Political party strength in Maine
The following table indicates the party of elected officials in the U.S. state of Maine:
The table also indicates the historical party composition in the:
- State Senate
- State House of Representatives
- State delegation to the U.S. Senate
- State delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives
For years in which a presidential election was held, the table indicates which party's nominees received the state's electoral votes.
The parties are as follows: Democratic (D), Democratic-Republican (DR), Federalist (F), Greenback (GB), Independent (I), National Republican (NR), National Union (NU), Opposition (O), Republican (R), and Whig (W).
Year | Executive offices | State Legislature | United States Congress | Electoral College votes | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Governor | Attorney General | Secretary of State | Treasurer | State Senate | State House | U.S. Senator (Class I) | U.S. Senator (Class II) | U.S. House District 1 | U.S. House District 2 | Former U.S. House Districts | ||
1820 | William King (DR)[1] | Erastus Foote (DR) | Ashur Ware (DR) | Joseph C. Boyd | DR Majority | DR Majority | John Chandler (DR) | At large: Joseph Dane (F) | James Monroe and Daniel D. Tompkins (DR) | |||
1821 | DR Majority | DR Majority | ||||||||||
William D. Williamson (DR)[2][3] | John Holmes (DR) | Joseph Dane (F) | Ezekiel Whitman (F) | 5DR | ||||||||
Benjamin Ames (DR)[4][5] | ||||||||||||
1822 | Daniel Rose (DR)[2] | Amos Nichols (DR) | DR Majority | DR Majority | ||||||||
Albion K. Parris (DR)[6] | vacant | |||||||||||
1823 | Elias Thomas | DR Majority | DR Majority | William Burleigh (DR) | Mark Harris (DR) | |||||||
Stephen Longfellow (F) | ||||||||||||
1824 | DR Majority | NR Majority | John Quincy Adams and John C. Calhoun (DR) | |||||||||
1825 | DR Majority | DR Majority | William Burleigh (NR) | John Anderson (DR) | 3DR, 2NR | |||||||
1826 | DR Majority | DR Majority | ||||||||||
1827 | Enoch Lincoln (DR)[7] | DR Majority | DR Majority | Albion K. Parris (DR)[5] | 3NR, 2DR | |||||||
vacant | ||||||||||||
Rufus McIntire (DR) | ||||||||||||
1828 | Mark Harris (DR) | DR Majority | DR Majority | John Quincy Adams and Richard Rush (DR) | ||||||||
1829 | Edward Russell (NR) | Elias Thomas | DR Majority | NR Majority | John Holmes (NR) | Peleg Sprague (NR) | 3DR, 2NR | |||||
Nathan Cutler (D)[8] | ||||||||||||
1830 | Joshua Hall (D)[4] | 12NR, 8DR | NR Majority | |||||||||
Jonathan Hunton (NR) | ||||||||||||
1831 | Samuel E. Smith (D) | Roscoe Greene (DR) | A. B. Thompson | 11DR, 9DR | 86DR, 62NR, 1? | 4DR, 1NR | ||||||
1832 | Jonathan P. Rogers (D) | Mark Harris (DR) | 21DR, 4NR | 100DR, 58NR, 24?, 2 vac. | Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren (D) | |||||||
1833 | 15DR, 10NR | 97DR, 59NR, 30? | Ether Shepley (DR)[5] | Francis Smith (DR) | 5DR, 1NR | |||||||
1834 | Robert P. Dunlap (D) | Nathan Clifford (D) | 21DR, 3NR, 1A-M | 79DR, 39NR, 63?[9] | ||||||||
1835 | Asaph Nichols (DR) | Asa Redington Jr. | 18D, 7NR | 94D, 66NR, 26? | John Ruggles (D) | John Fairfield (D)[5] | 4DR, 2NR | |||||
1836 | 22D, 3NR | 51D, 41NR, 94?[10] | Judah Dana (DR) | Martin Van Buren and Richard Mentor Johnson (D) | ||||||||
1837 | 21D, 4W | 108D, 54W, 24? | Francis Smith (D) | 4D, 2W | ||||||||
1838 | Edward Kent (W)[11] | Daniel Goodenow (D) | Samuel P. Benson (W) | James B. Cahoon (W) | 14D, 11W | 98W, 85D, 5? | 3D, 3W | |||||
1839 | John Fairfield (D)[5] | Stephen Emery (D) | Asaph Nichols (D) | Jeremiah Goodwin | 15D, 10W | 107D, 73W, 9?. 1 vac. | Reuel Williams (D)[5] | Nathan Clifford (D) | Albert Smith (D) | 4D, 2W | ||
1840 | Philip C. Johnson (D) | Daniel Williams | 17D, 8W | 123D, 63W, 5? | William Henry Harrison and John Tyler (W) | |||||||
1841 | Richard H. Vose (W)[2] | Daniel Goodenow (D) | Samuel P. Benson (D) | Sanford Kingsbury | 18W, 7D | 94W, 66D, 30?[12] | George Evans (W) | William Pitt Fessenden (W) | 3D, 3W | |||
Edward Kent (W) | ||||||||||||
1842 | John Fairfield (D)[13] | Otis L. Bridges (D) | Philip C. Johnson (D) | James White (D) | 27D, 4W | 131D, 55W, 18? | ||||||
1843 | 30D, 1W | 55D, 18W, 78?[14] | ||||||||||
Edward Kavanaugh (D)[2][5] | vacant | Joshua Herrick (D) | Robert P. Dunlap (D) | 3D, 2W | ||||||||
1844 | David Dunn (D)[4][5] | Wyman B. S. Moor (D) | 28D, 3W | 89D, 42W, 2 Lty., 18? | James K. Polk and George M. Dallas (D) | |||||||
John W. Dana (D)[2] | ||||||||||||
Hugh J. Anderson (D) | ||||||||||||
1845 | William B. Hartwell (D) | 85D, 49W, 17? | John Fairfield (D)[7] | John Fairfield Scamman (D) | 4D, 1W | |||||||
1846 | Ezra B. French (D) | 27D, 4W | 85D, 66W | |||||||||
1847 | Moses Macdonald (D) | 78D, 66W, 6 Lty., 1I | James W. Bradbury (D) | David Hammons (D) | Asa Clapp (D) | |||||||
John W. Dana (D) | ||||||||||||
1848 | Samuel H. Blake (D) | 102D, 49W | Wyman B. S. Moor (D) | Lewis Cass and William O. Butler (D) | ||||||||
1849 | Henry Tallman (D) | 20D, 11W | 85D, 66W | Elbridge Gerry (D) | Nathaniel Littlefield (D) | 3D, 2W | ||||||
1850 | John G. Sawyer (D) | Samuel Cony (R) | 88D, 63R | |||||||||
John Hubbard (D) | ||||||||||||
1851 | 26D, 4W, 1FS[15] | 93D, 50W, 8FS[16] | Hannibal Hamlin (D)[17] | Moses Macdonald (D) | John Appleton (D) | |||||||
1852 | 3W, 2D | Franklin Pierce and William R. King (D) | ||||||||||
1853 | William G. Crosby (W) | George Evans (W) | 22W, 9D | 84D, 62W, 4FS, 1? | vacant | Samuel Mayall (D) | 3W, 1D | |||||
1854 | Alden Jackson (W) | 17W, 14D | 76D, 66W, 9FS | William Pitt Fessenden (W) | ||||||||
1855 | Anson P. Morrill (R) | John S. Abbott (R) | Woodbury Davis (R) | 16W, 10D, 5FS | 83D, 44W, 23FS, 1?[18] | John M. Wood (R) | John J. Perry (O) | 2O, 1D, 1R | ||||
1856 | Samuel Wells (D) | George Evans (W) | Caleb Ayer (D) | Isaac Reed (D) | 20D, 9W, 2R | 68D, 61R, 22W[19] | John C. Fremont and William L. Dayton (R) | |||||
1857 | Hannibal Hamlin (R)[13] | Nathan D. Appleton | Alden Jackson (D) | Benjamin D. Peck | 30R, 1D | 125R, 26D[20] | Amos Nourse (R) | Charles J. Gilman (R) | 4R | |||
Joseph H. Williams (R)[2] | Hannibal Hamlin (R) | |||||||||||
1858 | Lot M. Morrill (R) | Noah Smith Jr. (R) | 117R, 34D[21] | |||||||||
1859 | 103R, 48D | William Pitt Fessenden (R)[5] | Daniel E. Somes (R) | John J. Perry (R) | ||||||||
1860 | Josiah Hayden Drummond (R) | Nathan Dame | 119R, 32D | Abraham Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin (R) | ||||||||
1861 | Israel Washburn Jr. (R) | Joseph B. Hall (R) | 31R | 128R, 23D | John N. Goodwin (R) | Charles W. Walton (R)[5] | ||||||
1862 | 26R, 5D | 123R, 28D | vacant | |||||||||
1863 | Abner Coburn (R) | 25R, 6D | 107R, 44D | Lot M. Morrill (R) | Lorenzo De Medici Sweat (D) | Thomas Fessenden (R) | 3R | |||||
Sidney Perham (R) | ||||||||||||
1864 | Samuel Cony (R) | John A. Peters (R) | Ephraim Flint Jr. (R) | 30R, 1D | 120R, 31D | Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson (NU) | ||||||
Nathan A. Farwell (R) | ||||||||||||
1865 | N. G. Hitchborn | 28R, 3D | 129R, 22D | William Pitt Fessenden (R)[7] | John Lynch (R) | |||||||
1866 | 31R | 136R, 15D | ||||||||||
1867 | Joshua L. Chamberlain (R) | William P. Frye (R) | 138R, 13D | |||||||||
1868 | Franklin M. Drew (R) | 28R, 3D | 105R, 46D | Ulysses S. Grant and Schuyler Colfax (R) | ||||||||
1869 | William Caldwell | 29R, 2D | 123R, 28D | Hannibal Hamlin (R) | Samuel P. Morrill (R) | |||||||
1870 | Thomas Brackett Reed (R) | 28R, 3D | 117R, 34D | |||||||||
1871 | Sidney Perham (R) | 113R, 38D | Lot M. Morrill (R) | William P. Frye (R) | ||||||||
1872 | George B. Stacy (R) | 112R, 39D | Ulysses S. Grant and Henry Wilson (R) | |||||||||
1873 | Harris M. Plaisted (R) | 30R, 1LR | 128R, 19D, 2LR, 2I | John H. Burleigh (R) | ||||||||
1874 | Nelson Dingley, Jr. (R) | Silas C. Hatch | 103R, 41D, 7I | |||||||||
1875 | Sidney Perham (R) | 28R, 3D | 89R, 55D, 7I | |||||||||
1876 | Selden Connor (R) | Lucilius A. Emery (R) | S. J. Chadbourne (D) | 20R, 11D | 85R, 63D, 3I | Rutherford B. Hayes and William Almon Wheeler (R) | ||||||
1877 | Esreff H. Banks (R) | 29R, 2D | 120R, 30D, 1I | James G. Blaine (R) | Thomas Brackett Reed (R) | |||||||
1878 | 28R, 3D | 99R, 47D, 3I, 2GB | ||||||||||
1879 | Alonzo Garcelon (D) | William H. McLellan | Edward H. Gove (GB) | Charles White (D) | 20R, 10GB, 1D | 65R, 57GB, 27D, 2I[22] | 2GB, 1R | |||||
1880 | Daniel F. Davis (R) | Henry B. Cleaves (R) | S. J. Chadbourne (R) | Samual A. Holbrook (R) | 19R, 11GB, 1D | 90R, 50GB, 11D | James A. Garfield and Chester A. Arthur (R) | |||||
1881 | Harris M. Plaisted (D) | Joseph O. Smith (R) | 23R, 6GB, 2D | 84R, 40GB, 27D | vacant | |||||||
Nelson Dingley, Jr. (R) | ||||||||||||
1882 | ||||||||||||
1883 | Frederick Robie (R) | 28R, 3D | 108R, 43D | At large: Thomas B. Reed; Nelson Dingley, Jr.; Seth L. Milliken; and Charles A. Boutelle (R) | ||||||||
1884 | James G. Blaine and John Alexander Logan (R) | |||||||||||
1885 | Orville D. Baker (R) | Ormandel Smith (R) | Edwin C. Burleigh (R) | 31R | 115R, 34D, 2GB | Thomas Brackett Reed (R)[5] | Nelson Dingley, Jr. (R)[7] | 2R | ||||
1886 | ||||||||||||
1887 | Joseph R. Bodwell (R)[7] | 27R, 4D | 122R, 29D | |||||||||
Sebastian Streeter Marble (R)[2] | ||||||||||||
1888 | George L. Beal (R) | Benjamin Harrison and Levi P. Morton (R) | ||||||||||
1889 | Edwin C. Burleigh (R) | Charles E. Littlefield (R) | 31R | 125R, 26D | ||||||||
1890 | ||||||||||||
1891 | Nicholas Fessenden (R) | 27R, 4D | 110R, 41D | |||||||||
1892 | Benjamin Harrison and Whitelaw Reid (R) | |||||||||||
1893 | Henry B. Cleaves (R) | Frederick A. Powers (R) | 30R, 1D | 107R, 44D | Eugene Hale (R) | |||||||
1894 | ||||||||||||
1895 | F. Marion Simpson (R) | 31R | 146R, 5D | William P. Frye (R)[7] | ||||||||
1896 | William McKinley and Garret A. Hobart (R) | |||||||||||
1897 | Llewellyn Powers (R) | William T. Haines (R) | Byron Boyd (R) | 145R, 6D | ||||||||
1898 | ||||||||||||
1899 | 126R, 25D | vacant | ||||||||||
vacant | Charles E. Littlefield (R)[5] | |||||||||||
1900 | Amos L. Allen (R) | William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt (R) | ||||||||||
1901 | John Fremont Hill (R) | George M. Seiders (R) | Ormandel Smith (R) | 30R, 1D | 132R, 19D | |||||||
1902 | ||||||||||||
1903 | 128R, 23D | |||||||||||
1904 | Theodore Roosevelt and Charles W. Fairbanks | |||||||||||
1905 | William T. Cobb (R) | Hannibal Emery Hamlin (R) | 27R, 4D | 126R, 25D | ||||||||
1906 | ||||||||||||
1907 | Arthur I. Brown (R) | Pascal P. Gilmore (R) | 23R, 8D | 88R, 63D | ||||||||
1908 | William Howard Taft and James S. Sherman (R) | |||||||||||
vacant | ||||||||||||
1909 | Bert M. Fernald (R) | W.C. Philbrook (R) | 100R, 51D | John P. Swasey (R) | ||||||||
1910 | ||||||||||||
1911 | Frederick W. Plaisted (D) | Cyrus R. Tupper (D) | Cyrus W. Davis (D) | James F. Singleton | 22D, 9R | 86D, 65R | Charles Fletcher Johnson (D) | Asher Hinds (R) | Daniel J. McGillicuddy (D) | 1R, 1D | ||
William Robinson Pattangall (D) | Obadiah Gardner (D) | |||||||||||
1912 | Woodrow Wilson and Thomas R. Marshall (D) | |||||||||||
1913 | William T. Haines (R) | Scott Wilson (R) | Joseph E. Alexander (R) | Joseph W. Simpson (R) | 21R, 10D | 79R, 72D | Edwin C. Burleigh (R)[7] | 2R | ||||
1914 | ||||||||||||
1915 | Oakley C. Curtis (D) | William Robinson Pattangall (D) | John E. Bunker (D) | Elmer E. Newbert (D) | 17R, 14D | 78D, 69R, 4 Prog. | ||||||
1916 | Charles Evans Hughes and Charles W. Fairbanks (R) | |||||||||||
vacant | ||||||||||||
1917 | Carl E. Milliken (R) | Guy H. Sturgis (R) | Frank W. Ball (R) | Joseph W. Simpson (R) | 28R, 3D | 105R, 46D | Louis B. Goodall (R) | Wallace H. White, Jr. (R) | ||||
1918 | ||||||||||||
1919 | 29R, 2D | 110R, 41D | Bert M. Fernald (R) | |||||||||
1920 | Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge (R) | |||||||||||
1921 | Frederic H. Parkhurst (R)[7] | Ransford W. Shaw (R) | William L. Bonney (R) | 31R | 135R, 16D | Carroll L. Beedy (R) | ||||||
Percival P. Baxter (R)[23] | ||||||||||||
1922 | ||||||||||||
1923 | 28R, 3D | 116R, 35D | Frederick Hale (R) | |||||||||
1924 | Calvin Coolidge and Charles G. Dawes (R) | |||||||||||
1925 | Owen Brewster (R) | Raymond Fellows (R) | 30R, 1D | 122R, 29D | ||||||||
1926 | ||||||||||||
vacant | ||||||||||||
Arthur R. Gould (R) | ||||||||||||
1927 | Edgar C. Smith (R) | William S. Owen (R) | 129R, 22D | |||||||||
1928 | Herbert Hoover and Charles Curtis (R) | |||||||||||
1929 | William Tudor Gardiner (R) | Clement F. Robinson (R) | 31R | 135R, 16D | ||||||||
1930 | ||||||||||||
1931 | 120R, 31D | Donald B. Partridge (R) | ||||||||||
1932 | Herbert Hoover and Charles Curtis (R) | |||||||||||
1933 | Louis J. Brann (D) | Clyde R. Chapman (R) | Robinson C. Tobey (R) | George S. Foster | 26R, 7D | 93R, 58D | Edward C. Moran, Jr. (D) | John G. Utterback (D) | ||||
1934 | ||||||||||||
1935 | Lewis O. Barrows (R) | 22R, 11D | 96R, 55D | Simon M. Hamlin (D) | Owen Brewster (R) | |||||||
1936 | Alf Landon and Frank Knox (R) | |||||||||||
1937 | Lewis O. Barrows (R) | Franz U. Burkett (R) | Frederick Robie (R) | Belmont Smith (R) | 29R, 4D | 124R, 27D | Wallace H. White, Jr. (R) | James C. Oliver (R) | Clyde H. Smith (R)[7] | |||
1938 | ||||||||||||
1939 | 31R, 2D | |||||||||||
1940 | Wendell Willkie and Charles L. McNary (R) | |||||||||||
vacant | ||||||||||||
Margaret Chase Smith (R) | ||||||||||||
1941 | Sumner Sewall (R) | Frank I. Cowen (R) | 128R, 23D | Owen Brewster (R)[5] | Frank Fellows (R)[7] | |||||||
1942 | Harold I. Goss (R) | |||||||||||
1943 | Joseph H. McGillicuddy (R) | 32R, 1D | 136R, 15D | Robert Hale (R) | ||||||||
1944 | Thomas E. Dewey and John W. Bricker (R) | |||||||||||
1945 | Horace A. Hildreth (R) | Ralph W. Farris (R) | 31R, 2D | |||||||||
1946 | ||||||||||||
1947 | Frank S. Carpenter (R) | 30R, 3D | 126R, 25D | |||||||||
1948 | Thomas E. Dewey and Earl Warren (R) | |||||||||||
1949 | Frederick G. Payne (R) | 28R, 5D | Charles P. Nelson (R) | |||||||||
1950 | ||||||||||||
1951 | Alexander A. LaFleur (R) | 31R, 2D | 126R, 24D, 1I | |||||||||
vacant | ||||||||||||
Clifford McIntire (R) | ||||||||||||
1952 | Burton M. Cross (R) | Dwight D. Eisenhower and Richard Nixon (R) | ||||||||||
1953 | Nathaniel M. Haskell (R) | 127R, 24D | Frederick G. Payne (R) | |||||||||
1954 | Burton M. Cross (R) | |||||||||||
1955 | Edmund Muskie (D) | Frank F. Harding (R) | 27R, 6D | 119R, 32D | Margaret Chase Smith (R) | |||||||
1956 | ||||||||||||
1957 | 25R, 8D | 100R, 51D | Frank M. Coffin (D) | |||||||||
1958 | ||||||||||||
1959 | Clinton Clauson (D) | Frank E. Hancock (R) | 21R, 12D | 94R, 57D | James C. Oliver (D) | |||||||
1960 | John H. Reed (R) | Richard Nixon and Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (R) | ||||||||||
1961 | Paul A. MacDonald (R) | 30R, 3D | 113R, 38D | Peter A. Garland (R) | Stanley R. Tupper (R) | |||||||
1962 | ||||||||||||
1963 | 29R, 5D | 110R, 41D | Stanley R. Tupper (R) | Clifford McIntire (R) | districts eliminated | |||||||
1964 | Lyndon B. Johnson and Hubert Humphrey (D) | |||||||||||
1965 | Richard J. Dubord (D) | Kenneth M. Curtis (D) | Eben L. Elwell (D) | 29D, 5R | 80D, 71R | Edmund Muskie (D) | William Hathaway (D) | |||||
1966 | ||||||||||||
1967 | Kenneth M. Curtis (D) | James S. Erwin (R) | Joseph T. Edgar (D) | Michael A. Napolitano (R) | 24R, 10D | 95R, 56D | Peter N. Kyros (D) | |||||
1968 | Hubert Humphrey and Edmund Muskie (D) | |||||||||||
1969 | Norman K. Ferguson (R) | 18R, 14D | 85R, 66D | |||||||||
1970 | ||||||||||||
1971 | 80R, 71D | |||||||||||
1972 | Jon A. Lund (R) | Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew (R) | ||||||||||
1973 | 22R, 11D | 79R, 72D | William Hathaway (D) | William Cohen (R) | ||||||||
1974 | ||||||||||||
1975 | James Longley (I) | Joseph E. Brennan (D) | Markham L. Gartley (D) | Rodney L. Scribner (D) | 19R, 14D | 91D, 59R, 1I | David F. Emery (R) | |||||
1976 | Leighton Cooney (D) | Gerald Ford and Bob Dole (R) | ||||||||||
1977 | 21R, 12D | 89D, 62R | ||||||||||
1978 | ||||||||||||
1979 | Joseph E. Brennan (D) | Richard S. Cohen (R) | Rodney S. Quinn (D) | Jerrold Speers (R) | 19R, 13D, 1I | 77D, 73R, 1ID | Olympia Snowe (R) | |||||
1980 | Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush (R) | |||||||||||
1981 | James E. Tierney (D) | Samuel Shapiro (D) | 17R, 16D | 84D, 67R | ||||||||
1982 | ||||||||||||
1983 | 23D, 10R | 92D, 59R | George Mitchell (D) | John R. McKernan, Jr. (R) | ||||||||
1984 | ||||||||||||
1985 | 24D, 11R | 83D, 68R | William Cohen (R) | |||||||||
1986 | ||||||||||||
1987 | John R. McKernan, Jr. (R) | 20D, 15R | 86D, 65R | Joseph E. Brennan (D) | ||||||||
1988 | George H.W. Bush and Dan Quayle (R) | |||||||||||
1989 | William Diamond (D) | 97D, 54R | ||||||||||
1990 | ||||||||||||
1991 | Michael E. Carpenter (D) | 21D, 14R | Thomas Andrews (D) | |||||||||
1992 | Bill Clinton and Al Gore (D) | |||||||||||
1993 | 20D, 15R | 90D, 61R | ||||||||||
1994 | ||||||||||||
1995 | Angus King (I) | Andrew Ketterer (D) | 18R, 16D, 1I | 77D, 74R | James B. Longley, Jr. (R) | John Baldacci (D) | ||||||
1996 | ||||||||||||
1997 | Dan Gwadosky (D) | Dale McCormick (D) | 19D, 15R, 1I | 81D, 69R, 1I | Tom Allen (D) | |||||||
1998 | ||||||||||||
1999 | 20D, 14R, 1I | 79D, 71R, 1I | ||||||||||
2000 | Al Gore and Joe Lieberman (D) | |||||||||||
2001 | G. Steven Rowe (D) | 17R, 17D, 1I[24] | 88D, 62R, 1I | Olympia Snowe (R) | ||||||||
2002 | ||||||||||||
2003 | John Baldacci (D) | 18D, 17R | 80D, 67R, 3I, 1G | Susan Collins (R) | Mike Michaud (D) | |||||||
2004 | John Kerry and John Edwards (D) | |||||||||||
2005 | Matthew Dunlap (D) | David Lemoine (D) | 76D, 73R, 1I, 1G | |||||||||
2006 | ||||||||||||
2007 | 90D, 59R, 2I | |||||||||||
2008 | Barack Obama and Joe Biden (D) | |||||||||||
2009 | Janet Mills (D) | 20D, 15R | 95D, 55R, 1I | Chellie Pingree (D) | ||||||||
2010 | ||||||||||||
2011 | Paul LePage (R) | William Schneider (R) | Charlie Summers (R) | Bruce Poliquin (R) | 20R, 14D, 1I | 78R, 72D, 1I | ||||||
2012 | ||||||||||||
2013 | Janet Mills (D) | Matthew Dunlap (D) | Neria Douglass (D) | 19D, 15R, 1I | 89D, 58R, 4I | Angus King (I) | ||||||
2014 | ||||||||||||
2015 | Teresea Hayes (I) | 20R, 15D | 78D, 68R, 5I | Bruce Poliquin (R) | ||||||||
2016 | 78D, 69R, 4I | 3 Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine (D) | ||||||||||
2017 | 18R, 17D | 77D, 73R, 1I | ||||||||||
2018 | 74D, 70R, 6I, 1GI | |||||||||||
Year | Governor | Attorney General | Secretary of State | Treasurer | State Senate | State House | U.S. Senator (Class I) | U.S. Senator (Class II) | U.S. House District 1 | U.S. House District 2 | Former U.S. House Districts | Electoral College votes |
Executive offices | State Legislature | United States Congress |
See also
Notes
- ↑ Resigned to take appointment as a minister to negotiate a treaty with Spain.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 As president of the state Senate, filled unexpired term.
- ↑ Resigned to take an elected seat in the United States House of Representatives.
- 1 2 3 As speaker of the state House, filled unexpired term.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Resigned.
- ↑ Elected to the United States Senate.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Died in office.
- ↑ As president of the state Senate, filled unexpired term until his Senate term expired.
- ↑ A Democrat, Nathan Clifford, was elected as Speaker.
- ↑ A Democrat, Hannibal Hamlin, was elected as Speaker.
- ↑ Won a close election, but Democrats challenged the election. He was finally declared the winner by the state Supreme Court and sworn in on January 19, 1838.
- ↑ A Whig, Josiah S. Little, was elected as Speaker.
- 1 2 Resigned to take an elected seat in the United States Senate.
- ↑ A Democrat, David Dunn, was elected as Speaker.
- ↑ Due to a constitutional change in when elected officials took office, legislators elected in 1850 had a two-year term.
- ↑ ibid.
- ↑ Resigned to take an elected seat as Governor.
- ↑ A coalition of Whigs, Free Soilers, and Morrill Democrats elected Noah Smith Jr., a Whig, as Speaker, and organized the chamber.
- ↑ A coalition of Republicans and Whigs elected Sidney Perham, a Republican, as Speaker, and organized the chamber.
- ↑ A Democrat, Josiah S. Little, was elected as a minority-party Speaker.
- ↑ A Democrat, Charles A. Spofford, was elected as a minority-party Speaker.
- ↑ A coalition of Democrats, Greenbacks, and Independents supported Melvin P. Frank, a Democrat, as Speaker and organized the House. p. 9
- ↑ As president of the senate, filled unexpired term, and was later elected in his own right.
- ↑ A power-sharing agreement was negotiated between the Democrats and Republicans, with a Democrat, Mike Michaud, becoming Senate President for one year in 2001, and a Republican, Richard A. Bennett, becoming Senate President for one year in 2002.
- ↑ Clinton and Kaine received state's two at-large votes and one vote in the First Congressional Districts while Trump and Pence received one vote in the Second District.
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