AUGUSTA — As controversy over Gov. Paul LePage’s comments during a recent campaign fundraiser in Belgrade rages, political attention is focused on next week’s special election for a Maine Senate seat in Sagadahoc County.

The race to replace Senate Majority Leader Seth Goodall, who resigned in July to head the Northeast region of the U.S. Small Business Association, pits Republican Paula Benoit of Phippsburg against Democrat Eloise Vitelli of Arrowsic. Green Independent Daniel Stromgren of Topsham also appears on the ballot.

Benoit said Thursday that LePage’s alleged comment about President Barack Obama hating white people has been overhyped by the media and is distracting voters from more important issues such as jobs, taxes and economic development.

“[The LePage controversy] isn’t affecting this election from where I stand,” said Benoit. “I’m just meeting people and going door to door and talking about myself. I’m not talking about the governor. All I say is that he sees a light at the end of the tunnel; it’s just that his message gets distorted.”

Several GOP insiders, however, have told the BDN that there is grave concern within the party that the latest LePage controversy will tip the race toward the Democrat Vitelli, so no one will talk about the issue publicly before the election.

Neither the governor nor his staff will discuss LePage’s comments, which the governor denied making on Tuesday. When reached Thursday by the BDN, LePage political adviser Brent Littlefield again declined to discuss the fundraiser.

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“As was previously reported I was not in attendance at that event to hear remarks,” wrote Littlefield in an email.

Democrats are seeking to make the Senate race a referendum on LePage, a strategy that appeared to work in the 2012 election when they regained control of the Maine Legislature after losing it in 2010 when LePage was elected governor.

Maine Republican Party Chairman Rick Bennett said the race is the Democrats’ to lose.

“For the Democrats, this is a critical race for them to win; it’s a seat that’s held by the Senate Democratic leader,” he said. “It would be marvelous for us to win it and it would be a great pickup. They’re trying to make this a referendum on Paul LePage to the extent that if they win this race, they can use it down the road.”

Campaign literature circulated in recent days — especially that paid for by the parties and their allies, which the candidates by law have no control over — confirms that Democrats are trying to link Benoit to LePage.

“The LePage way of doing things in Augusta just isn’t working,” reads a mailer paid for by the Maine Democratic Party. “Partisan politics and petty bickering are the LePage/Benoit way of doing things. … Gov. LePage wants Paula back in the Senate with her rubber stamp voting record.”

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The other side of the same mailer focuses on Vitelli’s attributes, including that she “will stand up to Governor LePage’s attempts to cut funding for early childhood education.”

A separate mailer funded by the Vitelli campaign makes no mention of LePage or Benoit.

A mailer from the Maine Republican Party on Benoit’s behalf focuses on her support of small businesses and opposition to tax increases. There is no mention of LePage.

“Paula Benoit has a plan: Get government out of the way and let our small businesses create jobs for Maine families,” reads the mailer.

The closest Benoit has come to distancing herself from LePage was in a mailer from her campaign that characterized her as “a strong independent voice who will be ready on day one.”

Nearly $126,000 has been spent on the campaign by independent groups. Of that, about $76,000 has benefited Vitelli versus about $50,000 for Benoit, according to the Maine Ethics Commission’s website on Thursday afternoon.

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Benoit, who said she told the Republican Party before becoming a candidate that she would drop out if they went negative, said Thursday that while she is a supporter of many of LePage’s initiatives, her actions as a senator are her own.

“I’m an independent thinker and I’m my own person,” she said. “I have my own opinions on things and I do what’s best for my county and the state as a whole. It’s amazing to me that they’re saying I’m a puppet for [LePage]. I haven’t even had a conversation with him about this race.”

Ben Grant, chairman of the Maine Democratic Party, said if that’s true, Benoit would be in a class of her own among legislative Republicans, who earlier this year sustained 78 of 83 LePage vetoes.

“Everyone in the Republican Party right now is tied to LePage somehow,” said Grant. “Most of the Republicans in the Legislature are lockstep with the governor, regardless of what they say. I think that will end up definitely driving away some middle-of-the-road voters and motivating some Democrats to come out and vote.”

Bennett said that’s not how Maine voters typically make their decisions.

“Riding coattails, or whatever the reverse is, usually doesn’t work in Maine,” he said. “I think this election is really about a choice between these two candidates.”

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Vitelli said she is unsure what effect LePage will have on the election.

“This election will turn on who is most vested in showing up at the polls on Tuesday and who has already voted,” said Vitelli. “It’s up to [Benoit] to try to distinguish herself from the governor and convince voters that she would be a more independent voice.”

The Senate seat, which represents all of Sagadahoc County and the town of Dresden in Lincoln County, is seen as one that could go either way in any election, despite the fact that Democrats now hold all of the county’s legislative districts. Before Goodall’s 2008 victory over Benoit by 162 votes, earlier versions of the Sagadahoc County district were represented by Republicans in the Senate dating back decades.

Goodall retained the seat in 2010 against political newcomer David Kaler of Bath by a margin of 1,263 votes with a total of nearly 18,000 ballots cast. He easily won against Jeffrey Pierce of Dresden in 2012. Goodall served as Senate majority leader from January until he resigned last month to take a presidentially appointed post with the U.S. Small Business Administration.

“Sagadahoc County is an area that has been very difficult for Democrats to win the Senate seat,” said Grant of the Maine Democratic Party. “Our most recent polling is several weeks old, but it does look like a close race.”

Green Independent Party candidate Stromgren adds a wild card to the race. Voter turnout in special elections tends to fall short of general elections, elevating the possibility that Stromgren, a progressive, could siphon key votes from Vitelli.

“I’m not here to steal votes. I’m here to get my own votes,” he said Thursday. “My Republican opponent was pretty honest last night [at a candidates’ forum in Richmond]. I will be fair to her and say she’s not Gov. LePage and I don’t believe that she conducted herself like he does when she served previously. But she did work for the administration and does claim the governor as a friend. … I think she’s straddling both sides of the aisle and I think it will affect this race.”

The special election takes place Tuesday, Aug. 27.