- Disambiguation: Pro wrestler Glenn
Jacobs also wrestled under the ring name of 'Angus
King'.
Angus S. King, Jr. (born March
31, 1944) served two terms as an independent
Governor of Maine from 1995 to 2003.
After
leaving office, he became a distinguished lecturer at Bowdoin College
in Brunswick, Maine
and annually teaches a semester-long undergraduate
course on leadership. He also became employed at a law firm and a
consulting firm in Portland, Maine
. He is a graduate of Dartmouth
College
in the class of 1966, and the University of
Virginia School of Law
class of 1969. He currently works on issues
of sustainable and renewable energy. In spring 2009 he endorsed the
Maine Green Energy Project,a summer program for young
people to learn to build and advocate for green energy in
Maine.
Early life
King was
born in Virginia
but spent
most of his adult years in the state of Maine
.
After early political experience as a legislative assistant to
Senator
William D. Hathaway, King entered private law
practice in Brunswick,
Maine
.In the 1980s King served as Vice President of
a company which developed alternative energy (hydro and biomass)
projects in New
England
. In
1989 King founded
Northeast Energy Management, Inc.
The company developed, installed, and
operated large-scale electrical energy conservation projects at
commercial and industrial facilities throughout south-central
Maine
.
Election as Governor

Angus King speaking at the Learning
Technologies Project Conference.
Before being elected Governor, King was well-known statewide as a
television host on
public television in Maine
and a successful businessman. King was first elected in 1994,
defeating both
Democratic former Governor
Joseph Brennan and
Republican Susan Collins.
The key to the King strategy was a large investment in television
advertising during Maine's unusually early June primary, allowing
him to emerge from the primary season on an equal footing with his
partisan rivals. Collins, a protege of U.S. Senator and future
Secretary of Defense
William Cohen,
was relatively unknown in Maine but benefited from a chaotic
eight-candidate Republican primary by winning with fewer than a
quarter of the votes. Brennan was in his fifth campaign for
governor - two successful - and beat back three challengers in the
Democratic primary. In the end, the candidacy of Green Party
nominee Jonathan Carter proved decisive when he took 6 percent of
the vote statewide and 10 percent in the Democratic stronghold of
Portland, much of it from Brennan.
King's
election as an independent was not unprecedented in Maine
politics, as
independent James B.
Longley had been elected twenty
years prior. As governor, King's bipartisan ways proved extremely
popular: in 1998, he was reelected with 59 percent of the vote to
19 percent for Republican
Jim
Longley Jr. (the son of the former governor) and 12 percent for
Democrat
Thomas Connolly.
During his
tenure, he was one of only two governors nationwide not affiliated
with either of the two major parties, the other being Jesse Ventura of Minnesota
.
Term as Governor
While in office, Governor King launched an initiative to provide
laptops for every public middle school student in the state of
Maine, a first of its kind in the nation. It met with considerable
resistance due to costs, but was enacted by the
Maine Legislature.
On September 5, 2002
the state began the program with a four-year, $37.2 million
contract with Apple
Computer
to equip all
seventh- and eighth-grade students and teachers in the state with
laptops. "I think we're going to demonstrate the power of
one-to-one computer access that's going to transform education,"
said Governor Angus King in a
Wired
Magazine interview. "The economic future will belong to the
technologically adept." While ushering in the program, King quipped
"We've still got fish but we're heavily into the chips," in
reference to the State of Maine's fishing industry and the new
laptop initiative.
One of the more controversial initiatives of Governor King was a
law requiring all school employees, including volunteers, and
contractors working in schools to be fingerprinted by the
Maine State Police, and have background
checks conducted on them. The program purported to protect children
from abuse by potential predators working within the schools, but
met with strong resistance from teachers' unions, who considered it
a breach of civil liberties. Supporters of the law claimed the
fingerprinting requirement would stop previous offenders from
coming to Maine to work in the schools, and if Maine did not have
this requirement, it would send a message to previous offenders
that they could work in Maine without fear of being identified as a
child abuser. Critics of the law maintained that there was no
evidence of a problem with child abuse by school employees, and the
fingerprinting represented a violation of constitutional guarantees
(a claim which was not backed up by Supreme Court rulings on the
issue). 57 teachers from across the state resigned in protest of
the fingerprinting bill. The
Maine
Legislature voted to exempt current school employees, but this
was vetoed by Gov. King in April 1997. The cost of the requirement
was initially to be paid for by the school employees themselves,
but the Legislature voted to have the state fund the costs of the
measure.
Post-Governor
The day after he left office in 2003, King, his wife, Mary Herman,
and their two children–Ben, 14, and Molly, 10–hit the road in a
40-foot motorhome to see America. Over the next six months, the
family traveled 15,000 miles and visited 34 states before returning
home in June 2003.
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Based on his experience, King offered some advice. "Get on the
road!" said King. "See the country. Do it with the kids. It was one
of the greatest experiences I've ever had in my life."
Governor King is also involved in a wind power utility company
co-founded with Robert Gardiner named Independence Wind. In August
2009, Independence Wind along with joint venture partner Wagner
Forest Management won Maine DEP approval for construction of a
proposed $120 million, 22-turbine, utility scale wind power project
along a prominent mountain ridge in Roxbury, Maine.
Of the project King has said in part:""However, the people who say
wind is only an intermittent resource are looking for a one-shot
solution. And my experience is that there are rarely silver
bullets, but there is often silver buckshot. Wind is an adjunct
source of energy. Ten percent, 20% can be very significant..." King
is also interested in solar energy and in spring 2009 he endorsed
the
Maine Green Energy Project,a summer program for young
people to learn to build and advocate for green energy in
Maine.
Gov.
King
is currently a Segal Lecturer in American Politics at Bates College
.
Presidential endorsements
According to the Portland Press Herald, King, who was a supporter
of
George W. Bush in 2000 (but endorsed
John Kerry in 2004), endorsed
Barack Obama in the 2008 Presidential election,
stating that the Illinois Democrat "...leads with hope and not
through fear."
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References
External links