Maine politics, mapped and explained.

See the race beneath the result.

The Maine Maproom maps and explains the political story underneath the topline.

Election maps, tools, campaign strategy, ranked-choice breakdowns, and plain-English analysis for making sense of Maine politics without getting boxed into one format or one kind of race.

  • MapsSee where the story happened.
  • ToolsTest scenarios and follow the count.
  • AnalysisUnderstand the race beneath the headline.
  • MethodsCheck the sources, assumptions, and data.
Featured Work

Start with the maps.

Featured races and active Maproom projects. Open a map, follow the count, and start seeing the race below the final result.

Tools

Tools for thinking through elections.

Scenario builders, campaign utilities, and practical ways to test how choices, transfers, turnout, and geography can change a race.

Coming Soon

RCV Simulator

Test ranked-choice election scenarios and see how transfers can change the final outcome.

Coming Soon

Campaign Strategy Tools

Practical tools for thinking about win numbers, vote geography, field priorities, and persuasion universes.

Analysis

Not just what happened. What it means.

Race breakdowns, predictions, essays, and campaign notes that connect the maps to strategy, voter behavior, coalition movement, and Maine political context.

Coming Soon

2026 CD2 Democratic Primary Notes

Geographic coalition analysis, ranked-choice transfer expectations, and campaign strategy lessons from the CD2 map.

Coming Soon

One Thing Everyone Missed

Short, sharp map-driven posts that pull one overlooked story out of each race.

Explore the Maproom

Maps, tools, analysis, methods, and ways to contribute.

The Maproom is meant to grow beyond any single election type: maps when the geography matters, tools when scenarios matter, and analysis when the story needs more than a chart.

About The Maine Maproom

A Maine politics workspace, not just a map archive.

The Maine Maproom is for understanding Maine politics beyond toplines and horse-race coverage. Maps are the entry point, but the project is broader than geography or ranked-choice voting alone: election breakdowns, campaign strategy, tools, analysis, methodology, and the political context behind the numbers.