Rick Bennett

Demi Kouzounas

Dana C. Hanley

Dana C. Hanley

(1963-05-24) May 24, 1963
Portland, Maine

Karen Bennett

2

Businessman

Biography[edit]

As a resident of Norway, Maine,[3] Bennett was the President of the Maine Senate as the result of a unique power-sharing agreement between Republicans and Democrats predicated on an even split in state senators. The deal gave the presidency to both parties for one year each during each two-year senate term.[4]


Bennett served four terms in the Maine Senate, two terms in the Maine House of Representatives, and in 1994 was the Republican nominee for Congress in Maine's second district, losing to John Baldacci in a close race. On May 2, 2008, he was elected to a four-year term as Maine's Republican National Committeeman.


In 2006, he considered running for Governor of Maine but decided to remain in the private sector instead. His name was widely circulated as a possible candidate for the Republican nomination for governor in 2010, but he ultimately decided against running. In November 2012, Bennett sought the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate Seat vacated by Olympia Snowe but was defeated by Maine Secretary of State Charles E. Summers, Jr.


On July 20, 2013, Bennett was elected chairman of the Maine Republican Party, replacing former State Representative Richard Cebra of Naples.[5] In 2015, Bennett was unanimously re-elected as Chairman of the Maine Republican Party. He was a Republican elector for Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election for Maine's second congressional district.[6]