AUGUSTA — His fellow Republicans backed him when he was in trouble in 2003 — and they still back him now.
When state Rep. Robert Nutting was battling Maine regulators in 2003 over a payment plan for the $1 million-plus his pharmacy owed the state in Medicaid overbilling, his fellow Kennebec County Republican lawmakers demanded that Gov. John Baldacci intervene in the conflict and force a resolution of the long-running conflict.
Baldacci declined to get involved. A response sent by his then-counsel, Kurt Adams, said, “the Governor cannot intervene in the manner you have requested because he would be infringing upon the powers and duties lawfully assigned to the Attorney General.”
Nutting declared the pharmacy business bankrupt, leaving the state and feds with no way to collect $1.2 million in overpayments.
In interviews Wednesday with Julie Ann O’Brien, Ken Fletcher, William Browne and Earle McCormick, the four surviving signers of that letter (Skowhegan Rep. Maitland Richardson died in April 2010), all expressed their continuing support of Nutting.
They said they saw no contradiction in the fact that House Republicans, who had swept unexpectedly to power in the recent election in large part on a campaign of promoting fiscal discipline and fighting welfare fraud, had chosen as leader someone who had stuck the state with an unpaid bill.
“In no way do I even jump to the conclusion that there is an inconsistency between the leadership of the party and its message,” said outgoing Rep. Ken Fletcher of Winslow, who was named by Gov.-elect Paul LePage to his Budget Advisory Committee. “I don’t think we need to go through a major reform to hunt for abusers.”
O’Brien, who was an Augusta representative and is the former head of the Maine Republican Party, said Wednesday, “We Republicans, we do care about fraud; we definitely care about fraud. This, to me, was somewhat different.”
While acknowledging that Nutting had “made mistakes,” O’Brien said that the pharmacist was the victim of overzealous regulators: “They wanted to get him.”
Sen. Earle McCormick of West Gardiner believes Nutting was pursued too long by the state. That’s why he signed on to the 2003 letter.
“It just seemed appropriate to ask to get it resolved, and let’s speed it up,” he said. McCormick said he believed the issue had “been resolved.” He subsequently served for a number of years in the Legislature alongside Nutting.
“Since then, I’ve had no reason to question his decisions or what he’s done," McCormick said. "He’s worked as a pharmacist at Walmart and (other) places, so I wasn’t really concerned when they nominated him as speaker.”
Bill Browne, the Vassalboro representative who just served his last term because of term limits, said he likewise saw no problem with Nutting serving as speaker.
“I have no qualms at all," Browne said. "I think he’s fine; I think that like all arguments, there are two sides.”
LePage and Republicans, Where Are the Jobs You Promised??
Hey LePage and Maine Republicans, where are the JOBS YOU PROMISED?!! I've given you MORE time than you gave President Obama and Democrats to fix the mess left behind by Bush and his Republican Congress (1995-2006).
- Permalink
- Is this comment inappropriate?
Kudos AwardedAgree (1)
Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.The Republican Comedy of Errors ... Only Nothing Funny Here
Let's see, the Republicans said they would be absolutely fantastic at handling Maine's finances. What do they do? Nominate a "leader" who either dishonestly tried to bilk the taxpayers out of a lot of money, or was so bad at managing the finances of his business that he bilked the taxpayers by accident. Either way it's a comedy of errors, only this isn't funny, it's never funny when worthless Republicans get their hands on power. They so immediately prove why they destroy everything they touch. Too bad some voters have amnesia about what Republicans actually do when they step in the voting booth. It's a psych problem: Republican dementia.
- Permalink
- Is this comment inappropriate?
Kudos AwardedAgree (1)
Disagree (1)
Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.title
"GOP Stands by its Man" They're not just "standing by their man", they are actively rewarding a known cheat and fraud with the leadership position. Is that the GOP/teabaggers value system in action?
- Permalink
- Is this comment inappropriate?
Kudos AwardedDisagree (2)
Agree (6)
Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.Nutting was pursued too long
Important message from republican legislative leadership to the executive branch:
Do not pursue recovery of unwarranted government payments for too long.
Question to Sen. Earle McCormick of West Gardiner:
HUH?
- Permalink
- Is this comment inappropriate?
Kudos AwardedDisagree (2)
Agree (3)
Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.Two sides alright...
"“I have no qualms at all," Browne said. "I think he’s fine; I think that like all arguments, there are two sides.” There is the side that says if you were a common thief you would be in jail serving 5 to 10, and the side that says it's ok because it was taxpayers monies. What a bunch of phonies these T'Baggers are proving to be already. Did you hear about the newest T'Bag winner in Washington whining about his lack of healthcare insurance.
"HOUSE REPUBLICAN WANTS HIS GOVERNMENT-SUBSIDIZED HEALTH CARE NOW.... It perfectly reasonable for Andy Harris, like all Americans, to want health care coverage. He's a husband and father of five, and I'm sure he worries about his family losing their health insurance, just like everyone else.
Harris spent months condemning the idea of Americans being entitled to taxpayer-subsidized health care coverage. Now that the election's over, Harris suddenly feels entitled to taxpayer-subsidized health care coverage -- and wants it immediately. (For the record, Harris and his family will probably rely on COBRA to stay insured until his coverage kicks in. COBRA, of course, is another government program that the right opposed.)"
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/archives/individual/2010_11/026655.php
- Permalink
- Is this comment inappropriate?
Kudos AwardedDisagree (2)
Agree (14)
Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.