Graham Platner isn't dropping out after weeks of controversy
Graham Platner isn't dropping out after weeks of controversy
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Graham Platner isn't dropping out after weeks of controversy

🕒︎ 2025-11-05

Copyright Bangor Daily News

Graham Platner isn't dropping out after weeks of controversy

Graham Platner has no plans to drop out of Maine’s U.S. Senate race. “I did not go looking for this opportunity in my life, but when it showed up, to say no to it, to not do it, would feel like an abdication of a responsibility,” the insurgent Democrat told The Guardian. “I’m in this ’til the end.” Platner’s comments to The Guardian, made following a campaign stop in Damariscotta on Monday night, come on the heels of the resignations of his national finance director Ronald Holmes III and his campaign manager and longtime friend Kevin Brown last week. Holmes said he resigned Friday because he feels his “professional standards” are “no longer fully aligned with those” of Platner’s campaign. Brown resigned days into his role after learning he has a baby on the way. His bid to take on Republican U.S. Sen. Susan Collins in 2026 has been beset with controversy over the past three weeks. Last month, a video of Platner surfaced showing him with a tattoo depicting a skull superimposed over crossbones, similar to the Totenkopf symbol adopted by the Nazi SS during World War II. Platner, a 41-year-old oyster farmer from Sullivan, denies knowing that his tattoo was a Nazi symbol. He has said he got the tattoo in 2007 while deployed abroad with the U.S. Marines. While on leave, Platner and other Marines went to Croatia, where they got “very inebriated” and decided to get tattoos. He said that they all picked “terrifying” designs off the wall. Platner has further denied allegations from Genevieve McDonald, a former state representative who resigned as his campaign’s political director, that he knew the tattoo was problematic weeks ago. He told The Associated Press that he has covered the tattoo. Before that, his campaign was contending with the fallout from numerous deleted Reddit posts in which Platner asked why Black people “don’t tip” and suggesting that women concerned about rape not drink around certain people, among others. Then, on Oct. 22, Platner confirmed to The Advocate that he was the author of a number of Reddit posts featuring homophobic slurs, anti-LGBTQ+ jokes and sexually explicit stories denigrating gay men. He called the posts “indefensible,” according to The Advocate. On Monday, Platner sought to reassure voters worried about his old internet posts and tattoo, pledging to fight for marginalized groups, The Guardian reported. “I have no patience for a politics that is willing to sell people out,” he told the audience. During his interview with The Guardian, Platner took aim at national Democrats, saying he is still a Democrat “despite the fact my party is trying to destroy my life.” In a bid to tamp down on the harmful revelations, Platner’s campaign has begun circulating non-disclosure agreements to staffers and hired the firm Spruce Street Consulting, which Politico reports has connections to Democratic New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani. Non-disclosure agreements, common in the corporate world, are becoming a fixture as well in politics, according to a 2021 article published in New York University’s Journal of Legislation and Public Policy. That article noted that non-disclosure agreements have been used in presidential campaigns and heavily during President Donald Trump’s first term in office in a bid to stem the flow of information to the press. Platner, who has support from unions and an endorsement from independent U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, made waves in August when he announced that he would challenge Collins in the 2026 November election. Sanders has told reporters in Washington that he is still supporting Platner. Even before these recent revelations, he already faced an uphill battle against Collins, who plans to run for a historic sixth term next year. She has handily beaten back challengers, including in 2020 when she defied polls and expectations to eke out a fifth term in the Senate. Despite that, Collins, once ranked the country’s most bipartisan senator, has seen her popularity slump since Trump’s first term in the White House. The oysterman also has to contend with a primary fight against Gov. Janet Mills, who launched her campaign earlier this month with the support of national Democrats, and former End Citizens United Vice President Jordan Wood, who has called on Platner to drop out of the race. Nonetheless, Platner — for now — maintains a wide lead in the polls among likely Democratic voters. In a recent University of New Hampshire, he had the support of 58% of likely primary voters, compared with just 24% for Mills. “People are sick and tired of politics as usual, and I am too,” Platner told The Guardian. “We’re just always being represented by people that come from wealth, people that come from backgrounds of power … Mainers, frankly, seem to be just champing at the bit to do something different.”

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