<u>Answer:</u>
<em>151 members make up the Maine House of Representatives. </em>
<em>35 members make up the senate. </em>
<u>Explanation:</u>
<em>Maine is a state in the US and it has bicameral legislature.</em> It consists of two houses, the lower house or the House of Representatives and the upper house or the Senate. <em>Both the senate and House of Representatives have a term of 4 years. </em>
The representatives of the lower house are chosen from single-member constituencies. The house also includes three non-voting members. <em>The there are no special seats for Native Americans in the house.
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Answer:
A lawmaker that already promised to pass laws that benefit not themselves but the company they are bridge financing into corporate status in exchange for the lobbying politicians' ownership stake in that very company(insider trading and bribery).
Explanation:
Our voices are lost within the confines of a ballot box or intentionally overlooked because they don't care. Also, it is the sad result of regulations and federal protections at the macroeconomic level that even prevent genuine sparks of intellectual insight from reaching the macro level from where we sit at the microeconomic level.
There is no incentive in the public sector TO actually care about districts or their efficacy to even correctly represent their constituents because it doesn't really matter anymore because the foundation of this constitutional republic has been eroded and the very fabric of civil justice has been set ablaze.
The accumulation of all delegated legislative, executive and judiciary powers, in the same hands of the few or the many can justly be the very definition of Tyranny.
I think it would be Candidate H. They have worked at a company that was accused of labor violations. They would know first hand what that was like & most likely be willing to protect workers & minority rights.
Answer:
Charles Joseph Fleischmann
Explanation: