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Janet Mills pledges to serve just 1 term in US Senate if elected

Janet Mills pledges to serve just 1 term in US Senate if elected

Gov. Janet Mills has pledged to serve only one term in the U.S. Senate if elected.
The Democrat, who launched her primary bid to face off against U.S. Sen. Susan Collins next year on Tuesday, made that pledge in an interview with the Boston Globe.
“I would not plan to serve more than one term,” she told the Globe.
Her Tuesday morning announcement was highly anticipated after news leaked last week that Mills planned to run and after her campaign inadvertently posted, and then took down, a fundraising video Friday.
It’s a marked turnaround from her position earlier this year that she had no plans to run for office after finishing her second term as governor.
But Mills has become increasingly vocal with her concerns about the agenda of Republicans and the Trump administration.
Since February, Maine has been locked in a fight with President Donald Trump over the rights of transgender students, particularly student athletes. The pair had a heated exchange during a meeting of governors at the White House, and shortly after that, the Trump administration launched numerous investigations into the state over transgender student participation in sports.
The Justice Department sued Maine in April for allegedly violating the civil rights of girls. That case is expected to go to trial next year.
In August, Mills said she would decide whether to run for the U.S. Senate by November. Last month, she said she was “seriously considering” running.
Whether Mills would run has been a big question mark looming over the evolving Democratic field, which already includes Sullivan oyster farmer Graham Platner, Maine Beer Co. co-founder Dan Kleban and former End Citizens United vice president Jordan Wood.
Earlier this year, a poll from the University of New Hampshire found Mills had the highest favorability among potential big-name candidates for the Democratic nomination for the 2026 U.S. Senate race.
In the poll, 40% of respondents indicated they would like Mills to run for the U.S. Senate, compared with 36% support for U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree of the 1st District and 29% for U.S. Rep. Jared Golden of the 2nd District, who faces a possible showdown with former Republican Gov. Paul LePage for the congressional seat.
Collins, a Republican, announced in November she would seek a sixth term in the U.S. Senate.
Collins is the last Republican standing in New England’s congressional delegation, and she could face stiff headwinds in 2026.
In that University of New Hampshire poll, 71% of respondents thought she didn’t deserve another term in the U.S. Senate, including 84% of Democrats and 57% of Republicans. Among independents, just 67% didn’t think voters should return Collins to Washington.
Just 21% wanted her to keep serving in the U.S. Senate, while 8% were uncertain.
Collins’ popularity has suffered during Trump’s two nonconsecutive terms as president. In April, a Morning Consult poll found 51% of Mainers disapproved of her. A follow-up poll released by Morning Consult in July found 54% of Mainers disapproved of her.
On Tuesday morning, Kyle Kondik, the managing editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball at the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics, said that the Maine Senate race had shifted from leaning toward Republicans to a toss-up.
But Collins found herself in a similar situation back in 2020, with polls favoring her Democratic opponent, Sara Giden of Freeport. The Republican from Caribou defied the polls en route to a historic fifth term in the U.S. Senate.