Susan Collins, Maine’s moderate
Republican in the U.S. Senate, should not run for governor in 2018.
She should continue to serve in the Senate where she plays a major
role for Maine and the country.
This is not a political endorsement.
Right now, she is running for nothing, but serving a term that
extends to 2020.
In the Senate, it often looks like
Collins is the only member of the GOP moderate caucus. She
represents the Maine view on issues, and her stands on principle can
put her in conflict with her party’s leadership. By using
old-fashioned “shunning,” they can make her pay a price for her
independence.
Neither she nor Olympia Snowe, Maine's
former senator and also a moderate, have had the kind of leadership
roles, including committee chairs, they deserve. Too unreliably
independent.
Of course, Collins must follow party
leadership when she can. For example, she is a loyalist on the
filibuster.
But her brand of independence and
moderation is essential in a deeply polarized Congress. She has kept
moderate politics legitimate in a party dominated by relentless
conservatives. That has encouraged other Republicans, closet
moderates, to stake out their own positions.
As the debate on a possible revision of
the Affordable Care Act has shown, congressional Republican moderates
have become more willing to differ from the slash-and-burn approach
of House Speaker Paul Ryan.
With Bill Cassidy, the new GOP senator
from Louisiana and a physician, Collins has sponsored a replacement
for the Affordable Care Act that would be less threatening to those
who have gained health insurance coverage under Obamacare.
Republican conservatives and Democratic
liberals don’t like it. That’s a recipe for the moderates in
both parties to ignore their leaders, block any extreme solution, and
work together on a compromise.
It only takes a handful of senators,
led by Collins and Cassidy, to produce at least some needed reform
while blocking extreme solutions. Only a bipartisan deal could yield
a durable solution. That has much less chance if Collins has one
foot out the door.
Admittedly, the case is also strong for
Collins to run for governor. First, let’s admit that if she ran,
she would win. She has a formidable standing with the voters and
operates at a political level well above any other possible
candidate. If she announced, some other hopefuls would rush out the
door.
And she may have a strong personal case
for wanting to come back to the state. The stresses of being
governor, particularly one capable of finding bipartisan solutions
even if the Legislature were dominated by Democrats, are much less
than those of being what she calls a “militant moderate” in the
GOP Senate.
For one thing, she would no longer have
to cater to Mitch McConnell, the mediocre GOP leader, who controls
the Senate’s business. She must have been frustrated when he put
together a Republican group to work on health care reform without a
single woman, despite Collins’ seniority and her health care
proposal.
Collins might also see the governorship
as the political path to retirement. With less stress and a possible
eight years in office, being governor could be a graceful departure,
leaving the state in better shape than when she started.
Though she did not serve in the Maine
Legislature, she knows how state government works. She headed the
Department of Business Regulation, the same position as both my wife
and I held, each of us under a different governor. She did an
excellent job.
Maine has traditionally been a “strong
governor state.” The Legislature looks to the governor for policy
proposals and he (no women, yet) sets the agenda with the support of
his legislative party.
Paul LePage has changed that. He
offers take-it-or-leave-it proposals and seldom negotiates with the
Legislature. In fact, when he makes the political debate personal,
it undermines his influence, occasionally even alienating his own
party.
Collins might restore the traditional
role of the governor. It’s likely she could forge compromises with
both parties and create a sense of good government instead of
conflict.
If she stays in the Senate, as she
should, the parties should not view the governorship as being so
weakened that anybody could do the job. The state needs an
articulate, thoughtful leader, not a political opportunist merely
seeking to fill a vacuum. LePage will leave the state in need of
more than routine leadership.
Collins made a deal with Maine voters to serve a six-year term in the
U.S. Senate. As a person of principle, she should keep her
commitment.