Organic Farmer šŸ‘©ā€šŸŒ¾ Maine islander 🌊 @AppropsDems Interior Ranking Member and member of @HouseAgDems.

Joined June 2008
2,952 Photos and videos
Congresswoman Chellie Pingree retweeted
Happy Friday, America! šŸ‡ŗšŸ‡ø

53
223
2,037
36,637
It’s the end of yet another terrible week in Washington. Republicans approved billions more for ICE and Trump is continuing his undiplomatic and reckless war with Iran. And don’t get me started on the president’s birthday party UFC match on the White House lawn this weekend. Corruption beyond belief.
6
7
8
709
A federal judge ruled that Trump had to take his name off the Kennedy Center by TODAY. But we all know how much he hates being told no, so he got his hand-picked board to file an appeal. Mr. President, I’m confused… I thought you were washing your hands with the Kennedy Center and ā€œgiving it backā€ to Congress (whatever the hell that means)? Take the L and move on already!
92
37
133
12,369
Hi, Donald. Midcoast Mainer here. Ā  You did not, in fact, ā€œhave to go to Japanā€ to get a Maine lobster before you. We sold millions. Our lobster fishery is one of the most valuable in the U.S. Ā  It’s a big reason why people come here, in case you didn’t know! Ā  If anything is hurting our lobstermen, it’s inflation (which you apparently ā€œloveā€). Ā  Also, exactly *zero* Maine fishermen run their boats at three knots. More like 30 knots—and some go even faster. You should check out a lobster boat race sometime! Ā  I think it might be time for one of your famous Oval Office naps, because you have ZERO idea what you’re talking about.
Trump lies that before he came around, "you had go to Japan to get a Maine lobster"
502
4,819
19,851
630,253
Glyphosate is turning up in more and more places, including our forests and food supply. That should concern everyone. After troubling @MotherJones reporting on Forest Service spraying, @RepHuffman and I are demanding answers. Yesterday, I pressed @SecRollins directly: are we looking at the whole picture here?
12
54
153
6,561
Get a load of this. Secretary Rollins just said ā€œglyphosate is safeā€ … really? The cancer-causing chemical that Bayer has literally spent BILLIONS on fighting and settling lawsuits is ā€œsafeā€? Thank you @RepMcGovern for holding her feet to the fire on this.
20
39
96
23,943
I was a HELL YES.
BREAKING: The House just passed a War Powers Resolution to end Trump's illegal war. Both houses of Congress have now passed bipartisan resolutions demanding the war end. The Constitution gives Congress, not the president, power to declare war. Trump must end this war now.
8
7
36
7,826
They don’t call it ā€œbreaking breadā€ for no reason. Today’s Interior Appropriations markup lunch: Idaho potato French fries from @CongMikeSimpson and my very own homemade Maine wild blueberry pie (leave it to a Mainer to whip up 8 pies in one morning!). 🄧 Maybe… hopefully!… after this lunch we can come back to the table and work on making this funding bill bipartisan! One can dream!
1
2
17
6,711
Checking in on the President, who doesn’t seem to be taking the news very well…throwing a little tantrum!
2
2
6
631
Donald Trump tried to slap his name on the Kennedy Center like it was one of his tacky hotels, and today a federal judge made clear what we have been saying from the start: he had no legal authority to do it. The Kennedy Center belongs to the American people. Now and always.
5
11
47
2,870
Trump and his vanity projects are completely out of control. This week, we learned he’s raiding NPS entrance fee revenue to help pay for his gilded, tacky vanity projects around DC. Meanwhile, parks like Acadia are facing real maintenance backlogs, which is exactly what that money is supposed to help fix. We mark up the Interior & Environment funding bill next week, and you can be damn sure @AppropsDems will be fighting back hard against this gross abuse of taxpayer dollars.
1
3
3
399
Congresswoman Chellie Pingree retweeted
VIEWER'S VOICE: Maine Democratic Congresswoman @chelliepingree takes your questions. Keep sending them in! @thehill @NewsNation
1
1
1
449
Here’s a disturbing story that’s flown mostly under the radar: ICE just signed a contract to train agents to extract data from iPhones and MacBooks. The contract reportedly includes courses on Mac forensics, software to analyze Apple devices, and training on password recovery, AirTag analysis, preventing automatic data deletion, and extracting data from Apple products. In other words, ICE is building capacity to train its agents to secretly steal data from Americans’ phones and computers. subscriber.politicopro.com/a…
1
2
1
485
This is incredibly alarming, and exactly why I introduced the Stop ICE Intimidation Act, which would: āœ… Block funding for expanded ICE surveillance programs and staffing until Congress gets detailed answers about how ICE uses these tools. āœ… Require ICE to disclose what data it collects, how long it stores it, who it targets, and whether its practices comply with constitutional protections and state and local laws. āœ… Establish that ICE surveillance of people observing or documenting immigration enforcement may violate First and Fourth Amendment rights.
1
1
363
ICE has already spent millions expanding its digital surveillance arsenal. Now it is training agents to extract data from some of the most common devices Americans use every day. I have a hard time believing anyone would be comfortable with this gross violation of privacy. I'm certainly not.
1
2
339
Barney was one of the most brilliant, fearless, and impactful public servants of our time—and someone I was proud to call a friend.Ā  I’ll miss him dearly. My heart goes out to Jim, Barney’s family, his many friends and colleagues, and the countless people whose lives he touched.
Date: May 21, 2026 Contact: Steve Adamske, swadmske@gmail.com, (202) 413-0183 This week we said goodbye to one of the most consequential leaders in modern American political life. Former Congressman Barney Frank (D-MA) passed away peacefully in his sleep on May 19, 2026. He was 86. He is survived by his husband, James Ready, his siblings, Ann Lewis, Doris Breay, and David Frank, his in-laws, his many nieces and nephews, as well as dozens of former colleagues and staff whom he considered family. "He never stopped fighting for people," said Jim Ready, Frank's husband. "I was proud of him every day.ā€ "We are so proud of Barney: his courage, his compassion and humor, his clear thinking about policies that could make people's lives better, and the best ways to achieve them. He was a loving brother, a great uncle to our children - and an example of public service at its best," said Frank's siblings, Ann Lewis, Doris Breay and David Frank. Barney Frank never backed down from a fight if it meant winning a fairer shake for working people, for elderly Americans, the poor, and everyone who had played by the rules and deserved security in retirement, or for anyone who’d been victimized or disenfranchised by racism, sexism or homophobia. Barney had the strategic sense and the legislative and political skills not just to join the fight, but to win many of them. As a pathbreaking leader in the U.S. House of Representatives, Barney Frank made an indelible mark on our body politic, and leaves a legacy that will last for generations. The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, passed during an era of deadlock and amid the howls of big banks and their congressional allies in the wake of financial chicanery that caused the largest economic meltdown since the Great Depression, has stood the test of time. Regulation of the ā€œWild Westā€ market for over-the-counter derivatives, insistence that banks retain ā€œskin in the gameā€ when bundling and reselling mortgages, creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and ending ā€œToo Big to Failā€ banks, helped rebuild the American economy on a more solid financial foundation. All stand as a testament to Barney’s leadership and legislative prowess, and serve as a lasting benefit to the nation he loved. ā€œBarney and I shared a fantastic relationship. I had many good moments in those 36 years in the Congress, but none more significant, joyful or productive than those almost two years working with Barney on our banking bill,ā€ said former Senator Christopher Dodd. As one of the first openly gay members of Congress, and the first gay member to marry while a Member of Congress, his example and the many gay rights bills he authored while serving in the Massachusetts legislature and Congress inspired millions and helped usher in an era of fuller participation for all, including LGBTQ Americans. When Barney entered politics, laws prohibited LGBTQ people from many activities of American life, including immigration, eligibility for security clearances, government employment and marriage. By the time he retired, and then by the time he passed, those prohibitions had not merely fallen away; they had been replaced by legal protections. He made this point often, in the hope that those who feel themselves on the front lines of seemingly hopeless battles might recognize just how far the country has come, and just how possible progress truly is. Tough, funny, not prone to suffer fools gladly, Barney Frank was reelected for more than three decades by his constituents because they appreciated that he was the very antithesis of the sort of poll-driven, focus-grouped politician that too often typifies politics today. Yet for all his impatience with that style, Barney was never contemptuous of the men and women he served alongside. He understood, perhaps better than anyone, the relentless pressures that shaped his colleagues' choices, and that understanding was itself a source of his effectiveness. It allowed him to build deep and trusted relationships on both sides of the aisle, grounded in a shared appreciation of just how hard the work of public service truly is. His first campaign motto, ā€œNeatness Isn’t Everything,ā€ perfectly summed up the politician, but masked the internal drive towards fairness, equality, and measurable progress. Barney was up front with the people he represented, and they knew he had their back. Constituent service was always a top priority for him, and he would surprise people by (bluntly) answering switchboard phone calls himself and vigorously championing their causes. Barney was famous for his one-liners and humor. One of his favorite quips was ā€œI know it's polite in America to say, ā€˜I hate to say I told you so,’ but in reality, no one hates to tell people they told you so. In fact, people love to say they told you so.ā€ Barney never missed this opportunity. Even with his passing, he will continue to tell us so, and he will enjoy every moment of it. As members of his staff, we say farewell with the knowledge that our lives, and the life of the nation, are better off for knowing him. Appropriately, his headstone will read, ā€œThe Gentleman’s time has expired,ā€ but his words and deeds will endure forever. In lieu of flowers, donations in Barney's memory can be made to the UMass Dartmouth Barney Frank Fund, which supports the preservation of his papers; to the Trevor Project; and to SMYAL.
1
3
10
2,463
My heart is with the Searsmont community as officials respond to a reported mass casualty incident at Robbins Lumber. Details are still limited. Please follow updates from local authorities, avoid the area, and keep those impacted and the first responders in your thoughts.
BREAKING NEWS: Emergency crews are at Robbins Lumber on Maine Street South in Searsmont following reports of a fire and multiple injuries. A reporter is on the way to the scene. We’ll continue to update this story as more information becomes available.
1
5
1,142
.@VP's remarks today were nothing more than a clumsy attempt to distract from the disastrous policies of this Administration. At a time when Mainers are being crushed by rising costs and surging gas prices—thanks to an illegal war he’s now suddenly defending—he barely touched on this very real economic anxiety. Instead, he used his platform to amplify baseless right-wing conspiracies, spread blatant disinformation about Maine’s immigrant communities, and threaten to defund critical health care programs that are literal lifelines for thousands of Mainers.
VP Vance speaks to a fired up crowd in Maine: "For the first time in a very long time, you've got an administration in Washington, DC that is fighting for you, fighting to protect your tax dollars, and fighting to put the fraudsters in prison."šŸ”„
4
3
654
That he delivered his little lecture about "waste" and "fraud" while his Administration is spending $1 billion a day on a war that an overwhelming majority of Americans do not support—and to say nothing of the staggering corruption of his own President, who is about to steal $10 billion in taxpayer money over a lawsuit involving the release of his tax returns—is beyond parody. I wholeheartedly support investigating legitimate fraud where and whenever it occurs and holding those accountable who knowingly engage in it. But I do not support using a few bad actors and isolated incidents to punish and vilify entire communities—which is exactly what the Vice President is trying to do. It’s shameful, it’s dangerous, and it’s beneath the dignity of his office.
2
190