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New Letter to the Editor Toolkit!

We have just posted a new toolkit that can help guide you through the process of writing a letter to the editor to local publications. This is a great way to start a conversation about policies and elections that impact your community.

Check out the Letter To The Editor Toolkit.

  • April 11, 2021
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New Officers Elected!

Sagadahoc Dems slate of new officers were voted in for a two-year term during the January meeting of the Sagadahoc County Democratic Committee:

  • Chair: Richard Kessler
  • Vide Chair: Abben Maguire
  • Secretary: Marcy Leger
  • Treasurer: Gretta Wark
  • Representative to state rules committee: Don Lawson-Stopps

  • January 31, 2021
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Chair’s Letter: June 2020

Dear Friends and Fellow Democrats:

When I started this letter to you 10 days ago, I wrote about the odious police union president in Minneapolis, Bob Kroll, and his connections with Trump.  Quotes of him at a Trump rally last October and in an interview last April were so incendiary after his members murdered George Floyd, that I had to stop writing. His words made me feel like the entire political enterprise was irrelevant. 

And what has been happening in the streets of America since George Floyd’s murder shows that sentiment is widely — and understandably — shared.  It is emotionally true, and it is essential to creating change. 

But the political enterprise IS NOT irrelevant – indeed it is the path that we must take to build lasting change.  Our outrage must be the fuel to drive us to the voting booth in overwhelming numbers, and then beyond through dense and thorny thickets of legislative brambles, to build statutory structures that, though inevitably imperfect, can nevertheless suffice to save us from the worst consequences of our centuries of national moral corruption, now erupting in crises of social justice, public health, the economy, climate change, international relations, and more.

In this connection, I encourage you to read the resolutionon police brutality recently adopted by the Democratic State Committee.

So, for us as the County Committee and its supporters, it is back to the nuts and bolts of defeating this disaster of a President and his debauched band of double-talking enablers and defaulters-in the-face-of-duty!

At the moment, there are two things we can all do now in the nuts-and-bolts department which will help us get out the vote next fall. One is to participate in the COMMIT to VOTEcampaign.  By clicking on the link and giving the Party your up-to-date contact info and your candidate preferences, you build our ability identify our voters and give the GOTV effort a big leg up in the critical final phase of the campaign, leaving more time to concentrate on contacting folks who haven’t voted yet. 

The other is to ask five other friends and acquaintances to participate as well, either by forwarding this letter to them, or by using the sharing options at the end of the sign-up process.

You can also sign up to volunteer and donate, but the key is committing to vote Democratic, giving your contact info, and passing it along to five others with the request that they do the same.  You can do it now, and it will help when it really counts!

Please note that we have a County Committee Meeting coming up this Thursday at 4:30 PM via Zoom.  We’ll have a chance to chat with US Senate primary candidates Betsy Sweet and Bre Kidman.  (House Speaker Sara Gideon unfortunately cannot make it.)

Finally, don’t forget to request an Absentee Ballot for the July 14 Primary.  You will help limit the risk to  the short-handed poll workers from Covid-19 – and to yourself!

Thank you for joining the effort to avert the worst of the calamitous consequences of historic moral failure, current incompetence in governance, and sophisticated social subversion!

Will Neilson, Chair
Sagadahoc County Democratic Committee

  • June 17, 2020
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Natasha Irving signs joint statement in reaction to George Floyd’s horrifying murder

[PDF Version of the statement here.]

JOINT STATEMENT FROM ELECTED PROSECUTORS ON THE MURDER OF GEORGE FLOYD AND POLICE VIOLENCE
May 29, 2020

We are elected prosecutors from communities across the United States. We are charged with upholding justice and protecting the safety of all members of our community regardless of the color of their skin, whether they wear a badge, or the neighborhood where they live. We denounce the murder of George Floyd as a profound tragedy and an affront to justice everywhere. We extend our deepest condolences to the family and friends of Mr. Floyd and the entire Minneapolis community. And we say loudly and unequivocally: Enough.

The murder of Mr. Floyd is only one of many episodes of police brutality and excessive force that have plagued our communities for decades. These violent, sickening and despicable acts threaten the safety of our streets and erode critical bonds of trust in our justice system. Every episode of police violence against people of color lays bare the unbroken link between slavery and modern racially-biased policing and demonstrates the moral imperative for all law enforcement leaders and every member of our justice system to do better.

We demand accountability from police and our fellow prosecutors, and we demand systemic change – and commit to bringing about these changes in our own communities. There have been some strides made, but not nearly enough as the body count at the hands of violent police officers continues to rise in cities across this nation. We know from painful experience that state and federal criminal investigations, enhanced oversight and civilian review of policing, and a reexamination of the practices that allow officers who have engaged in excessive force, misconduct or racist acts to stay on the job, are all important steps being implemented around the nation. But these changes are simply not enough to save lives and restore police legitimacy. Comprehensive reform is necessary to interrupt the cycles of state-sanctioned violence that endangers all of our communities, and we, as a group of elected prosecutors will do our part and call on our peers to join us.

Elected prosecutors must respond to incidents of alleged police violence swiftly, transparently, and fairly. And we must ensure that policies and practices of our offices as well as our law enforcement partners protect all members of our community. These objectives are embodied in the recommendations of the Task Force on 21st Century Policing. And they are the essence of the recommendations we urge leaders around the nation to embrace, as follows:

Enhancing Accountability and Addressing Misconduct

  • Independent oversight structures should be created and empowered to hold the police accountable to the community. And elected prosecutors should seek to support the creation and empowerment of these groups
  • Elected prosecutors should work together with their law enforcement leaders to change policies, practices and contracts that undermine the ability to discharge officers who should no longer be on the job.
  • Nationally, prosecutors and law enforcement agencies must work together to prevent the chronic practice of dangerous officers being fired and rehired by multiple law enforcement agencies. To that end, a national database should be created that addresses the concerning phenomenon of law enforcement members who are discharged from one department being rehired elsewhere.
  • Law enforcement, prosecutors, and public defenders should help create and support shared databases tracking documented instances of police misconduct.
  • Laws that shield police records from public view – and in doing so, hamper appropriate and necessary police accountability for misconduct – should be repealed.
  • Law enforcement departments should institute as a matter of common practice robust internal affairs mechanisms that report directly to the organization’s head and that effectively identify and track problem officers, allegations of misconduct and citizen’s complaints.

Promoting Transparency

  • All policies, protocols, and agreements regarding officer-involved incidents, including use of force policies, should be publicly available and all investigations, prosecutions, and dispositions regarding officer-involved incidents should regularly be reported to the public.
  • All officers should wear body cameras, and body camera footage should be routinely and promptly made available to the public – unless there is a specific and demonstrable showing that doing so would compromise an ongoing investigation, endanger witnesses, or otherwise violate ethical guidelines.

Addressing Racially Disparate Policing and Protecting Human Life

  • Police training should emphasize appropriate and inappropriate use of force and protect the dignity of human life, including by banning the use of neck restraints.
  • Implicit bias training should be mandated for all police officers.
  • Alternative first responder programs should reduce the extent to which police officers respond to individuals experiencing mental health crises and other medical emergencies that are better addressed by health professionals.
  • Practices that have allowed for a militarization of police departments should be revisited and replaced by robust community policing strategies that allow for co-ownership of policing.
  • Law enforcement bodies should proactively recruit and hire personnel who are more reflective of the communities they police.

Prosecutorial Practices

  • Prosecutors, when running for office, should not seek or accept endorsements or donations from police departments or police unions; and prosecutors should work with the American Bar Association and other national groups to imbed these practices in ethical rules to ensure prosecutorial independence and avoid any actual or perceived conflicts of interest.
  • Prosecutors’ offices should have the ability and resources to independently and effectively investigate and prosecute officer-involved shooting incidents and the investigation of these cases in most instances should not be handled by the employing law enforcement agency.
  • Responding to police-involved incidents with a criminal investigation is a critical accountability measure, but it is ineffective unless paired with day-to-day practices within the prosecutor’s office that are aimed at identifying troublesome police conduct, engaging with law enforcement agencies to improve their underlying policies and practices, and proactively avoiding reliance on officers with credibility and veracity concerns. To that end, discovery reform, Brady lists, independent oversight, tracking and analyzing racial disparities in prosecutorial decision-making, and training that combats racial bias are all measures that prosecutors must implement to address their own role in perpetuating racially-biased policing.
  • Prosecutors’ offices should have independent and empowered conviction integrity processes that address past misconduct and ensure that injustices do not go unaddressed.

A Reset of Our Justice System

  • Police violence against people of color is only one facet of mass incarceration and the deeply-entrenched racial disparities within our justice system. Meaningful change requires close scrutiny and analysis of all of the disparities within the legal system and policy changes at every stage – from arrest to sentencing. Even more urgently, meaningful change requires a fundamental shift in the way we view our system and support for alternative pathways than the justice system for individuals struggling with poverty, substance use or mental health challenges.
  • Law enforcement leaders must partner with the community to reimagine what justice means, examine the ways that the justice system intersects with racism, classism, and other societal inequities, and chart a new path predicated on community well-being. We can no longer engage in business as usual and presume that a punitive criminal justice response is the smart, effective, or evidence-based one when conduct driven by poverty, substance use or mental illness finds its way to the doorstep of our justice system. We can do better – and our communities need us to do better. In so doing we will all be safer and healthier.

As our streets erupt in outrage and grief, wise and level-headed leadership is an imperative. We condemn those who call for further harm or the use of violence to address unrest and communities in pain. To advocate for indiscriminate violence is a failure of leadership of the highest order and a betrayal of American law and values. To those who take to the streets to mourn, we hear you, and we urge you to abide by public health guidelines to prevent further tragedies and further loss of life. Your lives matter to us. Please do not put them at risk.

Change is long overdue, but transformation is possible. We, as elected prosecutors, pledge to do our part. We call on our colleagues and community partners to do what is right. We call on the Hennepin County Attorney and United States Department of Justice to move swiftly and transparently toward holding the perpetrators of this heinous crime accountable. We call on everyone to fight for the dignity and sanctity of Black and brown lives. In this season of national mourning, in which we have already lost so much and so many, we must take bold strides toward justice together, to ensure that no more lives are needlessly stolen.

Aramis Ayala
State Attorney, Ninth Judicial Circuit, Florida

Diana Becton
District Attorney, Contra Costa County, California

Wesley Bell
Prosecuting Attorney, St. Louis County, Missouri

Buta Biberaj
Commonwealth’s Attorney, Loudoun County, Virginia

Sherry Boston
District Attorney, DeKalb County, Georgia

Chesa Boudin
District Attorney, City and County of San Francisco, California

John Choi
County Attorney, Ramsey County, Minnesota

Shameca Collins
District Attorney, Sixth Judicial District, Mississipp

Scott Colom
District Attorney, Sixteenth Judicial District, Mississippi

John Creuzot
District Attorney, Dallas County, Texas

Satana Deberry
District Attorney, Durham County, North Carolina

Thomas J. Donovan, Jr.
Attorney General, State of Vermont

Mark A. Dupree, Sr.
District Attorney, Wyandotte County, Kansas

Kimberly M. Foxx
State’s Attorney, Cook County, Illinois

Kimberly Gardner
Circuit Attorney, City of St. Louis, Missouri

Sarah F. George
State’s Attorney, Chittenden County, Vermont

Sim Gill
District Attorney, Salt Lake County, Utah

Eric Gonzalez
District Attorney, Kings County, New York

Mark Gonzalez
District Attorney, Nueces County, Texas

Andrea Harrington
District Attorney, Berkshire County, Massachusetts

Jim Hingeley
Commonwealth’s Attorney, Albemarle County, Virginia

Peter S. Holmes
City Attorney, Seattle, Washington

John Hummel
District Attorney, Deschutes County, Oregon

Natasha Irving
District Attorney, Sixth Prosecutorial District, Maine

Kathleen Jennings
Attorney General, State of Delaware

Justin F. Kollar
Prosecuting Attorney, Kauaʻi County, Hawaii

Lawrence S. Krasner
District Attorney, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Beth McCann
District Attorney, Second Judicial District, Colorado

Brian Middleton
District Attorney, Fort Bend County, Texas

Stephanie Morales
Commonwealth’s Attorney, Portsmouth, Virginia

Marilyn J. Mosby
State’s Attorney, Baltimore City, Maryland

Jody Owens
District Attorney, Hinds County, Mississippi

Karl Racine
Attorney General, District of Columbia

Rachael Rollins
District Attorney, Suffolk County, Massachusetts

Daniel Satterberg
Prosecuting Attorney, King County, Washington

Daniella M. Shorter
District Attorney, Twenty-Second Judicial District, Mississippi

Carol Siemon
Prosecuting Attorney, Ingham County, Michigan

David E. Sullivan
District Attorney, Northwestern District, Massachusetts

Cyrus R. Vance
District Attorney, New York County, New York

Andrew H. Warren
State Attorney, Thirteenth Judicial Circuit, Florida

  • June 4, 2020
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Commit To Vote!

I bet you were wondering what you could do to help defeat Donald Trump this November. One of the single most important thing you can do this November is vote!

Voter turnout is the key to success. The Commit to Vote tool is our best mechanism to build our base of voters and ensure that Sagadahoc County citizens go to the polls in November and support our candidates from the top of the ballot on down.

Commit to Vote!

Thanks!

-Sagadahoc Dems

  • May 19, 2020
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Virtual Table: Indivisible Sagadahoc May 16

The next weekly Virtual Table of Indivisible Sagadahoc will be on Saturday May 16 at 9am. Among this week’s guests will be Judy Kahrl, founder of Grandmothers for Reproductive Rights. Join them on Zoom:

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81473557012

  • May 13, 2020
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Join Allison Hepler this Sat May 9

State Representative Allison Hepler will be stopping by “Indivisible Sagadahoc’s Virtual Table” event this Saturday at 9 am. You should stop by too. Link is: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81473557012

  • May 8, 2020
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Check In for the 2020 Caucus Now!

On Sunday, March 8, Democrats in towns and cities across the state will Rise and Organize as part of the statewide Maine Democratic Party Caucuses!

Gathering with our friends, families, and neighbors who share our values is how we’ll build the grassroots coalition we need to win this November. We need you to #RiseAndOrganize, because voting by itself is not enough.

CAUCUS ADVANCE CHECK-IN NOW

  • March 4, 2020
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Come hear Denise Tepler on Healthcare.

Denise Tepler talks Healthcare: Bath
  • March 2, 2020
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2020 Caucus March 8

If you’ve never attended a caucus before, or if you’ve caucused with us many times, now is the time to Rise and Organize at your local caucus on March 8. Because if we’re going to win in 2020, voting by itself is not enough.

Maine will hold a Presidential Primary for the first time in decades on March 3, 2020. But if we’re going to win in November, voting by itself won’t be enough.

Every path to winning the United States Senate runs through Maine, and no matter who is president, we need a Senate that works to give every American a fair shot at success.

But Donald Trump, Susan Collins, and Maine Republicans are being propped up by their wealthy corporate allies, which means we have to work twice as hard to defeat them.

Watch this video about the Maine Democratic Caucus process.

That’s why on March 8, 2020, just days after Maine’s Presidential Primary, Democrats will Rise and Organize​ at caucuses in towns and cities across Maine.

Although we’ll be casting our votes for our preferred presidential nominees the week before, these caucuses are the first step in building our winning coalition to support our eventual nominees for President and U.S. Senate, Reps. Golden and Pingree, and state legislative nominees up and down the ballot.

We’re going to need every ounce of support in building a strong infrastructure to persuade voters, one household at a time. That’s why the caucuses are so important.

  • February 14, 2020
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  • Natasha Irving signs joint statement in reaction to George Floyd’s horrifying murder
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