BRUNSWICK — A photographer tries to take Andrew Ian Dodge's picture, but the man who has become one of the leading national spokesmen for the tea party is having difficulty sitting still.
Dodge, 42, shifts on his bar stool, as if subconsciously seeking the shadows made elusive by the midday sun. He obsesses over the dark circles under his eyes; he'd been out late picking up a friend at the airport.
His hangdog appearance, as he describes it, is why he prefers to meet people in dark bars.
"I think you have enough to make me look like a hound of hell," he says as the photographer leaves.
Dodge has staked out a quiet corner of Byrnes Irish Pub, a new establishment in Brunswick's Maine Street Station, a taxpayer subsidized development project. Dodge, a libertarian and assailant of government intervention, acknowledges the irony of his temporary haven.
Per usual, he is dressed entirely in black, save for a white scarf with a pattern of skulls and crossbones. For the next two hours, Dodge, a Harpswell resident, freelance science fiction writer, musician, blogger, cancer survivor and state coordinator for the Maine Tea Party Patriots, discusses his increased national profile.
And, of course, there's the rampant speculation that Dodge is the mystery primary challenger to tea party pariah, U.S. Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine.
Dodge's oft-speculated run in 2012 has generated buzz locally and nationally. A recent story in the D.C.-based publication Roll Call stopped just short of announcing his candidacy. Dodge, for his part, has done nothing to discourage the rumors, appearing on local radio shows to whip up the intrigue.
During last week's interview in Brunswick, he coyly deflected a question about a potential run.
"I couldn't possibly comment," he said, bowing his head to disguise a wry smile.
While it might seem inevitable that Dodge will declare his candidacy, one can never be sure. As a recent report in the publication Mother Jones noted, the tea party appears to be influencing policy-making even when its candidates lose. The mere threat of a challenger has establishment politicians on edge, which, some say, is the point.
Dave Weigel, a D.C.-based reporter for Slate Magazine and a former reporter for Reason, a libertarian magazine, has been immersed in the movement from jump street. Weigel said the tea party doesn't care as much about running candidates as it does getting politicians to do what it wants.
"There’s been a couple of instances when somebody crosses them, or doesn’t live up to a promise," Weigel said. "They don’t forgive them because they want to get a meeting. They call it out."
"This isn’t normal politics," he added.
Tea party spokesman
Dodge, whose blunt, colorful quotes have made him one of the national media's go-to spokesmen for the movement, is keenly aware of the new dynamic.
It was Dodge, after all, who co-authored a letter by GOProud, signed by 14 tea party activists, warning Republican congressmen against running "down any social issue rabbit holes." The sharply worded missive came on the heels of comments by Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., who told religious groups, "You can't be a fiscal conservative and not a social conservative."
To some, the letter signaled a potential fissure in the GOP. But Dodge later told Weigel that it was designed to "stiffen" Republican backbones.
"I don't see the Republicans being dumb enough to chase social issues," Dodge said.
It remains to be seen whether Dodge's hints about running against Snowe are a red herring. Weigel, who has known about Dodge since 2002, said he never considered Dodge to be a politician.
"I don’t even think of Andrew as somebody who needs to acquire political power," Weigel said. "He’s just this blunt activist who demands accountability. He’s really not impressed by power."
One thing is certain: Dodge has taken great pleasure in tormenting Snowe with innuendo. Dodge claims to have had "extensive conversations" with the candidate who will run against Snowe. Dodge describes him as a wealthy man from southern Maine.
"Whoever gets the national money behind him, it’s going to be a bloodbath," Dodge predicted. "It’s going to be a nasty, nasty campaign."
Background, politics
Dodge lives in the High Head section of Harpswell, a thin peninsula jutting into Harpswell sound. With homestead exemptions, the property, which is owned by his mother, is valued at around $740,000, according to the town assessor's office.
Dodge says he scratches out a living with his freelance writing. However, his father, Arthur Dodge, who last year succumbed to pancreatic cancer, was a chemical engineer for Texaco oil company, and Dodge is in line to receive a significant inheritance.
Dodge's upbringing has made him both well-traveled and well-educated. He's lived in England, Honduras and Miami. He graduated from Colby College and has a post-graduate degree in legislative politics from the University of Hull in the U.K.
He describes himself as a 19th-century Gladstonian liberal, the British free-market, limited-government doctrine embraced by Winston Churchill.
"I have that coastal Maine attitude," he said. "I call it, 'don’t ask, don’t give a damn.' It’s just, 'leave me alone.' People want to be left alone. Let them get on with it."
Dodge's time in England appears to have shaped him the most. His wife, Kim Dodge, is English. His speech is sprinkled with British vernacular.
He is also steeped in British politics. He claims as a friend Daniel Hannan, the conservative member of European Parliament and tea party hero who wrote the book "The New Road to Serfdom."
Dodge draws English and European examples of the perils of socialism, a doctrine he claims is being advanced in the United States by President Barack Obama.
"The bizarre thing is that European countries are moving away from socialism," he said. "America is adopting it, but the rest of the world is cutting it back. ... It's because this country never went through the grinding socialism that European countries did."
Dodge described the endgame for libertarianism as a restoring of "all the usurped powers of the federal government back to the state level," or even the municipal level.
He called it "constitutionally mandated localism."
"We take all the powers that are demonstrably suited to the lowest level of local government because it’s closest to the people," he said.
In addition to opposing government intervention in bailing out the banking and car industries, Dodge would support legalizing marijuana and lowering the drinking age to 18.
Dodge's limited-government belief system appears unshakable, particularly when it comes to a government-run health-care system. Dodge himself barely survived colon cancer, having "died twice" because of a hospital-administered morphine overdose following a surgical procedure.
He speaks compassionately about the patients he met during chemotherapy.
But Dodge bristles when it's suggested that cancer survivors might benefit from a federal health care law that prohibits insurance companies from denying coverage for pre-existing conditions.
"I know of car insurance companies that will give you insurance even though you’re a (expletive) idiot driver," he said.
Sharp tongue
Weigel, of Slate, described Dodge as blunt. That might be an understatement.
His trenchant speech isn't always directed at his ideological opponents, either.
During the gubernatorial campaign, Dodge openly seethed after Republican Paul LePage suggested during a Portland forum that the tea party had courted him, not vice versa.
In a story in Mother Jones, Dodge lashed out at LePage and his apologists in the tea party.
"(LePage) expects the tea party to be his bitches and I'm not," Dodge said. "... (The tea party) seems to think the more thuggish he is, the better he does. They don't understand there's a difference between running and governing."
Dodge, an admitted skeptic of LePage, is still annoyed by the governor-elect's comments about not seeking tea party support.
"It was so insulting," Dodge said. "I mean, I was at the first (tea party) event (LePage) was at, and he was sucking up like you wouldn’t believe."
Dodge also believes LePage is being "scrubbed" by his handlers.
"The spinning to defend him gets funnier and funnier," he said.
Dodge's comments about LePage have sometimes put him at odds with local members of the tea party.
His GOProud letter attracted national attention, but it also drew fire from social conservatives who called Dodge "a pig" and "a liberal" suffering from "flashbacks."
But he keeps firing back.
Last week, when LePage told the National Review that he'd back Snowe for re-election in 2012, Dodge could barely contain his mockery of those who didn't see it coming. Posters on the tea party site for the Maine Refounders, which is separate from Dodge's group, shot back, claiming he didn't speak for Maine tea partiers.
Others accused him of practicing witchcraft.
Dodge, who typically dresses in black and admits that there are Halloween party photos of him wearing an eye patch, a leather kilt and similarly themed costumes, laughs it off. But he can't resist needling his detractors on the religious right.
"If you really want to wind them up, just let them know that the Puritans were socialists," Dodge said.
A self-proclaimed deist, Dodge likened his tiffs with the more religious elements of the party to the political arguments he had with his father, the ideological inspiration for his activism.
"We would get into absolute barneys over (politics)," he said. "But we were on the same side. ... I think it’s one of the things the tea party movement is realizing now. ... That’s the point where the tea party is, and people come to that point via completely different routes."
To run, or not to run
On the surface, whether or not Dodge joins Lisbon Falls Republican Scott D'Amboise in challenging Snowe might seem irrelevant. Although some polls have suggested that Maine Republicans want a more conservative candidate in 2012, other surveys have shown the three-time senator to be popular with a wider cross-section of voters.
Add the fact that Snowe has never lost an election in Maine, and it would seem that any challenger's quest would be quixotic at best.
But the tea party has changed the traditional dynamic. It has already succeeded in sacking moderate Republicans, and although some wonder – or hope – that the movement will dissipate, it has proven deft at wielding its newfound power.
Dodge, who has toured the country to speak at national rallies, has seen the influence firsthand. He believes that strict free-market conservatives like himself can coalesce with the social conservatives in the GOP establishment.
"We have a formula that works," he said. "We just can't screw it up like we did in the '90s."
The question remains locally, however: If Dodge runs, will he get backing from members of the Maine movement?
"I think there’s a chance that more of these people will begrudgingly like me," he said. "I admit, I've been an arrogant so-and-so at times."
"There are some people in some groups that adore me and there are others that think I’m demon spawn," he added.



No Help From the Media: Tea Party Do It On Their Own
Tum,
How is it that the "media" is trying to make the "tea party" look, in your words: "bad or stupid"? The "tea party" freaks like this tool do that well enough without any help from the "media."
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What's with the crossed eyes? Did his mother drop him on his head?
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This guy won't stand a chance until he is able to grow proper facial hair and get some Clearasil ... and maybe a flea collar too. Couldn't hurt.
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Isn't it funny how the "tea party" was actually led around on leash by Dick Armey's Freedom Works, the most insider "astro turf" corporate lobbying ground in far right land. They didn't know any better and actually fit the profile of children who believe what they want to believe. Remember Christine "I'm not a witch" O'Donnell who incurred the derision of law students during a debate for not even grasping the basics of the separation of Church and State? That's who these buffoons really are, the most ignorant of American society. Didn't take Rand Paul long to ditch his "no earmarks" campaign pledge. These are people who are either morally bankrupt or intellectually damanged goods. Take your pick they're "tea baggers" one and all!
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...makes asses of the news media. Any look at TEA Party activities in Maine will quickly inform anyone interested that Mr. Dodge is not a spokesperson or for that matter even an involved with many Maine TEA Party activists.
Out of the thousands of people involved in Maine I cannot find even one that looks to Ian Dodge as a leader, an involved activists or spokesperson. I cannot find anyone who would vote for him. He is the only candidate I can think of that would have TEA Party activists voting for Senator Snowe.
Mr. Dodge is a prankster who has gathered the attention of any news outlet that does their best to discredit the TEA Party Movement by describing oddball fringe characters as leaders.
You've been “punked” dude! See the full story of your stupidity as Andrew continues to make you look uninformed. By the way your advertisers will be informed that your newspaper is reporting in a shoddy way and is also against what most Americans agree with, the common sense solutions of the TEA Party. We will ask your advertisers to stop advertising and make it worth their while to do so.
Darwin had some things right...natural selection will provide for the demise of the weak and stupid.
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I'm not familiar with the fella being written about. It seems to me another attempt by the press to make the tea party look bad or stupid. But I do take offense at your statement about libertarians. I am not a libertarian only when it is convenient, nor do I know of any. Anyone who does act as you stated is not a libertarian but a hypocrite.
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Oh my my my...like shooting fish in a barrel. Poor Olympia must be losing sleep in anticipation of 2012.
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The only reason Olympia Snowe would be up late at night after reading this is because she is laughing so hard she can’t get to sleep.
This guy makes John Frary look mainstream…
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Ehh, I may have been wrong about this guy not being completely with it. His head is on straight, he's just a little odd... which isn't unusual for a New England libertarian (anyone ever listen to a New Hampshire free stater talk?). The Newsweek article from not long ago that he features in prominently is interesting. If he ever won a nomination over Snowe that would spell an easy victory for the Democrats, though. He should stick to commentary.
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So typical that someone leading a life of privilege would become a professional whiner about the free ride he perceives others to be getting.
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The Tea Party started off as pissed off Libertarians and slowly became swallowed up by country club evangelist Republicans. He's a little extreme but really, at a time like this, I'll go for someone who is extreme about our liberty and state's rights over the big government, big two.
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This guy clearly isn't completely with it, but on the surface his views aren't terrible. The libertarian-led part of the Tea Party is a part I wish would come out more. Instead, we're more likely to fall victim to a religious, socially conservative wacko in the mold of Christine O'Donnell or Sharron Angle. So, if this guy's head were on a little more straight I could see myself appreciating some of the stuff he says.. I mean, he's clearly intelligent. Instead, he chooses to drape himself in skull and crossbones and associate himself with a group of people better known for its Angles, O'Donnells and Palins.
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A pretty good judge of character .....I think this guy looks unstable.
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Even though my views are moderate in the political spectrum I actually reserved a little hope in the theory of the Tea party and what it could represent. Sadly enough, after reading about this guy, and his "ideals" while trying to walk erect with a huge 'silver spoon' shoved up his backside and living with his mommy, this movement will ultimately die a slow, pathetic death at the hands of the media and political machines. Is there anyone out there who can be taken seriously and actually represent the silent, intelligent, middle-class population of this country?? No one will argue that there is dire need for change, but the tea party really is no different than the liberal moon-bats. Their all self-serving lunatics that either don't want to 'pony up' their share to live in a republic or they want to spend everyone else's hard-earned money on hand-outs. Where's the sanity?
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Lives with his mommy? Doesn't really have a job? Does he have a Rascal?
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It didn't say he lives "with" his mother, it says his mother "owns" the house he lives in. Lots of people rent from family members Kevin Saisi who is a frequent contributor here and is the moderator for the Town of Rumford lives in property owned by his parents, but he doesn't live with them. It is not unusl for someone to rent from parents or manage property owned by their parents and reside on the premises.
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It doesn't say he lives with his mommy, but it does say his mommy owns the house. How much rent does he pay to his mommy with his occasional freelance whackery?
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Dodge took a stab as a Snowe contender in 2000
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That little cross eyed butterball is out of his league. I love hoe libertarians are anti government until they need something.
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Golly - I'm so glad to see the SJ readers concentrating on substance, instead of shallow details like someone's appearance. With voters like these, it's a sure bet our state will be an economic powerhouse in a very short time.
[/sarcasm]
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That race would go well.
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This guy's a joke and you're giving him all this ink? Guess REAL news is slow today.
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No wait this is December.... Oooops they ran the story early.
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