New Maine Bill: If You're Not a Party Member, You're "Unenrolled"

New Maine Bill: If You're Not a Party Member, You're "Unenrolled"
Published: 09 Mar, 2017
2 min read

A new bill has worked its way into the Maine legislature. Presented and co-sponsored by Republican and Democratic state lawmakers, it seeks to “require candidates to be listed as unenrolled if not registered with a recognized party.”

That’s right, it seems that for these legislators, “independent” is now too strong of a word for those who decide to run with no party affiliation.

But it’s not only independents who would be affected by this law. The only recognized parties in the state of Maine are Republican, Democratic, and Green Independent. That means, for instance, that a Libertarian candidate would also have an "unenrolled" designation on the ballot.

Some opponents have referred to this bill as the “Party Protection Plan,” since it is likely to give recognized party candidates an advantage at the polls over the unimpressive and uninformative designation "unenrolled."

It's important to note that Maine has a considerably high independent voter population (37% of the total electorate), state voters elected one of the only two independent U.S. senators in Congress, and Maine is one of the only states in the country that currently has two independent state legislators.

It certainly seems like some in Maine's government have a strategy to hold on to power, which they feel is being taken away from them by those pesky voters.

And it doesn't stop there.

Many state lawmakers on both sides of the political aisle are going after the citizens' initiative process; particularly, after state voters approved Ranked Choice Voting to reform the state’s election process. Ranked choice voting was approved with more than 400,000 votes, the second-highest ‘Yes’ vote in the state’s initiative history.

Governor Paul LePage talked about the initiative process during his State of the State. He was very assertive, saying that direct democracy is not good for the people of Maine, in part, because he believes it is making the legislators less relevant.

IVP Donate

Several bills were introduced in the legislature – right after Ranked Choice Voting passed – going after the initiative process, which means future efforts at voter-approved reform in Maine are in jeopardy.

On ranked choice specifically, Maine’s Senate voted (with a 24-10 vote) in favor of asking for an advisory opinion from Maine’s Supreme Court, which is likely to delay or even kill its implementation all together.

Forcing independents to run as ‘unenrolled,’ delaying ranked choice voting, and attacking citizens’ initiatives -- is the partisan political establishment trying to cripple Maine’s independent and reformative streak?

Photo Credit: Felix Lopov / shutterstock.com

You Might Also Like

Why Neither Side Wants the Truth About Voter ID
Why Neither Side Wants the Truth About Voter ID
Voter ID is treated like a five-alarm fire in American politics. That reaction says more about our dysfunctional political system than it does about voter ID itself. ...
06 Feb, 2026
-
3 min read
Oklahoma Independents Drive Massive Push to Open Primaries With State Question 836
Oklahoma Independents Drive Massive Push to Open Primaries With State Question 836
While much of the U.S. was slammed with severe winter weather over the weekend, volunteers for Oklahoma State Question 836 – which would end the use of taxpayer-funded closed primaries – made a final push to get their campaign to over 200,000 petition signatures....
27 Jan, 2026
-
3 min read
NEW POLL: California Governor’s Race Sees “None of the Above” Beat the Entire Democratic Field
NEW POLL: California Governor’s Race Sees “None of the Above” Beat the Entire Democratic Field
A new statewide poll conducted by the Independent Voter Project finds California’s independent voters overwhelmingly support the state’s nonpartisan primary system and express broad dissatisfaction with the direction of state politics....
12 Jan, 2026
-
4 min read