Republican Bobby Charles and Democrat Hannah Pingree are set to face off in Maine’s gubernatorial race this fall after final vote tabulatinos came through from the primary held over a week ago.
The Associated Press called both primary races just before 2 a.m. Friday, June 19, ten days after the primary. Maine is a ranked choice state, so after no candidate won 50% of either primary outright on primary election day, election officials had to go a ranked choice run off.
In the first round, Charles secured 37.9% of the vote, but by the final round of counting between him and Republican Benjamin T. Midgley, he secured over 60% of the vote.
On the Democratic side, Pingree came in behind her main competitor in the first round of voting, with 22.3% compared to Nirav D. Shah’s 26.8%. However, after the ranked choice runoff, Pingree came out ahead with over 55% of the vote.
Notably, the number of Democratic primary voters dwarfed Republican primary votes, with over 200,000 Democrats turning out and around 99,000 Republicans turning out.
The victories set up a high-stakes general election to succeed Democratic Gov. Janet Mills, who is term-limited and unable to seek a third consecutive term.
Maine voters will elect a new governor for the first time since 2018, and the race is expected to test whether Democrats can hold the Blaine House in a state known for frequently shifting between the two parties. Maine has not elected governors from the same party consecutively in more than seven decades.
The Republican primary featured a crowded field that included former healthcare technology executive Jonathan Bush, former State Department official and lobbyist Bobby Charles, real estate businessman David Jones, former Maine Senate Majority Leader Garrett Mason, engineer and entrepreneur Owen McCarthy, fitness executive Ben Midgley and businessman Robert Wessels.
Charles, a former Reagan and Bush administration official, ran a staunchly conservative campaign focused on immigration, crime and opposition to Democratic policies. He entered Election Day as the perceived front-runner after public polling showed him with a sizable lead in both first-choice ballots and ranked-choice simulations.
The race also drew attention as a test of whether a more traditional New England Republican could still compete in a GOP increasingly shaped by President Donald Trump. Bush, the nephew of former Presidents George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush, attempted to position himself as a business-minded outsider while downplaying his political lineage.
On the Democratic side, voters chose among Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, former Maine Senate President Troy Jackson, renewable energy entrepreneur Angus King III, former Maine House Speaker Hannah Pingree and former Maine CDC Director Dr. Nirav Shah.
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King is the son of independent U.S. Sen. Angus King (I-ME), while Pingree is the daughter of Democratic U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree (D-ME).
Shah became widely known across Maine during the COVID-19 pandemic through his public health briefings and entered the race with significant statewide name recognition.
The general election is expected to draw national attention as both parties view Maine as competitive territory in an increasingly polarized political environment.
