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Troy Jackson (politician)

American logger & politician (born 1968)

Troy Jackson (politician)

Summary

American logger & politician (born 1968)

FieldValue
nameTroy Jackson
imageTroy Jackson at Hearts of Pine (cropped).jpg
captionJackson at a Portland Hearts of Pine game in 2025
officePresident of the Maine Senate
term_startDecember 5, 2018
term_endDecember 4, 2024
predecessorMichael Thibodeau
successorMattie Daughtry
office1Minority Leader of the Maine Senate
term_start1December 7, 2016
term_end1December 5, 2018
predecessor1Justin Alfond
successor1Dana Dow
office2Majority Leader of the Maine Senate
term_start2July 10, 2013
term_end2December 3, 2014
predecessor2Seth Goodall
successor2Garrett Mason
office3Member of the Maine Senate
constituency31st district
term_start3December 7, 2016
term_end3December 4, 2024
predecessor3Peter Edgecomb
successor3Susan Y. Bernard
constituency435th district
term_start4December 3, 2008
term_end4December 3, 2014
predecessor4John L. Martin
successor4Dawn Hill
office5Member of the Maine House of Representatives
term_start5December 4, 2002
term_end5December 3, 2008
predecessor5Marc Michaud
successor5John L. Martin
constituency5151st district (2002–2004)
1st district (2004–2008)
birth_nameTroy Dale Jackson
birth_date
birth_placeFort Kent, Maine, U.S.
partyRepublican (before 2002)
Independent (2002–2004)
Democratic (2004–present)
spouseLana Pelletier
educationUniversity of Maine, Fort Kent
website

1st district (2004–2008) Independent (2002–2004) Democratic (2004–present)

Troy Dale Jackson (born June 26, 1968) is an American logger and politician from Allagash, Maine, who served as president of the Maine Senate from 2018 to 2024. A Democrat, Jackson represented Senate District 1, representing northern Aroostook County, including the towns of Fort Kent, Madawaska and Caribou. He is currently running for governor of Maine.

Jackson started in politics during the 1998 logging blockade along the Canadian border, protesting the illegal hiring of Canadian workers over Maine loggers, inadequate wages and poor working conditions. Eventually, Jackson was elected to the Maine House of Representatives, where he served three terms before being elected to the State Senate in 2008. After Democrats gained the majority in the 2018 election, Jackson was chosen to be Senate President. He also served as Senate Majority Leader and Senate Minority Leader. He first ran for office as a Republican, was first elected as an Independent, and joined the Democratic Party in 2004.

Early life

Jackson was born to a 16-year-old mother in Fort Kent, Maine, and was raised Catholic.

Career

Jackson first ran for the Maine House of Representatives in 2000 for Maine House District 151, as a Republican, narrowly losing to Marc Michaud, a Democrat, 2,017–2,172. Two years later, he was elected to House District 151 as an Independent, defeating the incumbent Michaud 2,171–1,176 in a race with no Republican candidate. He was the first non-Democrat to represent the area since 1978, but joined the Democratic Party in early 2004. That year, after Maine's post-census legislative redistricting, Jackson ran for re-election in the new House District 1 as a Democrat. He won a resounding victory against Republican Paul Berube, by a margin of 3,486 to 1,248. He was re-elected to the State House unopposed in 2006.

In 2008, Jackson ran for and won Maine State Senate District 35, defeating Republican Daniel DeVeau 11,188–6,593. He would be re-elected in 2010 by defeating DeVeau 7,525–5,620 in a rematch, holding the seat amidst a Republican wave that saw the GOP claim its first government trifecta in Maine since 1963. He would be re-elected again in 2012 by a narrow 8,521–8,016 margin over Republican Peter Edgecomb. Democrats regained control of the Maine Senate in that election, and in December 2012, Jackson was elected Assistant Majority Leader of the State Senate after the Democrats. On July 10, 2013, Jackson was elected Majority Leader of the Maine Senate after the departure of fellow Democrat Seth Goodall, who resigned to accept a presidential appointment overseeing the New England region of the Small Business Administration.

On July 1, 2013, following incumbent Democratic Congressman Mike Michaud's decision to explore running for Governor, Jackson announced he would run for Maine's 2nd congressional district, which had been Michaud's seat since 2003. On June 10, 2014, Jackson lost the primary to fellow State Senator Emily Cain, receiving 21% of the vote to Cain's 79%. Cain would go on to lose the general election to Republican Bruce Poliquin.

On January 25, 2015, Jackson was elected as a member of the Democratic National Committee.

In November 2016, Jackson was re-elected to the Senate, in what was now the 1st District, over Republican Timothy Guerrette and a week later he was chosen by his fellow Democrats to be the Senate Minority Leader. He would be re-elected as Senator of the 1st District in 2018, 2020, and 2022, becoming the Senate President as the Democrats would gain the majority in 2018 and retain it in 2020 and 2022.

Jackson left the Maine Senate following the 2024 election due to term limits. He was succeeded as Senator for the 1st District by Republican Susan Y. Bernard and as Senate President by Democrat Mattie Daughtry.

On March 7, 2025, Jackson announced he was formally exploring a run for Governor of Maine in the 2026 election. He officially announced his candidacy on May 19.

Politics

a U.S. Senate candidate in 2026]], at a [[Portland Hearts of Pine]] match on September 27, 2025.

He is an advocate for health care and workers rights, especially for fellow loggers. In 2010, Jackson wrote a bill which would have "prohibited the Maine Department of Conservation from employing foreign laborers at state-owned logging sites". It passed both the House of Representatives and the State Senate before being vetoed by Governor Paul LePage. LePage questioned the bill's constitutionality while Jackson said that LePage was favoring large Canadian logging corporations over American workers.

Jackson previously held socially conservative positions on abortion rights and LGBTQ rights, which he attributed to his Roman Catholic upbringing, but over time became a staunch supporter of both.

In June 2013, Jackson called LePage "obstructionist" and "delusional" regarding discussions about the 2013–2014 state budget. LePage responded by saying that Jackson "claims to be for the people but he’s the first one to give it to the people without providing Vaseline", as well as saying Jackson had a "black heart".

During the 2016 presidential election, Jackson was a prominent supporter of U.S. Senator from Vermont Bernie Sanders' campaign and cast his superdelegate vote for him at the 2016 Democratic National Convention. He was chosen to introduce Sanders at a campaign rally before 8,000 supporters in Portland, Maine on July 6, 2015. During the 2020 presidential election, Jackson again supported Sanders, and again addressed a Portland rally for Sanders on September 1, 2019. After the primaries, Jackson threw his support behind the Democratic ticket of Vice President Joe Biden and Senator Kamala Harris.

Sanders would return the favor by endorsing Jackson's 2026 gubernatorial campaign on May 21, 2025. On Labor Day 2025, Sanders headlined a Portland campaign rally for Jackson and U.S. Senate candidate Graham Platner, attended by 6,500 supporters.

Personal life

Jackson attended Allagash Consolidated Community High School before obtaining an A.A. in business from the University of Maine at Fort Kent. He lives in Allagash, Maine.

Electoral history

YearOfficeElectionDemocraticPartyVotes%RepublicanPartyVotes%OtherPartyVotes%
2000Maine House of Representatives, 151st districtGeneralMarc MichaudDemocratic2,17251.9%Troy JacksonRepublican2,01748.1%
2002Maine House of Representatives, 151st districtGeneralMarc MichaudDemocratic1,17635.1%Troy JacksonIndependent2,17164.9%
2004Maine House of Representatives, 1st districtGeneralTroy JacksonDemocratic3,48673.6%Paul BerubeRepublican1,24826.4%
2006Maine House of Representatives, 1st districtGeneralTroy JacksonDemocratic2,826100.0%
2008Maine Senate, 35th districtGeneralTroy JacksonDemocratic11,18862.9%Daniel DeVeauRepublican6,59337.1%
2010Maine Senate, 35th districtGeneralTroy JacksonDemocratic7,52555%Daniel DeVeauRepublican5,62041%
2012Maine Senate, 35th districtGeneralTroy JacksonDemocratic8,52149%Peter EdgecombRepublican8,01646%
2016Maine Senate, 1st districtGeneralTroy JacksonDemocratic9,58950.3%Timothy GuerretteRepublican9,01847.3%
2018Maine Senate, 1st districtGeneralTroy JacksonDemocratic8,79359.3%Michael NadeauRepublican5,68339.3%
2020Maine Senate, 1st districtGeneralTroy JacksonDemocratic10,93757.6%Brian SchaeferRepublican7,48539.4%
2022Maine Senate, 1st districtGeneralTroy JacksonDemocratic8,81751.9%Susan Y. BernardRepublican7,97447.0%

References

References

  1. (2 December 2020). "Lawmakers kick off a pandemic-altered session". Bangor Daily News.
  2. (11 November 2022). "Republicans in Maine Legislature shake up leadership after disappointing election".
  3. (25 October 2019). "Here's why the 1998 logging blockade still matters now".
  4. Russell, Eric. (November 10, 2018). "Maine Senate Democrats and Republicans choose new leaders". [[Portland Press Herald]].
  5. Shepherd, Michael. (2014-05-10). "Cain, Jackson divided on abortion, same-sex marriage".
  6. "State of Maine GENERAL ELECTION TABULATION for the Election of November 7, 2000 Official Vote for REPRESENTATIVE TO THE LEGISLATURE".
  7. "State of Maine Official General Election Tabulation for the Election held on November 5, 2002 for Representative to the Legislature".
  8. Banville, Beurmond. (November 7, 2002). "Logger fells incumbent in Aroostook County". Bangor Daily News.
  9. Harkavy, Jerry. (February 2, 2004). "Logging legislator shapes voice for woods workers". Bangor Daily News.
  10. "State of Maine General Election Tabulation for the Election held on November 2, 2004 for Representative to the Legislature".
  11. "State of Maine General Election Tabulation for the Election held on November 7, 2006 for Representative to the Legislature".
  12. "State of Maine General Election Tabulation for the Election held on November 4, 2008 for State Senate".
  13. "State of Maine General Election Tabulation for the Election held on November 2, 2010 for State Senate".
  14. "11-6-2012 General & Referendum Election State Senate".
  15. Cousins, Christopher. (July 10, 2013). "Senate Democrats pick Jackson, Haskell as leaders after Goodall's resignation". [[Bangor Daily News]].
  16. (4 June 2013). "Seth Goodall resigning his Senate seat to take SBA post".
  17. Cousins, Christopher. (July 1, 2013). "Aroostook County's Sen. Troy Jackson announces run for congressional seat". [[Bangor Daily News]].
  18. Moretto, Mario. (June 10, 2014). "Emily Cain wins Democrats' 2nd District primary — Politics — Bangor Daily News — BDN Maine". [[Bangor Daily News]].
  19. "25 - January - 2015 - Maine Progressives Warehouse".
  20. "November 8, 2016 General Election State Senate".
  21. Cousins, Christopher. (November 14, 2016). "Democrats elect Troy Jackson to lead them in the Maine Senate". [[Bangor Daily News]].
  22. "11/6/18 General Election - State Senate".
  23. "11/3/2020 General Election State Senator".
  24. "11/8/2022 General Election State Senator".
  25. (2025-03-07). "Former Maine Senate President Troy Jackson explores a run for governor".
  26. Flisiuk, Francis. (2025-05-19). "Troy Jackson officially announces campaign for Maine governor".
  27. [http://bangordailynews.com/2011/08/26/politics/lepage-comments-in-county-upset-loggers/ LePages comments on logging stir debate in The County] ''[[Bangor Daily News]]'', August 26, 2011
  28. "Equality Maine 2024 Legislative Scorecard 131st Legislature – 2nd session".
  29. "Planned Parenthood 2023 Legislative Scorecard".
  30. Cousins, Christopher. (June 21, 2013). "Democratic senator lets LePage 'Vaseline' jab slide off his back". [[Bangor Daily News]].
  31. Moretto, Mario. (July 6, 2015). "Bernie Sanders urges 'political revolution' in Portland". [[Bangor Daily News]].
  32. (6 July 2015). "Bernie Sanders' populist message draws thousands to campaign event in Portland - The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram".
  33. (September 1, 2019). "Rally in Portland, ME with Bernie".
  34. (5 September 2020). "Maine 'Labor for Biden' coalition to launch Monday".
  35. Burns, Christopher. (2025-05-21). "Bernie Sanders endorses Troy Jackson for Maine's next governor".
  36. Pendharkar, Eesha. (2025-09-02). "Sanders joins Platner, Jackson in Portland to rally for working people • Maine Morning Star".
  37. [http://www.mainesenate.org/jackson/bio.htm Biography] Maine Senate
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