Do you favor making the former state flag, replaced as the official flag of the State in 1909 and commonly known as the Pine Tree Flag, the official flag of the State?
The 2024 Maine flag referendum (formally known as Question 5) is a legislatively referred state statute that will appear on the ballot on November 5, 2024.
The referendum had initially been scheduled for 2023, but the Maine Legislature delayed it until 2024.[2][3] The Legislature then attempted a further delay until 2026, which was vetoed by Governor Janet Mills.[4][5] On August 5, 2024, the winner of the flag redesign contest was announced, with honors going to Adam Lemire of Gardiner, Maine. His design, chosen out of more than 400 entries, features a pine tree modeled after one he saw in Viles Arboretum in Augusta, Maine. It has sixteen branches, one for each of Maine's counties. Lemire's design will become the new Maine flag should the referendum pass.[6]
Supporters
Supporters of this referendum, such as former representative Sean Paulhus argue that "We are the pine tree state, and I think it is a good representative, all-inclusive design, our state flag currently with a blue background in our state seal looks very similar to many other state flags," as do New Hampshire's, Vermont's, Pennsylvania's, and New York's."[7]
Opponents of the referendum, such as representative Billy Bob Faulkingham, argue that "it goes back to Civil War significance to have that blue flag. The sailor and the farmer have historical significance back to the roots of the state of Maine, and that's what they represent"[7]