, you can’t run a successful campaign without putting in a lot more effort, frankly, than he was prepared to do,” explained Cutler in one recorded interview.

Cutler says that his choice to run as an independent was also influenced by his time working for Muskie, both on the campaigns and as a Senate aide, because Muskie always sought to reach across the aisle during his time in government. (An interesting observation about a man famous for having single-handedly resuscitated the Democratic Party in Maine).

Cutler himself was a registered Democrat for most of his life and worked for both Muskie and President Jimmy Carter. He changed his registration to the GOP to support Peter Mills in the 2006 Republican primary but switched back before the 2008 election to vote for Adam Cote in he Democratic Primary for Maine’s first Congressional District. He is now unenrolled.

“I intend to be distinguished among the minds of Maine voters by the quality of ideas I put on the table,” Cutler assured me. However, he wasn’t willing to reveal many specifics of his policy proposals, and said he didn’t intend to release a policy road map or a campaign book like Longley or King.

On health care, which Cutler says should be a basic right, he seems to have a good handle on the state of health care in Maine but only nascent ideas for reform. He cited Cianbro and Jackson Labs as having models of preventative care that Maine could emulate, but declined to discuss how they could be translated into state health care policy.


The only issue where Cutler seems comfortable talking about detailed new policy proposals is in the field of energy, where he has a long background, including an energy policy position in the Carter administration. Cutler is specifically interested in electricity prices, which he calls “the single biggest lever in the Maine economy.” He’d like to see a new “public actor” in the energy system in Maine, a state entity that could access capital, enter into public-private partnerships, and could even take ownership of distribution and generation systems in order to increase efficiency and output.

Christian Potholm, a Bowdoin professor and frequent campaign consultant, wrote in his bookThis Splendid Game, one of the few works on Maine electoral politics, that Longley and King succeeded by targeting particular demographics in Maine that are more likely to vote independent, specifically Franco-Americans and urban professionals in southern Maine. When I asked if the campaign would be targeting these or other groups, Cutler was outright dismissive of Potholm’s theory and said the campaign, at this stage at least, wasn’t distinguishing demographically.

Cutler and O’Meara did, however, agree with another piece of Potholm’s assessment of the King campaign – the idea that early TV ads during the party primaries were essential in establishing King as a viable alternative to the major party candidates.

“We plan to run ads even before that,” said Cutler.

Early ads will likely help Cutler’s name recognition, which is an area where he lags far behind the historical examples of both King and Longley. While Cutler has a long resume, including work in government, the private sector, and on corporate and non-profit boards, most of his career has been out of state and far under the radar of Maine voters.

Cutler seems to have the money and the personal drive of King and Longley, and a similar wide-open political landscape, but not yet the name recognition or a solid policy platform. As the campaign for governor heats up over the next few months, we’ll soon know whether these or other factors make him the next Angus King or just another Barbara Merrill.

You can read the complete article at Downeast.com here.