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Red Flag Laws Threaten Due Process — Maine Must Do Better
If the state can take away one constitutional right without due process, what stops it from taking others? Free speech? Property rights? Religious liberty? The danger is not just about guns — it’s about government overreach in every corner of our lives.
Oct 9


Protecting Trust, Protecting Every Vote
Maine people take pride in our elections. We show up, we volunteer, we trust our clerks and neighbors to run the process fairly. But trust is not a system; it’s a value that must be backed by proof. When something as serious as 250 official ballots ends up in an Amazon box instead of a clerk’s office, that’s not a small hiccup; it’s a failure of control. It shouldn’t happen, and it shouldn’t take a lucky delivery and an honest citizen to catch it. The lesson here isn’t partis
Oct 7


It’s Time to Restore Trust in Maine’s Elections: Why Voter Confidence is Collapsing and What We Can Do to Fix It
For decades, Mainers have taken pride in local elections — small-town transparency, hand-counted ballots, neighbors watching neighbors do the work. But things have changed. And not for the better.
Aug 4


Medical Freedom
I’m running for governor because I believe in the foundational values of individual liberty, personal responsibility, and limited government—values that have been trampled by the current leadership of our state.
Jun 2


Boys in Girls Sports
There are many valid reasons to base sports eligibility on biological sex rather than self-declared gender. I fully support protecting girls' sports by ensuring biological males do not compete in female categories. Here are several key points:
Jun 2


Enough is Enough: Cutting Taxes, Controlling Spending, and Respecting Your Paycheck
Since 2020, Maine’s state budget has ballooned from $7.4 billion to $10.5 billion—a jaw-dropping 40% increase in just four years. At the same time, national reports have ranked Maine as one of the top three most heavily taxed states in the country.
This isn’t happening by accident. It’s the result of choices made by leaders in Augusta—and it can be reversed if we elect leaders willing to make different ones.
Apr 13


Government Overreach on Wheels: Why Forcing EVs on Mainers Is the Wrong Road to Take
The Maine Department of Environmental Protection recently considered what they called a “minor policy change” that would have had a major impact: requiring new car dealerships to only purchase electric vehicles (EVs) from manufacturers.
Apr 13


Why School Choice Makes Sense—And Builds Better Schools
Robert Wessels supports School Choice to give Maine parents more control over where and how their children are educated—through real options, not one-size-fits-all mandates. He advocates for solutions like education tax credits that empower families without limiting school freedom.
Apr 13


Power to the People: Fixing Maine’s Energy Crisis
We see it on our monthly bills, at the gas station, and built into the price of almost everything we buy. Mainers are paying nearly 46% more than the national average for electricity—and when I talk with folks around the state, I hear the same thing over and over again: "Something has to give."
Apr 12


After Lewiston: Standing Strong, Standing Together
In the wake of tragedies like this, some immediately call for sweeping gun bans. But we must resist knee-jerk reactions that target law-abiding citizens rather than the systemic failures that allowed such a tragedy to happen in the first place
Apr 12


Standing for Truth, Protecting Our Children: My view on Transgenderism
Whether you identify as male or female, whether you’re questioning your identity or living as someone else—you are a human being, created by God, and worthy of dignity and love. That belief is central to how I treat every person I meet.
Apr 12


Fixing What Matters Most: Education That Works for Maine
Right now, less than 50% of Maine students are proficient in core subjects like math, science, and reading. That’s not just a statistic—it’s a red flag. And instead of acknowledging the problem, the current administration is spending money trying to cover it up. In 2024 alone, Governor Janet Mills paid $60,000 of taxpayer dollars for three articles to paint a rosy picture of our schools. That’s not leadership. That’s spin.
Apr 12
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