President Bush to visit Bangor for campaign rally

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BANGOR – President Bush, a familiar sight at his family’s southern Maine estate, will venture north Thursday for a Bangor rally. Not everyone wanting to hear Bush will be allowed to attend the event, scheduled for 4:15 p.m. at a location to be determined.
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BANGOR – President Bush, a familiar sight at his family’s southern Maine estate, will venture north Thursday for a Bangor rally.

Not everyone wanting to hear Bush will be allowed to attend the event, scheduled for 4:15 p.m. at a location to be determined.

Peter Cianchette, the Bush campaign’s Maine manager, said Sunday that a limited number of no-cost tickets will be distributed only to supporters planning to vote for Bush or to undecided voters wanting to hear his message.

“If they are clearly not supporting the president in his re-election bid, then we’re not going to give them a ticket,” Cianchette said Sunday. “This is not an official White House travel event. It’s a campaign event. We only have a limited number of tickets, and we don’t want to turn down supporters and undecided voters. That wouldn’t make any sense for us to do that.”

People who want tickets will be asked by a campaign volunteer if they are supporters or undecided, and if they would like to volunteer to work on the campaign. Each person will then be asked to fill out a form, providing name, address, Social Security number and date of birth. That information will be given to the Secret Service “for security reasons,” Cianchette said.

“In this post 9-11 era, the need for security is so tight that we need to collect that information,” he said. “That’s pretty standard.”

If any nonsupporter gets into the event and stages a protest, that person will be escorted out of the building, Cianchette said.

“We want to make sure that at the event there’s not people there to disrupt the event,” he said. “We’re going to make them leave the venue. That sounds more harsh than it really is.”

Jesse Derris, state spokesman for the campaign of Democratic Sen. John Kerry, said Sunday he believes that people who want to hear President Bush should not be pre-screened about how they will vote Nov. 2 before being given or denied an event ticket.

“It’s unfortunate that the people of Maine cannot see their own president talk about why he should be president again,” Derris said.

The issues Bush will address Thursday are not known, Cianchette said. Two of Bush’s seven campaign events this week focus on education.

He will attend a town meeting-type event today in Derry, N.H., and the other campaign stops, including the Bangor visit, are being billed as “victory” rallies.

“I’m sure it will be a message of his record of accomplishments,” Cianchette said. “He’ll touch on his positive agenda for the next four years. There probably will be two broad themes – our need to continue the war on terrorism and plans for a stronger economy, including creating more manufacturing jobs.”

Derris said the Kerry campaign camp is interested in what Bush will say to Mainers, particularly the 18,000 workers who have lost manufacturing jobs in the past few years.

“I hope the president offers a vision of how he will help people instead of continuing a pattern of putting special interests ahead of working families,” Derris said.

Thursday’s appearance in the state’s 2nd Congressional District will be unlike any of the president’s trips to Kennebunkport, the southern coastal community that houses the Bush family homestead.

Instead of waving to people who line the streets up to the Bush family compound, the president actually will be addressing them in a campaign event – and in a voting district that some analysts and pollsters have suggested is a battleground for electoral votes.

Both the Bush-Cheney and Kerry-Edwards campaigns have sent a string of political heavyweights to Maine’s 2nd District lately.

Bush lost the district by a few percentage points in 2000.

On the Republican side, first lady Laura Bush and Chief of Staff Andrew Card have attended events in Lewiston and Bangor. For the Democrats, former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich, former New Hampshire Gov. Jeanne Shaheen, and former U.S. Sen. Max Cleland of Georgia have campaigned in Bangor and Hampden.

A CNN poll released Friday said Bush would win the Maine 2nd District if the election were held last week. Earlier last week, a Zogby International poll of likely voters statewide, conducted for the Maine Sunday Telegram, said Bush and Kerry were evenly divided at 43 percent.

Cianchette said he did not know whether Bush would be campaigning in the 1st District any time before the Nov. 2 election.

Ticket information

Bangor

People who want to attend must register at MaineGOP.com or call (866) 633-2874. Tickets then can be picked up at the intersection of Godfrey Boulevard and Maine Avenue near Bangor International Airport from 2 to 9 p.m. Monday, and 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday. No tickets will be distributed on the day of the event.

Statewide

Tickets are available from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Wednesday at:

. Maine Republican Party headquarters, 9 Higgins St., Augusta.

. Campaign office at 169 Academy St., Suite C, Presque Isle.

. Campaign office at 159 Lisbon St., Lewiston.

. Campaign office at 778 Main St., Suite 3, South Portland.

No tickets will be distributed on the day of the event.

Correction: Because of an editing error, Democratic vice presidential candidate Sen. John Edwards was inadvertently deleted from a list of political heavyweights that both Democrats and Republicans have sent to campaign in Maine’s 2nd Congressional District this month. The list appeared in a Monday story about President Bush’s upcoming visit to Bangor. Edwards campaigned Sept. 8 in Orono.

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