McCain's eye on the Maine chance (BBC)By Max Deveson It has long been a liberal bastion, voting solidly Democrat in every presidential election since 1992. But both of Maine's senators are Republicans, and the appearance of Sarah Palin on the Republican ticket could be giving plenty of voters pause for thought.
Last week the McCain campaign upped its advertising spending in the state, and on Thursday, Mrs Palin herself is visiting Bangor - the biggest town in Maine's second congressional district - with her husband Todd, a snowmobile race champion whose renown extends beyond Alaska.
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"I think Sarah Palin has made the second district of Maine a battleground out of what most likely was an open-and-shut case for Obama."
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In the balanceIn the last three state-wide polls conducted in Maine, Barack Obama held a four or five point lead over his Republican rival.
Polling analyst Nate Silver projects that Mr Obama will poll two or three points below his state-wide vote in the second district, which is home, as he puts it, to "most of the places where people die in Stephen King novels".
So if the polls stay static, or the race tightens at all, then the second district's electoral vote may really hang in the balance.
There is more than one plausible scenario for election day on 4 November, where the two candidates could end up with 269 electoral college votes each.
In that case the hunters, fishermen and snowmobilers of northern Maine could play a decisive role.
If we split a electoral vote off, it will be seen as for Sarah Palin, and the world will notice. Notice and snicker.
Maine, aka "most of the places where people die in Stephen King novels".