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Kildere53's avatar

One quick note about the Maine special election: One reason why the Republican candidate got as close as she did may have been that she had a French last name while the Democratic candidate did not. Lewiston has a large Franco-American population, and these things really can make a difference.

I remember that in the early 2010s, there was a special election in Massachusetts, for a district south of Boston, an area with a lot of people of Irish descent. The Republican candidate had an Irish name - Patrick O'Connor - while the Democratic candidate did not. The district had voted for Obama, but the Republican won the special election, and I maintain to this day that he won because he had an Irish name while the Democrat did not.

Yuji's avatar

Superb reporting on this. The Fiechter story is actually a pretty useful case study in the limits of endorsement power without logistical follow-throgh. Trump's political capital works best when opponents fear it will be exercised, but the moment a challenger discovers the endorsement comes with no money or staff, the threat deflates fast. I've seen similar dynamics in primary fights at the state levle, where the outside endorser has more bark than budgetary bite.

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