Former Maine Senate President Troy Jackson is not ruling out the possibility of running for Congress in Maine’s 2nd Congressional District.
Jackson, who is in a competitive Democratic primary in the Maine governor’s race, has said previously that several people have asked if he would switch races after U.S. Rep. Jared Golden announced earlier this month he won’t seek reelection to a fifth term.
Asked in an interview Friday if he was thinking about running in the 2nd District, Jackson, who is from Allagash in far northern Maine, said he was flattered by the questions and attention he’s been getting.
“I can understand why people are interested in that,” he said. “I’ve been running in districts that supported Trump and Republicans for a long time and winning. But I think the same reason people are telling me I’m the only one who can win in the 2nd District is the same reason I’m the best candidate for governor. If you can’t win the 2nd District, you’re probably going to have a hard time winning a race statewide.”
Asked if he would definitely not switch races, Jackson said, “Again, if you see me as the best candidate for the 2nd District, you should see me as the best candidate for the governor’s race.”
Political insiders have been speculating for weeks on whether Jackson, 57, might switch races after Golden, also a Democrat, announced on Nov. 5 that he wouldn’t seek reelection.
Jackson served three terms as Maine Senate President from 2019 to 2024, and has served 10 terms total in the Maine House of Representatives and Maine Senate. After he was termed out of his Senate seat last year, Republican Sue Bernard won the district with 66% of the vote.
The Maine governor’s race has so far drawn close to two dozen candidates. Gov. Janet Mills cannot run for reelection due to term limits and is running for Sen. Susan Collins’ seat.
In the Democratic primary, Jackson is among frontrunners who also include Shenna Bellows, Maine’s secretary of state; Angus King III, a businessman and entrepreneur; Hannah Pingree, a former speaker of the Maine House and official in the Mills administration; and Nirav Shah, the former head of the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
In the 2nd District race, state auditor and former Maine Secretary of State Matt Dunlap and former congressional staffer Jordan Wood are the leading Democratic contenders. Former two-term Gov. Paul LePage is the frontrunner among Republicans.
State Sen. Joe Baldacci, a Bangor Democrat, has also said he is considering a run.
The sprawling 2nd District encompasses northern and western Maine and has leaned more conservative in recent years, with Donald Trump picking up one of Maine’s four electoral votes from the district in the 2016, 2020 and 2024 elections.
National Democrats indicated earlier this month they were still looking for a candidate to get behind. A person familiar with the work of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, a national group working to elect Democrats to the U.S. House, said after Golden’s announcement that the committee was “actively recruiting” for the seat.
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