Golden still won’t say if he’ll back Kamala Harris
By Billy Kobin, Bangor Daily News Staff and Paula Brewer, The Star-Herald Staff
MADAWASKA — U.S. Rep. Jared Golden, a Democrat up for reelection this year in a district twice carried by former President Donald Trump, deflected questions on Thursday about supporting his party’s ticket of Vice President Kamala Harris and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.
Golden told a reporter “no one asked me” about supporting Harris in 2020, when Golden endorsed President Joe Biden after Biden beat Harris and other Democratic primary candidates.
The third-term Democrat from Maine’s 2nd District otherwise said he is “keenly focused” on representing his constituents while at a ribbon cutting Thursday for a new port of entry and international bridge that replaces the old and deteriorating bridge connecting Madawaska with Edmundston, New Brunswick.
“It’s going to be a competitive race,” Golden said. “I’m going to do this job.”
Asked about Harris selecting Walz as her running mate earlier in August, Golden said: “I don’t think I’ve given an opinion on her campaign.”
Golden, a third-term Democrat and Marine veteran from Lewiston, is running for reelection against state Rep. Austin Theriault, a Fort Kent Republican and former NASCAR driver endorsed by Trump. Theriault has gone after Golden repeatedly in recent weeks for not giving firm answers on supporting Harris, a former U.S. senator and California attorney general, and Walz, a former National Guard member and congressman.
While other Maine Democrats quickly coalesced around backing the Harris-Walz ticket after Biden opted against seeking reelection following a shaky June debate against Trump, Golden has been among several Democrats running for Congress who had not yet offered their support.
Golden irked a segment of his Democratic supporters after saying in early July that Trump would beat Biden and that he was “OK with that.” He said he would not support Trump but did not commit to supporting Biden. After Biden announced his plan later in July to not seek reelection, Golden said he wanted to see what Harris’ “vision for the future of the country is” before deciding to support her.
Biden was trailing Trump in numerous polls before announcing his decision to step aside, but Harris has brought renewed momentum to the Democratic Party, with a new poll released Wednesday showing her leading or tied with Trump in six of seven battleground states.
Asked whether he still believes Trump will win in November, Golden was brief Thursday.
“It is a possibility,” he said. “It certainly is.”
Golden will also not attend the Democratic National Convention in Chicago next week and declined to join superdelegates in a virtual vote this month that cemented Harris as the party’s nominee. Still, the congressman who voted last year against Biden policies more than any other House Democrat has proven a tough candidate for Republicans to beat since first winning election in 2018 to represent Maine’s 2nd District that went for Trump in 2016 and 2020.
The Cook Political Report has rated Golden’s race against Theriault as a “toss up,” one of 11 seats currently held by Democrats alongside 11 GOP-held seats to also receive that rating. With less than three months to go, Mainers may now request absentee ballots for the Nov. 5 election.