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All the ugly people

Politics and other mistakes
By AL DIAMON  |  November 12, 2008

I was confused for a while.

Why did Maine voters give overwhelming approval to a tax-repeal referendum on Nov. 4, while simultaneously returning to office even more of the Democratic legislators who passed the unpopular tax in the first place?

Why did the state’s electorate cry out for change, but, by wide margins, return to Congress incumbents Susan Collins and Mike Michaud — as well as Chellie Pingree, a person who supports the same policies as the incumbent?

Why — with everyone whining about the economy, economic development, and unemployment — did this election result in the rejection of a casino project whose proponents promised jobs, additional state revenue, and diversion from recessionary reality?

I searched in vain for signs of consistency in the returns. I wanted some assurance the state’s citizens hadn’t just trudged to the polls to make a bunch of random marks on their ballots. I wanted an indication they weren’t choosing their elected leaders the way novices pick race horses. (“I’m voting for the candidate with the funniest nickname.” “I’m voting for the referendum campaign with the cutest colors on its lawn signs.”)

I watched on TV as the winners declared victory and the losers made noises like they hoped they could get back their old jobs at the car wash, and I suddenly saw the pattern.

These campaigns weren’t about issues.

People hadn’t made decisions based on platforms or platitudes.

They didn’t care who had the sharpest arguments in debates or the most innovative ideas in their frontal lobes.

This whole mess came down to physical appearance. But not the way you think.

Welcome to the year of voting ugly.

On election night, almost all the defeated politicos looked sharp. Meanwhile, most of the winners could have been mistaken for the “before” picture in a Botox commercial.

Take the casino. The front person for the Oxford County gambling emporium was Pat LaMarche. OK, she’s no candidate for the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue, but, if you ignore her personality, LaMarche is poised, well-groomed, and reasonably attractive.

In 2008, that’s called the loser look.

The anti-gambling side was represented by Dennis Bailey. His clothes could have been dropped off by a refugee-relief agency. His hair appeared to be staging a coup d’état against his scalp. His face indicated he’s expecting a hard winter, so he’s storing walnuts in his jowls.

What a stud.

Did you see the TV ad Republican 1st District candidate Charlie Summers ran attacking his Democratic opponent for supporting tax increases? It featured a picture of Chellie Pingree that appeared to have been taken right after she soaked her head in an acid bath. Made you feel sorry for her boyfriend, millionaire hedge-fund manager S. Donald Sussman. Unless you’ve seen S. Donald Sussman.

On the other hand, Summers always looks like he just stepped out of the pages of GQ. It’s going to be tough keeping those creases sharp while he’s soaping up cars.

Democratic US Senate candidate Tom Allen has perfect hair, a chiseled visage, and an adorable gap in his teeth. But he was never able to shake his image as a big-city, policy-wonk lawyer.

The truth is clingy like that.

GOP incumbent Susan Collins has a voice like a smoke alarm, a hairdo created by anarchists, and a wardrobe that could have been designed to enrage bulls. The overall effect screams something.

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Related: Hey, hey, we're the Monkees, Endorsements, or lack thereof, Here come the bugs, More more >
  Topics: Talking Politics , Election Campaigns, Elections and Voting, Politics,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY AL DIAMON
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