Christopher W. Babbidge is a Democratic member of the Maine House of Representatives, representing District 8. He was first elected to the chamber in 2014.
Babbidge served in the House previously, representing District 141 from 2002 to 2008.
Former Member, Energy, Utilities and Technology Committee, Maine State House of Representatives
Former Member, State and Local Government Committee, Maine State House of Representatives
Member, Judiciary
Member, Rules
— Number of Grandchildren:
1. Abortions should always be illegal.
- No Answer
2. Abortions should always be legal.
- No Answer
3. Abortions should be legal only within the first trimester of pregnancy.
- No Answer
4. Abortions should be legal when the pregnancy resulted from incest or rape.
- X
5. Abortions should be legal when the life of the woman is endangered.
- X
6. Prohibit public funding of abortions and to organizations that advocate or perform abortions.
- No Answer
7. Require clinics to give parental notification before performing abortions on minors.
- No Answer
8. Other or expanded principles
- Reproductive questions are ultimately the mother's to answer, and her privacy should not be violated by government intrusion except to ensure proper education and medical safety.
1. Education (Higher)
- Slightly Increase
2. Education (K-12)
- Maintain Status
3. Emergency preparedness
- No Answer
4. Environment
- Slightly Increase
5. Health care
- Maintain Status
6. Law enforcement
- Maintain Status
7. Transportation and Highway infrastructure
- Maintain Status
8. Welfare
- Maintain Status
9. Other or expanded categories
- Consistent with the voter mandate, we vastly increased state funds for K-12 education, which I supported. To balance the budget, I approved late cuts to DHHS. York County Community College and the university system need more funds, and higher ed $ dovetail with economic development. Long-term infrastructure needs for roads and bridges justify a beyond-the-budget transportation bond, and the difficult-to-reverse impact of unabridled development justifies increased $ for Land for Maine's Future.
1. Alcohol taxes
- Maintain Status
2. Capital gains taxes
- Maintain Status
3. Cigarette taxes
- Maintain Status
4. Corporate taxes
- Maintain Status
5. Gasoline taxes
- Maintain Status
6. Income taxes (incomes below $75,000)
- Slightly Decrease
7. Income taxes (incomes above $75,000)
- Slightly Decrease
8. Property taxes
- Slightly Decrease
9. Sales taxes
- Maintain Status
10. Vehicle taxes
- Slightly Decrease
11. Other or expanded categories
- Slightly Increase: luxury taxes, sales tax expansion
12. Should the state sales taxes be extended to Internet sales?
- No
13. Should accounts such as a ?rainy day? fund be used to balance the state budget?
- Undecided
14. Should fee increases be used to balance the state budget?
- No
15. Other or expanded principles
- Comprehensive tax reform requires balance. Sales tax exemptions should be reevaluated in that process. I would explore decreasing corporate income taxes in favor of a profits-based tax to permit economic expansion. We have increased the cigarette tax and provided personal tax relief via property tax rebates. Regarding my district, I have dedicated myself these two years to protecting Kennebunk from a tax increase caused by a cost-sharing shift adoped by the previous legislature.
1. Do you support the current limit of terms for Maine governors?
- Yes
2. Do you support the current limit of terms for Maine state senators and representatives?
- No
1. Individual
- Yes
2. PAC
- Yes
3. Corporate
- Yes
4. Political Parties
- Yes
5. Do you support requiring full and timely disclosure of campaign finance information?
- Yes
6. Do you support imposing spending limits on state level political campaigns?
- Yes
7. Do you support adopting statewide standards for counting, verifying and ensuring accuracy of votes?
- Yes
8. Do you support prohibiting media exit polling of voters until all polling locations in Maine are closed?
- No
9. Should Maine recognize civil unions between same-sex couples?
- Yes
1. Other or expanded principles
- I support Maine's Clean Elections laws. I support public financing of candidates who meet a threshold of legitimacy. Term limits have forced into retirement many knowledgeable public servants who, once back in private life, choose not to embrace the personal sacrifice that returning to the Legislature entails; this means increased reliance on lobbyists/bureaucrats for information and increased power of the Executive at the expense of the Legislature. I support increasing term limits from 8 to 12 years.
1. Increase state funds for construction of state prisons and hiring of additional prison staff.
- No Answer
2. Implement the death penalty in Maine.
- No Answer
3. Support programs to provide prison inmates with vocational and job-related skills and job-placement assistance when released.
- X
4. End parole for repeat violent offenders.
- No Answer
5. Implement penalties other than incarceration for certain non-violent offenders.
- No Answer
6. Strengthen penalties and sentences for drug-related crimes.
- No Answer
7. Minors accused of a violent crime should be prosecuted as adults.
- No Answer
8. Require that crimes based on race, ethnic background, religious belief, sex, age, disability, or sexual orientation be prosecuted as hate crimes.
- No Answer
9. Increase state funding for community centers and other social agencies in areas with at-risk youth.
- No Answer
10. Strengthen sex-offender laws.
- No Answer
11. Support the restriction of the sale of products used to make methamphetamine (e.g. tablets containing pseudophedrine, ephedrine and phenylpropanolamine).
- No Answer
12. Support the continued publication of Maine?s sex offender registry.
- No Answer
13. Other or expanded principles
- As I see it, the proper role of the Legislature is to make law and set penalties in ranges that allow professionals in the courtroom to find truth, assess relevant factors, and administer justice. The safety of our community requires firmness. The conscience of American society requires fairness. I resist the popular temptation to mandate harsher punishments that have unintended negative consequences.
1. Support national standards and testing of public school students.
- No Answer
2. Provide parents with state-funded vouchers to send their children to any public school.
- No Answer
3. Provide parents with state-funded vouchers to send their children to any private or religious school.
- No Answer
4. Increase state funds for school capital improvements (e.g. buildings and infrastructure).
- No Answer
5. Increase funds for hiring additional teachers.
- No Answer
6. Support teacher testing and reward with merit pay.
- No Answer
7. Endorse voluntary prayer in public schools.
- No Answer
8. Require public schools to administer high school exit exams.
- No Answer
9. Provide state funding to increase teacher salaries.
- No Answer
10. Increase funding for Head Start programs.
- No Answer
11. Provide state funding for tax incentives and financial aid to help make college more affordable.
- X
12. Support sexual education programs that include information on abstinence, contraceptives, and HIV/STD prevention methods.
- X
13. Support abstinence-only sexual education programs.
- No Answer
14. Other or expanded principles
- Testing to meet standards is imperative (we've always done it to some degree), but we must ensure that its benefits don't blind us into permitting testing to overwhelm the learning environment of the classroom. I would support public school choice if it caused no negative financial impact on students left behind. I have worked hard to protect MSAD 71 financially.
1. Increase funding for state job-training programs that retrain displaced workers and teach skills needed in today?s job market.
- No Answer
2. Reduce state government regulations on the private sector in order to encourage investment and economic expansion.
- No Answer
3. Provide low interest loans and tax credits for starting, expanding, or relocating businesses.
- X
4. Provide tax credits for businesses that provide child care for children in low-income working families.
- X
5. Increase state funds to provide child care for children in low-income working families.
- No Answer
6. Include sexual orientation in Maine's anti-discrimination laws.
- X
7. Increase the state minimum wage.
- No Answer
8. Other or expanded principles
- These statements are only relevant to the status guo and therefore may misinform the reader about my priorities. I was a strong advocate of a 4% increase in the minimum wage for each of the next two years to bring it to $7. It was a big vote in a controversial and close decision, is now the status quo, I didn't check it above as I don't favor a higher wage in that time period.
1. Public employment
- No Answer
2. State college and university admissions
- No Answer
3. State contracting
- No Answer
4. Other or expanded principles
- Once a candidate for employment or college has ALREADY successfully met qualifying criteria that would justify his/her selection, THEN race or gender may be used by those with defined affirmative action plans that have justifiable goals as one positive factor in the process of final selection.
1. Promote increased use of alternative fuel technology.
- X
2. Support increased production of traditional domestic energy sources (e.g. coal, natural gas, and oil).
- No Answer
3. Use state funds to clean up former industrial and commercial sites that are contaminated, unused, or abandoned.
- No Answer
4. Increase funding for improvements to Maine's power generating and transmission facilities.
- No Answer
5. Support funding for open space preservation.
- X
6. Enact environmental regulations even if they are stricter than federal law.
- X
7. Other or expanded principles
- Maine's energy costs, like all northeastern states, are very high, and my work on the Utilities and Energy Committee has been to look out for the interests of consumers and businesses by pursuing adequate supply at reasonable cost. I have been part of a pro-active state government that is addressing these issues head on. In addition, I have promoted conservation and alternative energy projects, and sponsored cell phone recycling legislation.
1. Maintain and strengthen the enforcement of existing state restrictions on the purchase and possession of guns.
- No Answer
2. Ease state restrictions on the purchase and possession of guns.
- No Answer
3. Repeal state restrictions on the purchase and possession of guns.
- No Answer
4. Allow citizens to carry concealed guns.
- No Answer
5. Require background checks on gun sales between private citizens at gun shows.
- X
6. Require a license for gun possession.
- No Answer
7. Support notifying individuals protected by an abuse order when the abuser attempts to purchase a firearm.
- X
8. Other or expanded principles
- I believe 2nd amendment rights can be preserved without sacrificing safety in the community. Common sense dictates that unstable people shouldn't be permitted to get concealed weapon permits and people who have a history of resolving life's conflicts with criminal behavior shouldn't have access to guns. Battered spouses, for instance, deserve every practical protection government can provide. Those actions, however, need not jeopardize hunting and target practicing as long-held Maine traditions by law-abiding citizens.
1. Ensure that citizens have access to basic health care through managed care, insurance reforms, or state-funded care where necessary.
- X
2. Transfer current Medicaid recipients into managed care programs.
- No Answer
3. Limit the amount of punitive damages that can be awarded in medical malpractice lawsuits.
- No Answer
4. Support patients' right to sue their HMOs.
- X
5. Guaranteed medical care to all citizens is not a responsibility of state government.
- No Answer
6. Continue to support Dirigo Health in Maine.
- X
7. Legalize physician assisted suicide in Maine.
- No Answer
8. Continue to allow doctors to prescribe marijuana to their patients for medicinal purposes.
- X
9. Other or expanded principles
- Regarding health issues, I support the empowerment of the PATIENT to make decisions regarding their doctor, their HMO, the specifics of their care, and, in certain situations, their end of life. I support Dirigo Health, a pioneering program addressing both costs and coverage, recognizing that uninsured Maine citizens cause significant costs to be transferred to the rest of the population.
1. Support increased work requirements for able-bodied welfare recipients.
- No Answer
2. Increase funding for employment and job training programs for welfare recipients.
- No Answer
3. Increase access to public transportation for welfare recipients who work.
- No Answer
4. Redirect welfare funding to faith-based and community-based private organizations.
- No Answer
5. Use federal TANF (Temporary Assistance to Needy Families) funds to extend health and child care subsidies to the working poor.
- X
6. Support marriage promotion programs for welfare recipients.
- No Answer
7. Eliminate government-funded welfare programs.
- No Answer
8. Other or expanded principles
- I believe in government assistance to needy Mainers, but not to the point of it becoming a disincentive to work. Treatment, both physical and mental, and education are the vehicles to get out of poverty. These programs must leave recipients with their dignity, while recipients need to recognize personal responsibility for their own future. But care for the elderly and the handicapped are the responsibility of a civilized society,
Please explain in a total of 75 words or less, your top two or three priorities if elected. If they require additional funding for implementation, please explain how you would obtain this funding.
- I am committed to promoting a strong and vibrant economy, investing in Maine people and small business, preserving our quality of life and our environment, promoting strong educational opportunities, opposing discrimination, fighting energy costs, advocating for good health care, and helping our seniors fight costs and maintain independence. It's has been a great privilege to represent Kennebunk these past two years in pursuit of making Maine an even better place to live.