Here in Maine, showing up still means something. It’s how trust is built, how problems get solved, and how progress starts — and it’s the principle Tiffany Roberts has carried through four terms in the Maine Legislature. Over four terms, she’s done what Mainers do best: learned on the job, shown up early, and left things better than she found them.
Tiffany has chaired committees that shape nearly every corner of Maine’s economy — from farms and fisheries to innovation, housing, and business development. As House Chair of the Inland Fisheries and Wildlife Committee and a member of the Housing and Economic Development Committee, she works to balance growth, conservation, and opportunity. Previously, as Chair of the Innovation, Development, Economic Advancement, and Business Committee, she led efforts to expand workforce training, strengthen small businesses, and grow emerging industries that keep Maine competitive.
She’s guided by the same truth she’s learned again and again: the answers are out there — if we’re humble enough to listen to the people living the problems. Tiffany believes the government should listen more than it talks, act with respect and responsibility, and focus on results that last.
A small-business owner herself, she knows that what keeps Maine strong are the people who build, teach, repair, and protect it. Tiffany built her business from a desk in her family’s den and raised three sons as a single mom, learning firsthand what she calls “economic dignity” — the space between paychecks where most people actually live. Those experiences drive her fight to make Maine a place where families can thrive, kids can stay, and seniors can live with stability and respect.
Tiffany’s vision for Congress isn’t about slogans or soundbites. It’s about a promise: to bring Maine’s voice directly to Washington, to rebuild trust in government, and to ensure policy keeps pace with the pace of change — from workforce innovation to AI, automation, and the future of work.
This campaign isn’t against anyone. It’s for something — for Maine’s future, for the next generation, and for a government that listens first and acts second.
“Progress still starts the Maine way — one conversation, one action, one neighbor at a time.”
Here in Maine, showing up still means something. It’s how trust is built, how problems get solved, and how progress starts — and it’s the principle Tiffany Roberts has carried through four terms in the Maine Legislature. Over four terms, she’s done what Mainers do best: learned on the job, shown up early, and left things better than she found them.
Tiffany has chaired committees that shape nearly every corner of Maine’s economy — from farms and fisheries to innovation, housing, and business development. As House Chair of the Inland Fisheries and Wildlife Committee and a member of the Housing and Economic Development Committee, she works to balance growth, conservation, and opportunity. Previously, as Chair of the Innovation, Development, Economic Advancement, and Business Committee, she led efforts to expand workforce training, strengthen small businesses, and grow emerging industries that keep Maine competitive.
She’s guided by the same truth she’s learned again and again: the answers are out there — if we’re humble enough to listen to the people living the problems. Tiffany believes the government should listen more than it talks, act with respect and responsibility, and focus on results that last.
A small-business owner herself, she knows that what keeps Maine strong are the people who build, teach, repair, and protect it. Tiffany built her business from a desk in her family’s den and raised three sons as a single mom, learning firsthand what she calls “economic dignity” — the space between paychecks where most people actually live. Those experiences drive her fight to make Maine a place where families can thrive, kids can stay, and seniors can live with stability and respect.
Tiffany’s vision for Congress isn’t about slogans or soundbites. It’s about a promise: to bring Maine’s voice directly to Washington, to rebuild trust in government, and to ensure policy keeps pace with the pace of change — from workforce innovation to AI, automation, and the future of work.
This campaign isn’t against anyone. It’s for something — for Maine’s future, for the next generation, and for a government that listens first and acts second.
“Progress still starts the Maine way — one conversation, one action, one neighbor at a time.”