Dana Milbank has a good column in last Sunday’s Washington Post: “Health reform and the specter of Alf Landon.”
Landon, you might recall, ran against FDR in 1936’s presidential election – the most lopsided election in the history of the United States in terms of electoral votes (I don’t want to spoil it, but FDR creamed him).
Additionally the 1936 presidential election, you might recall, was the one in which Maine lost its place as the bellwether presidential elections.
For the hundred years prior Maine had almost consistently predicted the Presidential winner. See, back then our statewide elections were in September. In the presidential election years we oftentimes voted in the governor or senators from the party that would go on to win the presidential election. The political wisdom of the time became “As Maine goes, so goes the nation.”
Then 1936 happened.
Only Maine and Vermont voted for Landon.
Thus the phrase jokingly became “As goes Maine, so goes Vermont.”
Anyway, check out Milbank’s article.
Tags: history, Maine, politics, Washington Post