On January 7, 2015

Legislative votes for governor, Thursday

By Anne Galloway, VTDigger.org

On Thursday, Jan. 8, lawmakers will cast secret ballots to elect the new governor. Neither Scott Milne, the Republican candidate, nor incumbent governor Shumlin received more than 50 percent of the vote on Election Day, and under the Vermont constitution, the Legislature must now decide.

Legislators have traditionally supported the top vote-getter, Shumlin said. But he says he is not lobbying lawmakers to vote for him on Jan. 8.

Milne has said he hopes the overwhelmingly Democratic Legislature will support his bid for governor.

Milne’s supporters announced on Monday, Dec. 29, that they are launching television ads and a grassroots campaign to urge lawmakers to support the Republican candidate. Shumlin beat Milne by fewer than 2,400 votes. Milne did not ask for a recount, nor has he conceded the race.

A new advocacy group, Vermonters for Honest Government, led by Bill Round, a retired U.S. Navy captain, hopes to persuade lawmakers to vote for Milne because he says Shumlin is not fit to continue in office.

Round is running television ads on WPTZ, WCAX and Local 22. He is also organizing volunteers who will be pressuring lawmakers to vote for Milne.

Round says legislators should vote against Shumlin because “he’s promised a lot and failed to deliver.” The issues the retired Newport Center resident is most exercised about include “skyrocketing” property taxes, “out of control” education spending and state budget deficits.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Two members, including chair, resign from the Commission on the Future of Public Education in Vermont

June 25, 2025
By Corey McDonald/VTDigger Two members of the Commission on the Future of Public Education in Vermont, including the commission’s chair, announced last week they would be resigning, saying they no longer believed their efforts would make any impact. Meagan Roy, the chair of the commission, and Nicole Mace, the former representative of the Vermont School Boards…

Vt plastic bag use dropped 91% following ban, researchers find

June 25, 2025
In the midst of 2020 Covid measures, another change took place in Vermont: A law went into effect banning businesses from offering plastic bags to customers, with paper bags only available for a fee. A 2023 analysis of a survey of hundreds of Vermonters found the law appeared to have worked. Plastic bag use in…

A Roadmap

June 25, 2025
The Vermont Legislature adjourned Monday evening, June 16, following the passage of H.454, the education reform plan. I call it a roadmap as the legislation lays out a list of changes that will take place over the next few years. And as various studies and reports come back in, there will also likely be adjustments,…

Vermont to get over $21 million in nationwide settlement with Purdue Pharma and the Sacklers

June 25, 2025
Attorney General Charity Clark announced June 16 that all 55 attorneys general, representing all eligible states and U.S. territories, have agreed to sign on to a $7.4 billion settlement with Purdue Pharma and its owners, the Sackler family. This settlement was reached after the previous settlement was rejected by the U.S. Supreme Court. It resolves…