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Quick Facts
Personal Details

Sara Gideon is a Democratic member of the Maine House of Representatives, representing District 48. She was first elected to the chamber in 2012.

Gideon currently serves as speaker of the House. She served as assistant majority leader from 2014 to 2016.

Gideon served as the Vice Chairwoman of the Freeport Town Council.

Gideon earned her B.S. from George Washington University.

Education

  • Attended, American University of Paris
  • BA, International Affairs, George Washington University, 1990-2004

Professional Experience

  • Attended, American University of Paris
  • BA, International Affairs, George Washington University, 1990-2004
  • Former Intern, United States Senator Claiborne Pell
  • Advertising Account Executive, USA TODAY

Political Experience

  • Attended, American University of Paris
  • BA, International Affairs, George Washington University, 1990-2004
  • Former Intern, United States Senator Claiborne Pell
  • Advertising Account Executive, USA TODAY
  • Speaker, Maine State House of Representatives, 2016-present
  • Representative, Maine State House of Representatives, District 48, 2012-present
  • Vice Chair, Freeport Town Council
  • Candidate, United States Senate, Maine, District Sr., 2020
  • Candidate, Maine State House of Representatives, District 48, 2018
  • Assistant Majority Floor Leader, Maine State House of Representatives, 2014-2017

Former Committees/Caucuses

Former Chair, Elections Committee, Maine State House of Representatives

Former Chair, Select Committee on Joint Rules, Maine State Legislature

Current Legislative Committees

Chair, Legislative Council

Member, Personnel

Chair, Rules and Business of the House

Chair, Subcommittee on Legislative Budget

Religious, Civic, and other Memberships

  • Attended, American University of Paris
  • BA, International Affairs, George Washington University, 1990-2004
  • Former Intern, United States Senator Claiborne Pell
  • Advertising Account Executive, USA TODAY
  • Speaker, Maine State House of Representatives, 2016-present
  • Representative, Maine State House of Representatives, District 48, 2012-present
  • Vice Chair, Freeport Town Council
  • Candidate, United States Senate, Maine, District Sr., 2020
  • Candidate, Maine State House of Representatives, District 48, 2018
  • Assistant Majority Floor Leader, Maine State House of Representatives, 2014-2017
  • Board Member, Board of Freeport Community Services
  • Board Member, Freeport Economic Development Corporation
Policy Positions

2020

Abortion

Do you generally support pro-choice or pro-life legislation?
- Pro-choice

Budget

1. In order to balance the budget, do you support an income tax increase on any tax bracket?
- Yes

2. Do you support expanding federal funding to support entitlement programs such as Social Security and Medicare?
- Yes

Campaign Finance

Do you support the regulation of indirect campaign contributions from corporations and unions?
- Yes

Crime

Do you support the protection of government officials, including law enforcement officers, from personal liability in civil lawsuits concerning alleged misconduct?
- Unknown Position

Defense

Do you support increasing defense spending?
- Unknown Position

Economy

1. Do you support federal spending as a means of promoting economic growth?
- Yes

2. Do you support lowering corporate taxes as a means of promoting economic growth?
- No

3. Do you support providing financial relief to businesses AND/OR corporations negatively impacted by the state of national emergency for COVID-19?
- Yes

Education

Do you support requiring states to adopt federal education standards?
- Unknown Position

Energy and Environment

1. Do you support government funding for the development of renewable energy (e.g. solar, wind, geo-thermal)?
- Yes

2. Do you support the federal regulation of greenhouse gas emissions?
- Yes

Guns

Do you generally support gun-control legislation?
- Unknown Position

Health Care

1. Do you support repealing the 2010 Affordable Care Act ("Obamacare")?
- No

2. Do you support requiring businesses to provide paid medical leave during public health crises, such as COVID-19?
- Unknown Position

Immigration

1. Do you support the construction of a wall along the Mexican border?
- Unknown Position

2. Do you support requiring immigrants who are unlawfully present to return to their country of origin before they are eligible for citizenship?
- Unknown Position

National Security

1. Should the United States use military force to prevent governments hostile to the U.S. from possessing a weapon of mass destruction (for example: nuclear, biological, chemical)?
- Unknown Position

2. Do you support reducing military intervention in Middle East conflicts?
- Unknown Position

Trade

Do you generally support removing barriers to international trade (for example: tariffs, quotas, etc.)?
- Unknown Position

Speeches
Articles

Watchdog Complaint Cites Dark-Money Group Targeting Collins

Oct. 11, 2019

A liberal dark-money group that popped up in Maine earlier this year and has already spent at least $1 million in attack ads against four-term Republican Sen. Susan Collins is drawing new scrutiny. A conservative-leaning watchdog group has filed an IRS complaint against Maine Momentum, a nonprofit whose leaders have direct ties to the state’s Democratic Party, as well as to Collins’ leading Democratic opponent, Sara Gideon. In a letter to IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig, the Foundation for Accountability and Civic Trust, or FACT, argues that Maine Momentum is violating its 501(c)(4) nonprofit tax status by engaging in a “consistent pattern of activities and public admissions” that show it’s acting as an arm of the Democratic Party rather than serving the public good, as nonprofit tax laws require. The complaint alleges that Maine Momentum, which calls itself a tax-exempt “grassroots advocacy effort” not required to disclose its donors, in reality is operating for the “substantial private benefit of the Democratic Party and Maine’s 2020 Democratic candidates for Senate instead of serving the public interest by promoting social welfare of the general public.” Under IRS law, groups formed as 501(c)(4)s cannot stand in support or against any politician, whether done indirectly or directly. They are allowed to participate in minimal political activities, but those activities cannot be the sole focus of the organization. Since the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United case, which opened the floodgates for unions and corporations to spend unlimited amounts of money on ads and other efforts to influence voters, dark-money groups on the right and left have proliferated with little IRS regulation and enforcement. When it comes to Maine Momentum, FACT argues that the organization is operating well outside the boundaries of the law. “Section 501(c)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code maintains the integrity of social welfare organizations, as well as citizens’ confidence in their efforts,” Kendra Arnold, FACT’s executive director, said in a statement to RealClearPolitics. “These organizations are supposed to promote the social welfare of the general public not engage in overtly partisan politics, and there are many facts in this case which bring into question Maine Momentum’s execution of this requirement.” The IRS complaint refers to quotes by one of the group’s leaders in a Portland Press Herald article describing its “sole focus” as “advocacy and accountability and public education” about Collins and her reelection campaign, part of a “multipronged strategy” by national Democratic operatives to defeat her. The complaint also highlights several of the group’s direct ties to the Maine Democratic Party and Collins’ top Democratic opponent, Maine House Speaker Gideon. Christopher Glynn, the spokesman for Maine Momentum, had worked as recently as June for Gideon. Before that, he served as a spokesman for the Maine Democratic Party. The group’s executive director, Willy Ritch, previously worked as the spokesperson for Maine Democratic Rep. Chellie Pingree. Lily Herrmann, the group’s community organizing and outreach director, also previously worked for the state Democratic Party and served as the co-president of the Colby College Democrats and chair of the Waterville Democratic Committee. Hermann’s LinkedIn profile, the complaint notes, mentions her participation in a candidate training program run by Emerge Maine, a group that was forced to convert to a 527 political organization after the IRS denied its tax exemption in 2011 because its activities violated the private benefit rules for 501(c)(4) organizations by benefiting only the Democratic Party. Emerge Maine also has strong ties to Gideon, who is a self-described alumna of the group’s 2012 program and has credited it for her start in politics. The group honored her as its “Woman of the Year” in June and its founder hosted a San Francisco fundraiser for Gideon’s Senate campaign in August. Neither Maine Momentum nor the Gideon campaign immediately responded to a request for comment. Maine Momentum has generated a flurry of media stories after it dropped $1.5 million in misleading attack ads against Collins over the summer. One of the television ads earned three Pinocchios from the Washington Post. It accused the centrist Republican of putting federal programs for seniors and retirees in harm’s way while giving big corporations massive tax cuts. The ad quotes “David,” who says he’s a cancer survivor and calls on viewers to tell Collins to “stop risking” Social Security and Medicare. Moments later, the ad asserts that Collins voted to give “tax breaks to corporations and then took donations from them.” The Collins campaign has decried the ad as flat-out wrong, arguing that the longtime lawmaker worked to protect Medicare during the tax debate and tied her vote for the tax-cut package to a deal that included provisions ensuring that Medicare wouldn’t be jeopardized. After a lengthy explanation, the Post confirmed that the ad included “a significant factual error and/or obvious contradictions.” Team Collins says the senator hasn’t taken money directly from corporations because doing so is illegal, although she does accept money from corporate political action committees, which she reports, as required, on her Federal Election Commission filings It’s Gideon and the outside groups supporting her that aren’t being transparent about their funding, they counter. “When the former Democratic aides who are running those ads are asked, ‘Who’s paying your salary?’ They have refused to say,” Collins said in the public radio interview in early September. “I think the people of Maine have a right to know. … Just as I have to disclose all of my contributions to the [Federal Election Commission], I think they should have to disclose the source of where their money is coming from, whether they are for me or against me. But [the ads] have all been against me so far.” The FACT complaint also points out that Maine Momentum formed as a nonprofit in April 2019 but launched its public presence within a day of Gideon declaring her candidacy for the Senate, which took place June 24. One week later, the complaint alleges, Maine Momentum launched the 16 Counties Coalition, a project to “pressure Republican Sen. Susan Collins on issues likely to resonate with moderate voters.” Within the first two weeks of its launch, Ritch told the Press Herald that the group would be using “advertising, social media, and community organizing to encourage Collins to start putting families and working Mainers ahead of her special interest supporters.” The complaint also cites the 16 Counties Coalition website as describing its mission in partisan terms. “Our coalition is made up of concerned residents living with the consequences of the Republican-controlled Senate’s policies, which reward wealthy donors at our expense.” Maine Momentum and the 16 Counties Coalition are also running digital ads and hitting Collins on Twitter and Facebook. Roughly 85% of the tweets by 16 Counties Coalition, the complaint alleges, have featured attacks on Collins and the only account the group’s Twitter handle follows is Collins’ Twitter account. Source: https://www.realclearpolitics.com/

'Dark Money'-Fueled Ads Heat Up Maine Senate Battle

Sep. 10, 2019

New England suffered through some of the hottest summer months on record this year – and that scorching season has extended to the race for Maine’s hotly contested Senate seat, where Susan Collins is in the political fight of her life. The race is already shaping up to be one of the costliest and most contentious in the country. Collins, now in her fourth term, had to know that her pivotal vote to confirm Brett Kavanaugh as the newest Supreme Court justice would place a huge, blinking neon target on her back ahead of her 2020 reelection campaign. But the GOP centrist says she didn’t expect shadowy “dark money” liberal groups to spring up in Maine and start flinging arrows at her more than a year before voters go to the polls. “I have never had so much money on negative ads spent against me so early,” Collins told Maine public radio on Friday. “It’s approximately $1.5 million in false attack ads on television and the Internet, and it’s just been nonstop, and we don’t know who’s paying for those – we have our suspicions.” The Collins camp doesn’t have to look too hard to find ties to one of her Democratic opponents in the race. The spokesman for Maine Momentum, the dark-money group that has already earned three Pinocchios from the Washington Post for its ad hitting Collins, had worked as recently as June for Collins’ leading Democratic opponent, Sara Gideon, speaker of Maine’s House of Representatives. Christopher Glynn served as Gideon’s communication director in the speaker’s office, and before that as a spokesman for the Maine Democratic Party. He now has the same communications director role at the 16 Counties Coalition, a project of Maine Momentum, a nonprofit group that does not have to disclose its donors and calls itself a “grassroots advocacy effort” with representatives from each of the state’s counties. Contrary to its grassroots claims, Collins argues that the group and its affiliates seemed to sprout up for the sole purpose of attacking her. The ad that earned the Washington Post’s rebuke accuses the centrist Republican of putting federal programs for seniors and retirees in harm’s way while giving big corporations massive tax cuts. It quotes “David,” who says he’s a cancer survivor, calling on viewers to tell Collins to “stop risking” Social Security and Medicare. Moments later, the ad asserts that Collins voted to give “tax breaks to corporations and then took donations from them.” The Collins campaign has decried the ad as flat-out wrong, arguing that the longtime lawmaker worked to protect Medicare during the tax debate and tied her vote for the tax-cut package to a deal that included provisions ensuring that Medicare wouldn’t be jeopardized. After a lengthy explanation, the Post confirmed that the ad included “a significant factual error and/or obvious contradictions.” Team Collins says the senator hasn’t taken money directly from corporations because doing so is illegal, although she does accept money from corporate political action committees, which she reports, as required, on her Federal Election Commission filings. It’s Gideon and the outside groups that support her who aren’t being transparent about their funding, they counter. “When the former Democratic aides who are running those ads are asked, ‘Who’s paying your salary?’ They have refused to say,” Collins said in the public radio interview. “I think the people of Maine have a right to know. … Just as I have to disclose all of my contributions to the [Federal Election Commission], I think they should have to disclose the source of where their money is coming from, whether they are for me or against me. But [the ads] have all been against me so far.” In the months to come, dark-money groups on the right will undoubtedly try to fight fire with fire in the Maine Senate contest. So far, though, it’s liberal groups that are staking out the early advertising game, trying to change Collins’ reputation in the state from a pragmatic voice in the middle to a corporate-controlled Republican who has backed President Trump’s agenda and high court nominees at critical points. In a year in which New England’s two liberal presidential hopefuls — Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren --  are embracing the socialist mantle and an anti-Wall Street message, Gideon has tried to distinguish herself from Collins by swearing off corporate PAC money. Collins’ campaign, however, argues that Gideon’s big business bashing is inconsistent with her past. Her GOP critics also point to a campaign finance violation Gideon admitted to in early August in which her corporate-funded political action committee illegally reimbursed Gideon for thousands of dollars in contributions she made to other Democratic candidates in 2015 and 2016. Gideon’s campaign said she received incorrect guidance on how to process contributions, but a national campaign finance expert called the violation a “pretty clear-cut straw donor” situation and Republican campaign consultants said that “anyone who runs for office” would know that reimbursing yourself for personal election contributions through a corporate-funded PAC is illegal. “Sara Gideon is trying to have it both ways,” Collins campaign spokesman Kevin Kelley told RCP. “She says she’s against accepting campaign donations from PACs, yet she built her career on donations from pharmaceutical companies, an oil pipeline company, and many other large, out-of-state corporations. “She says she wants to take on the ‘rigged system’ in Washington, yet she seems eager to accept help from at least one dark money group who refuses to reveal who is funding them, and is operated by someone who used to work for her,” he added. Gideon also isn’t hurting when it comes to fundraising from out-of-state sources. She boasts the strongest financial backing from groups connected to national Democrats of all four Democrats vying for the chance to challenge Collins. The other three are lobbyist Betsy Sweet, lawyer Bre Kidman and retired Air Force Gen. Jonathan Treacy. Last week Gideon traveled to San Francisco for a fundraiser hosted by Andrea Dew Steele, founder of Emerge America, a women’s political recruiting group that played a role in Gideon’s decision to enter the political arena. The event was held at Manny’s, a popular Bay-area event site for Democratic fundraising. Several years ago when President Obama was in the process of renewing diplomatic ties with Cuba, Dew Steele boasted on her personal Facebook page about sitting down with that island nation’s communist dictator, Fidel Castro, for an eight-hour dinner in 2002. The Facebook post came just months before debilitating sonic attacks directed at U.S. diplomatic staff living and working in Havana. “All this talk of Cuba today reminds me of my trip to Cuba in 2002 and my (8 hour) dinner with Fidel (and 20 others) pictured below with me on the left,” she wrote. “This is a historic time that we are living through.” Asked about her out-of-state fundraising hosted by a liberal activist in San Francisco, Gideon spokeswoman Maeve Coyle said it’s Collins who’s taking more money from the Bay-area this cycle “than she has from the entire state of Maine.” Coyle also said Collins has spent 22 years in the Senate raising millions of dollars from special interests and PACs. “When Collins has been in a position to get money out of politics, she’s repeatedly voted against measures to fix the system and instead prompted and protected the current system – one that benefits her,” she told RCP. Coyle, however, did not respond to RCP’s questions about Gideon’s former staffer’s communications role for 16 Counties Coalition.   Kelley dismissed as “laughable” Coyle’s argument that Gideon has an edge over Collins when it comes to decrying special interest money and standing up for campaign finance reform.   Collins was an original co-sponsor of the most far-reaching campaign finance reform legislation in decades, the 2002 Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, commonly known as McCain-Feingold, which prohibited national political parties, federal candidates and officeholders form soliciting soft-money contributions – unlimited funds generally used for party-building activities rather than helping specific candidates. Gideon’s team, meanwhile, has slammed Collins for voting against the Disclose Act, which required many advocacy groups that speak out about politicians’ records to release the names and identities of their donors. The bill was opposed by several free-speech groups, including the usually liberal-leaning American Civil Liberties Union, which argued the bill “inequitably suppresses only the speech of smaller organizations” while allowing “a few large organizations to preserve the privacy of their donors.” During her Maine public radio interview, Collins clarified that she supports a “level playing field” and legislation that requires all politically active groups to disclose their donors, “whether you’re on the right or the left or the center.” “Where’s their money coming from?” she asked. “They obviously have a lot of it.” Source: https://www.realclearpolitics.com/

Events

2020

Jun. 16
Virtual Town Hall with Sara Gideon

Tue 6:00 PM – 7:00 PM EDT

Jun. 2
Virtual Town Hall with Sara Gideon

Tue 6:00 PM – 7:00 PM EDT