County officials The following individuals hold county offices: • County Manager: Michael Williams • County Treasurer: Tricia White • Mayor: Paul Paydos • Finance Administrator: Kathy Walsh • Sheriff: Robert Young • EMA Director: Debra Hamlin • Probate Register: Donna Peterson • Deeds Register: Gail Clark • District Attorney: R. Chris Almy • DA Administrative Assistant: Corinna Rackliff • Facilities Director: Josh York • Judge of Probate: Benjamin Cabot
County Commissioners and Districts Piscataquis County is administered by three County Commissioners, each representing one of the three county districts. They are elected for four-year terms. A term of office begins on January 1 following the election in November. County Commissioner meetings are typically held on the 1st and 3rd Tuesdays of the month at the County Courthouse in
Dover-Foxcroft. The meetings begin at 8:30 a.m. and continue until the agenda for the meeting has been addressed.
District 1 includes the towns of
Abbot,
Beaver Cove,
Greenville,
Guilford,
Kingsbury Plt,
Monson,
Parkman,
Shirley,
Wellington and the Unorganized Territories of
Blanchard, Elliotsville and
Northwest Piscataquis. Eric P. Ward is the Commissioner.
District 2 includes the towns of
Dover-Foxcroft,
Sangerville and
Willimantic. James D. Annis is the Commissioner.
District 3 includes the towns of
Bowerbank,
Brownville,
Lake View Plt,
Medford,
Milo,
Sebec and the Unorganized Territories of
Atkinson, Barnard, Ebeeme, Katahdin Iron Works,
Orneville, Williamsburg and
Northeast Piscataquis County. Frederick Trask is the Commissioner.
Voter registration Elections Governor In the
Maine gubernatorial election, 2010, Republican candidate
Paul LePage received the most votes in Piscataquis County with 48.4%. Three Independent candidates ran in this election:
Eliot Cutler received the second most Piscatquis votes with 36.5% of the total, Shawn Moody received 3.1% and Kevin Scott, 1%. Democratic candidate,
Libby Mitchell received the third most votes in the county with 10.9% of the total.
Paul LePage was elected governor. In the
Maine gubernatorial election, 2006, Republican candidate
Chandler Woodcock received the most votes in Piscataquis County with 37.7%. Democratic candidate, incumbent governor
John Baldacci received 34.5%. Independent candidate
Barbara Merrill received 19.7%, Green party candidate
Pat LaMarche received 7.4%, and Phillip Morris NaPier received .63% of the Piscataquis vote.
John Baldacci was reelected governor. In the
Maine gubernatorial election, 2002, Democratic candidate
John Baldacci received the most votes in Piscataquis County with 50.4%. Republican candidate
Peter Cianchette received 42.9% of the county vote and Green Party candidate,
Jonathan Carter received 5.1%.
John Baldacci was elected governor. In the
Maine gubernatorial election, 1998, Independent candidate
Angus King received the most votes in Piscataquis County with 50.2%. Republican candidate
James Longley, Jr. received 26.6%, Democratic candidate
Tom Connolly received 10.7%. Other candidates split 12.5% of the vote.
Angus King was elected governor.
US Senate President Piscataquis County is one of the most reliably Republican counties in New England, only voting for a someone other than the Republican candidate five times since 1880 — voting for
Bull Moose Party nominee
Theodore Roosevelt (a former Republican) in
1912, Democrats
Lyndon B. Johnson and
Hubert Humphrey in
1964 and
1968 respectively, independent
Ross Perot in
1992, and Democrat
Bill Clinton in
1996. Since 2000, Piscataquis County has maintained its strong Republican lean, continuing to be the most reliably Republican county in Maine, and New England. In
2008, Piscataquis was the only county in New England to vote for
John McCain, who won the county by a margin of 355 votes or 3.8% over
Barack Obama, with Obama winning Maine by a 17.3% margin over McCain. In
2012, Piscataquis was only one of five counties in New England to support Republican candidate
Mitt Romney, and the only county in Maine to do so. Romney received the most votes in Piscataquis County with 50.6%. Democratic incumbent
Barack Obama received 46.3%. Libertarian candidate
Gary Johnson received 1.5% and Green Independent candidate
Jill Stein received 1.24%. There were a total of 30 "write in" votes; 29 of these were for
Ron Paul and 1 for
Rocky Anderson.
Barack Obama was reelected President. This makes the county the only one in New England to reject President Obama in both of his successful campaigns. Republican candidate
Donald Trump carried the county in
2016 while greatly improving on Romney's performance. He won it again in
2020 with 62% of the vote, marking the first time a presidential candidate from any party won Piscataquis County with over 60% of the vote since
Ronald Reagan in
1984. ==Communities==