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Maine

Firearms Policy Coalition Takes No Prisoners in Sharp Response to Thin-Skinned Maine Governor

Gov. Janet Mills’s office referred critical social media posts to the police. The FPC pushed back.

J.D. Tuccille | 7.22.2024 7:00 AM

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Maine Gov. Janet Mills | Illustration: Lex Villena; John Marshall Mantel/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom
(Illustration: Lex Villena; John Marshall Mantel/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom)

Talk about your thin-skinned politicians! Apparently, it doesn't take much more than an insult from critics these days to get the governor of Maine to scream for the police.

Since When Is Criticism a Crime?

Back in December, during an interview with a local NBC affiliate about blunders by official in the lead-up to the Lewiston mass shooting, Maine Gov. Janet Mills left the door open to tighter gun restrictions, including a ban on so-called "assault weapons." That segment was picked up and publicized by The Maine Wire, a conservative-leaning news site. That outlet's post, in turn, drew a pungent comment from the Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC), a pugnacious self-defense rights group that pulls no punches when it comes to defending individual liberty. So, of course the governor's office went crying to the cops.

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"Documents obtained by the Maine Wire via a Freedom of Access Act show that Gov. Janet Mills' personnel referred social media posts from the Firearms Policy Coalition and the Maine Wire to the State Police, flagging them for the governor's Executive Protection Unit," The Maine Wire's Steve Robinson reported last week.

The posts in question were entirely unthreatening, except perhaps to sensitive feelings. The Maine Wire added nothing to the video clip except for a short summary of the content: "Governor Mills is leaving the door open for a possible assault weapons ban following the Lewiston shooting."

The FPC was, characteristically, a little sharper: "Hey @GovJanetMills, Three words: Fuck you. No."

That's short, to the point, and perhaps a bit sharp, but it implies no threats whatsoever.

Nevertheless, The Maine Wire found emails showing that Mills' press secretary passed a link to the post around the office, and that "another staffer immediately forwarded the post to the Maine State Police employee responsible for protecting the governor."

According to Robinson, this isn't the first time officials in the Democrat-led state government have tried to get the outlet in legal hot water. Emails revealed the office of Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows questioning if an article illustration depicting a stylized presidential ballot featuring only the Joe Biden–Kamala Harris ticket qualified as a "fake ballot" since it showed the state seal. This happened after Bellows tried to boot Republican Donald Trump from the state's primary ballot.

Part of a Pattern of Weaponized Law

The Maine spat is part of a flurry of cases across the country involving government officials attempting to misuse the legal system and regulatory power to punish political opponents. While not as high-profile or as high-stakes, it's reminiscent of NRA v. Vullo, a case recently given new life by the U.S. Supreme Court, in which Maria Vullo, the former head of New York's Department of Financial Services, very clearly used the power of her office over banks and insurance companies to twist their arms until they denied services to the National Rifle Association.

"Six decades ago, this Court held that a government entity's 'threat of invoking legal sanctions and other means of coercion' against a third party 'to achieve the suppression' of disfavored speech violates the First Amendment," Justice Sonya Sotomayor wrote for the court in the unanimous opinion. "Today, the Court reaffirms what it said then: Government officials cannot attempt to coerce private parties in order to punish or suppress views that the government disfavors."

Such coercion came in the form of the abuse of regulatory power over financial institutions in the Vullo case. But it can come as old-school referrals to the police of anybody who criticizes government officials and their policies. Anything like that violates free speech rights.

The Firearms Policy Coalition Fights Back

"The disdain for natural rights by government officials like Maine Governor Mills and Secretary of State Bellows bolsters our commitment to our mission to render them irrelevant," the FPC responded to the dust-up over the X post referral.

In a July 18 letter to Mills and Bellows, FPC President Brandon Combs vowed, "we take First Amendment-protected rights just as seriously as we do others."

"You must surely be aware that our X post responding to Governor Mills's discussion of an immoral ban on protected arms is clearly protected speech as there is absolutely no uncertainty about the law regarding this form of speech. If not, some education is in order," the letter continued. "Naked authoritarianism, such as efforts to chill free speech, is not acceptable to FPC and our members. We strongly encourage you to learn more about protected speech and arms."

For what it's worth, the first letter of each line of the letter, read vertically, spells: "Fuck You No."

The governor's office did not respond to requests for comment by press time.

The state police commissioner was copied on the letter. That seems a handy shortcut given the propensity of the governor's office to share mean messages with the cops. It cuts out the middleman and ensures police get a timely heads-up about sharply worded criticism of government officials.

A Practice That Needs To Stop

The weaponization of law, the courts, regulatory agencies, and tax collectors is despicable, but nothing new. The IRS has been used by presidents at least as far back as Franklin Delano Roosevelt to torment political enemies. Operation Chokepoint put federal regulatory pressure on banks to cut off access to financial services for legal but politically disfavored industries. The practice is extralegal and destructive of whatever remains of respect for government. It's also becoming increasingly common.

When abusing the power of the state to punish critics becomes the norm, it erases the line between people who have committed actual criminal acts, and those who have just pissed off the powerful. That's what lands us at the point when the office of a state governor refers insulting social media posts for the state police to do something about.

We'll discover the hard way what that something is, unless those on the receiving end push back the way the FPC did. That means mocking thin-skinned government officials, calling them out publicly, and taking them to court. Intolerant officials want to hurt their critics with powers that were never meant to be used that way. That can only be discouraged if such abuses come with high costs of their own.

The Rattler is a weekly newsletter from J.D. Tuccille. If you care about government overreach and tangible threats to everyday liberty, this is for you.

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NEXT: Brickbat: Unsafe Speeds

J.D. Tuccille is a contributing editor at Reason.

MaineGunsGun OwnersState GovernmentsGovernorFree Speechfirearms policyActivismPoliceGun RightsGun Control
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  1. Medulla Oblongata   10 months ago

    For what it's worth, the first letter of each line of the letter, read vertically, spells: "Fuck You No."

    Now that was higher-level legal trolling of the Governor's office.

    1. Rossami   10 months ago

      That is impressive.

  2. Chipper Chunked Chile Con Congress (ex NCW)   10 months ago

    I hope she gets trampled by a moose.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   10 months ago

      A moose once bit my sister.

    2. MatthewSlyfield   10 months ago

      Why do you hate...moose so much?

  3. Longtobefree   10 months ago

    How (D)isgusting.

    1. GroundTruth   10 months ago

      What do you expect from a place regularly referred to by Mainers as "Disgusta"?

  4. shadydave   10 months ago

    That multiple government officials didn't wind up behind bars for Operation Chokepoint is very disappointing.

    1. B G   10 months ago

      When the plan was probably cooked up by the AG in the first place, who's going to prosecute anyone for carrying it out?

      Not to mention how few people even know that it happened because the MSM was so proud of having manufactured an administration with "eight scandal-free years" that they continued to brag about it well into 2018.

      Trying to get the public behind prosecuting Chokepoint would have been like trying to explain to an audience who'd never heard of "Operation Fast and Furious" that the reason why Eric Holder was found to be in Contempt of Congress was his 18+ months of refusal to comply with Committee subpoenas issued in the course of investigating the policy. Not surprisingly, when Bob Barr was hit with a similar charge by a Dem Congress for taking more than 72 hours to release the full Mueller Report, nobody had to read even an opinion piece questioning whether the progression in that instance might have been rushed.

  5. Mickey Rat   10 months ago

    Democrats innthus country and the Left throughout the West have increasingly regarded effective opposition to their policies as crimes.

  6. Earth-based Human Skeptic   10 months ago

    ‘Since When Is Criticism a Crime?’

    Did you NOT take your required victim studies classes in college and DEI corporate training?

    BTW, expect to see tons of this in the Harris campaign.

  7. Quo Usque Tandem   10 months ago

    "Hey @GovJanetMills, Three words: Fuck you. No."

    Already belong to the SAF; going to join the FPC too.

  8. Sympatica   10 months ago

    Is she as senile as she looks and her actions suggest. She has that Biden look.

  9. Rossami   10 months ago

    Abusing the power of the state to punish critics has always been the norm.

    1. JohnZ   10 months ago

      It is with dictators and totalitarian regimes.

  10. Uncle Jay   10 months ago

    "Since When Is Criticism a Crime?"

    Since leftist progressive vermin got into power.

  11. JohnZ   10 months ago

    There is nothing democratic about the Democrat Party. They are neither liberal nor progressive.
    They are outright neo- Marxist. The Democrat Party has been infiltrated and taken over by these Marxists which by now we all have clearly witnessed what their intentions are: stifle free speech, disarm the American people, impose DEI brainwashing and punishment for those who fail to or disagree with their agendas.
    Under their rule liberty and freedom will become a thing of the past. Then the elites/ deep state will step in and America becomes a complete dictatorship. Complete with gulags, show trials and summary executions for those who dare oppose them.
    This is what the Founding Fathers warned against: passivity and ignorance. They also warned us that by no means should we ever give up our guns.

  12. YuckFou   10 months ago

    Libtards seem to be neurotic. There should be a testing process to weed out people who are neurotic as they shouldn't be in positions of authority.

  13. jimc5499   10 months ago

    Well death threats are seen as a badge of honor in the Democrat Party, if they don't get them, they make them up.

  14. Incunabulum   10 months ago

    >"Six decades ago, this Court held that a government entity's 'threat of invoking legal sanctions and other means of coercion' against a third party 'to achieve the suppression' of disfavored speech violates the First Amendment," Justice Sonya Sotomayor wrote for the court in the unanimous opinion.

    Didn't Reason tell us that this was all 'just private companies' and totally ok if they chose to agree to do what their government contacts merely asked them to do, as a personal favor, no coercion on tap, at all?

  15. markm23   10 months ago

    This _should_ be cause for the federal district court to issue an injunction forbidding the governor and AG from violating the Constitution - and for fining and jailing them for contempt of court the next time they do.

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