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The not-so-glamorous Instagram life of a US senator

He eats microwave meals, weed-whacks his neighborhood’s overgrown grass, rides a Harley and the Washington Metro – and earlier this year traveled to the Ukrainian capital to meet President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Welcome to the glamorous life of a United States senator, courtesy of Angus King’s Instagram feed.

The Maine senator may not be the king of Instagram – he has just 32,400 followers, compared with, say, the 8.5 million of New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. His down-to-earth approach is more the speed of Maine lobstermen trolling for crustaceans than politicos scrolling for scuttlebutt. But in a way that resonates with many along the craggy coasts of Maine, his understated commentary on Washington and the people he represents challenges the pervasive cynicism about politicians. 

Why We Wrote This

At a time when many bemoan the use of social media to exploit divisions and further polarize America, independent Sen. Angus King of Maine is striving to do the opposite.

He defies the downward pull of the social media vortex, pulling back the curtain on the humanity of his colleagues on both sides of the aisle – Virginia Democrat Sen. Tim Kaine playing the harmonica and Mississippi Republican Sen. Roger Wicker singing – while also being frank about their disagreements.

Not everyone is a fan; some people use the comments space to rail against his voting record. But others are grateful, as one who wrote simply: “Thank you for bringing sanity to Washington.” 

He eats microwave meals, weed-whacks his neighborhood’s overgrown grass, rides a Harley and the Washington Metro – and earlier this year traveled to the Ukrainian capital to meet President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Welcome to the glamorous life of a United States senator, courtesy of Angus King’s Instagram feed.

“Here’s one of [Democratic Sen.] Tammy Duckworth looking out the back of a helicopter in Baghdad,” he says, scrolling through his account after a Monitor reporter asked him about it. I’ve got a new hero, he wrote after watching the former Black Hawk helicopter pilot circle the place where she had been shot down 15 years earlier, losing both legs.

“There I am raking leaves,” says the Maine independent, adding that it’s important for people to realize that senators do yardwork and use airports. 

Why We Wrote This

At a time when many bemoan the use of social media to exploit divisions and further polarize America, independent Sen. Angus King of Maine is striving to do the opposite.

Wait, what – no private jet? 

Far from it. 

@anguskingmaine

Normally Senator King flies coach back to Maine, but when his flight was canceled (after sitting on the runway for more than an hour) in June 2019, he joined up with four other passengers he’d never met and drove a rental car through the night, taking turns driving and chipping in for gas.

“One of the funniest ones was when my plane got grounded in Washington,” he says, coming across a June 2019 post when he banded together with two software engineers, a college professor, and a lawyer he’d never met to make the trip back home. “We rented a car and drove overnight,” he says. That post prompted one of his biggest responses ever, he says.  

The Maine senator may not be the king of Instagram – he has just 32,400 followers, compared with, say, the 8.5 million of New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. His down-to-earth approach is more the speed of Maine lobstermen trolling for crustaceans than politicos scrolling for scuttlebutt. But in a way that resonates with many amid the craggy coasts and whispering pines of Maine, his understated commentary on Washington and the people he represents challenges the pervasive cynicism about politicians and their polarizing use of platforms from Twitter to TikTok. 

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