When a ship’s captain goes overboard, you’d expect the crew to change course. In Maine’s Democratic Senate race, they’ve lashed the wheel to the same heading and hit the throttle.
Graham Platner was a political phenomenon — a combat veteran and oyster farmer who caught fire with a populist, anti-establishment pitch that earned him a Bernie Sanders endorsement and a landslide primary victory. He steamrolled the Democratic establishment on his way to challenging Republican Sen. Susan Collins. Then it all came apart. A string of scandals culminated in an explosive rape allegation, which Platner denied but which finally broke the dam. Top Democrats in Maine and Washington demanded he withdraw. On July 10, he did.
Now the party has until July 25 to pick a replacement. Thirteen candidates filed. One already dropped out, calling the process “a deeply unserious spectacle.” Can’t say I blame her. Surely the remaining dozen would read the room and find a moderate who could credibly challenge Collins in a state that values pragmatism?
Not even close.
Same song, different choir
At Thursday night’s debate, every single Democratic candidate called for abolishing ICE. Not reforming it. Not restructuring it. Abolishing it — three days after a fatal ICE shooting in Biddeford that has become a political flashpoint. Every. Single. One.
From Fox News:
Shah pointed to what he called “the president’s goons” and emphasized, “I don’t think this agency can be reformed. The rot has gone to the core and that’s why we must abolish it.” Troy Jackson, a former Maine Senate president, added: “I support law enforcement, but ICE is not law enforcement. It’s a rogue agency.”
When moderators asked which of Platner’s ideas they intended to campaign on, they didn’t flinch. Jackson named Medicare for all. Bellows echoed Platner’s rhetoric about democracy being “deeply corrupted by billionaires and massive corporations.” Jordan Wood, a former congressional staffer, pushed for Palestinian statehood and called the situation in Gaza a genocide — a term he said Platner personally convinced him to adopt. (Apparently the man’s real legacy isn’t oyster farming.)
Every candidate also voiced opposition to U.S. involvement in the Iran conflict and pledged to cut funding to Israel. One candidate, Ashley Webb, summed up her pitch with refreshing bluntness: “I’m just an angry citizen now, and if I got elected, I’d be an angry senator.” Well, at least she’s honest about the qualifications.
The mud beneath the platform
Here’s what Maine Democrats apparently concluded: the only problem with Platner was his personal baggage. Not the socialist platform. Not the calls to dismantle federal law enforcement. Not the foreign policy positions that would make a San Francisco city councilmember blush. Just the messenger.
Sound familiar? When Democrats swapped in Kamala Harris in 2024, the compressed timeline was supposed to be a shield — too little time for scrutiny, too much momentum to question. Maine’s party is running the same play. A convention of 601 delegates in Bangor will hand the nomination to someone most voters have barely heard of, and the race to November begins with the hope that nobody looks too closely.
But the debate already blew the cover. The positions are on the record. And FEC filings released this week show Collins has widened her already massive cash advantage over anything Democrats can muster. I’d love to know which strategist looked at this field and thought, “Yes, this is how we win Aroostook County.”
What Mainers will actually vote for
Look, Maine is a blue-leaning state, but it’s not Brooklyn. It’s lobstermen, small business owners, and retirees who’ve sent Susan Collins to Washington three times because she shows up and does the work without the ideological theatrics. Abolish ICE, defund Israel, Medicare for all — these aren’t kitchen-table issues in Bangor. They’re faculty-lounge fantasies.
Democrats cleared the scandal from the ticket. But they kept every policy that should make moderate voters nervous. The new face is different. The platform is identical. And Maine voters — practical, independent-minded, nobody’s fools — are going to notice.
Key Takeaways
- Every Democratic candidate unanimously called to abolish ICE — not one offered a moderate alternative.
- Democrats replaced Platner’s scandals but kept his entire socialist platform intact.
- Maine’s compressed nomination timeline mirrors the Harris 2024 playbook of minimizing voter scrutiny.
- Collins’ pragmatic record and cash advantage make this radical gamble a tough sell with Maine moderates.
Sources: Fox News, Maine Morning Star