Maine Gubernatorial Primary Polls Show Split Support Among Democrats and Republicans; Jackson Censure Expunged in 1837; Trump Returns as President
Polls from March 2026 show divided support among Maine’s Democratic and Republican primary voters for governor, while historical records confirm the censure and subsequent expungement of Andrew Jackson in the 1830s. Donald J. Trump has been elected president in 2024 and is returning to the White House.
In a March 2026 poll reported by spectrumlocalnews.com, Angus King III and Dr. Nirav Shah each received 24% likely support among Democratic primary voters for governor of Maine, while Hannah Pingree received 18%. Among Republican primary voters, Bobby Charles received 26% support, Garrett Mason received 11%, and Jim Libby received 8%. According to the same poll, 44% of Republican primary voters in Maine indicated they were not familiar with all of the candidates. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, is running for reelection to her sixth term in the U.S. Senate, according to gdelt. Historical records from millercenter.org state that on April 15, 1834, President Andrew Jackson ordered the Treasury Department to withdraw federal deposits from the Second Bank of the United States. Secretary of the Treasury William Duane was fired after refusing to carry out the order. On March 28, 1834, the U.S. Senate passed a resolution of censure against Jackson, which was expunged from the record on January 16, 1837. Donald J. Trump was elected president in 2024 and is returning to the White House, according to whitehouse.gov. During his first administration, Trump passed record-setting tax cuts and regulation cuts, and the United States achieved energy independence, according to whitehouse.gov.
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