By Mike Nelson
Tuesday, July 07, 2026
The Senate race in Maine looks significantly different
than it did 48 hours ago. Yesterday, Politico
reported a credible allegation of sexual assault against the Democratic
nominee, Graham Platner. In a video posted after the story broke, Platner
denied the accusation but said that his campaign would explore the best way
forward, opening the door to what seems like an inevitable withdrawal from the
race.
Now the voices that had most vehemently defended Platner
during previous scandals or vouched for the necessity of his folksy
progressivism have withdrawn their endorsements, one after another, and called
for him to drop out. Among those voices are Senators Bernie Sanders and
Elizabeth Warren, Representative Ro Khanna, and Pod Save America’s Jon
Favreau. No doubt, none of these Democratic politicians, party power brokers,
or podcasters were aware of the alleged rape when they made and maintained
their endorsements. Nearly everyone who previously supported Platner seems to
have since reversed course. Credible allegations of sexual assault do, indeed,
go too far.
But the question remains: Why was this horrific
allegation the threshold when Platner had so obviously transgressed so many
times before? Perhaps Platner’s Nazi
tattoo should have been a sufficient indicator that he lacked the character
to be a senator. Perhaps maintaining that SS logo for two decades, covering it
up only when it became politically inconvenient, demonstrated that he lacked
the judgment for national office. Perhaps a multiyear history of not just
having abhorrent views about women and minorities, but feeling the need to post
them for the world to see, could have told us that he is not the person to be
Maine’s voice in Washington. Maybe a well-documented history of contemptible
behavior in his personal life should have been enough, when taken with
everything else, for Democrats to conclude that Platner was exactly the person
he appeared to be.
When Platner emerged last year as the Democrats’ shiny
new object—DSA sensibilities with a gruff voice and working-class clothes—many
who favored his brand of leftist populism rallied to help him defeat Democratic
centrism. He managed to do so when his primary opponent, Governor
Janet Mills, suspended her campaign before votes were cast. Platner’s
backers hoped that he could do the same against Susan Collins this fall. But
when a clear pattern of Platner’s bad behavior and bad judgment emerged, these
Democrats held firm, using their positions of prominence to assure voters that
what we all could see was somehow not as it seemed. This latest allegation was
not a black-swan event—a shocking and unexpected revelation from an otherwise
strong candidate. Rather, it was the most recent in a steady drumbeat of
disqualifying revelations.
It’s good that those who have changed their mind about
Platner are now telling the woman who spoke with Politico, Jenny
Racicot, that they will not stand with her alleged victimizer. But why were the
Jews who were targeted by the organization whose logo he bore not worthy of the
same support? And was Lyndsey Fifield, a conservative woman who alleged
that Platner had engaged in emotional and physical abuse (also denied by
Platner), less worthy because of her politics? What does it say about Platner’s
defenders that his other horrible behavior was within their range of
acceptability?
Those who waited until this week to rescind their
endorsements had all the indicators they needed to surmise that Platner was a
problem. And pretending otherwise required a willful denial of the facts. For
instance, they claimed that he hadn’t known the significance of his tattoo
until recently, despite the fact that at least three people said they’d had
conversations with Platner about the image prior to its public disclosure.
We have spent months listening to spin from Democrats
arguing that what was clear about Platner’s character was somehow more nuanced
and explainable, all because progressives had found a candidate in Carhartt.
The idea that a candidate could have a Nazi tattoo and stay in the race sounds
more like a subplot from Veep than the reality upon which several
prominent Democrats staked their reputations.
When the Platner campaign comes to its ignominious end,
as it almost certainly will whether he withdraws or not, the value of
conducting a postmortem will not be about Platner himself, a deeply flawed
person worthy of neither the office he sought nor the support he received. It
will be about those who gave him that support. Not only did they stand by
Platner; they expressed outrage toward those of us who said he was unfit. And
contemptibly, they attacked one of Platner’s accusers, Fifield. “Believe women,”
it seems, does not extend to victims who commit the unforgivable sin of having
voted for Republicans.
Perhaps next time these officeholders, influencers,
advocates, and organizations will think twice before throwing their
full-throated support behind someone they do not actually know or, at a
minimum, withhold support from those who are clearly unacceptable. They lied to
voters, either by vouching for the virtue of a candidate about whom they did
not have specific knowledge, or by claiming that someone they knew to be
detestable was not. Perhaps now voters will think twice before heeding the
advice of Sanders, Warren, Khanna, Favreau, and others, or of Veterans for
Responsible Leadership, the advocacy organization that had endorsed Platner,
who served
in the Marines, and reiterated its support through the previous scandals.
The voters themselves should not be let off the hook; a
republic’s survival requires the engagement of an educated electorate. Even
though most of Platner’s behavior had been widely reported prior to the June 9
primary, an overwhelming majority of Democratic voters in Maine selected
Platner. They either made no effort to inform themselves about the man for whom
they cast their vote, did not believe the well-corroborated claims against him,
or felt that Nazi iconography, alleged partner abuse, admitted substance abuse,
and offensive Reddit posts were of less importance than defeating Mills. None
of those justifications was ever sufficient.
It would be nice to believe that those who failed the
test during the Platner campaign will learn from their mistake, but I am
skeptical, particularly in today’s political environment. For those who
apparently lacked the integrity to denounce contemptible candidates, the
discernment to detect them, or the desire to do the right thing, might I offer
a simple rule to assist—even just toward the pragmatic goal of selecting
electable candidates. Prior to the Platner campaign, I would have thought this
rule was common sense and easy to follow, but apparently it should be made
explicit: Maybe, at a minimum, don’t support a candidate with a Nazi tattoo.
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