The Trump effect: Why Dems embraced a Platner time bomb
A Nazi tattoo, social media rants, rampant rumors about women: Many Democratic leaders privately feared the Maine Democrat, now their U.S. Senate nominee, could be trouble. But they rationalized their delusions and denialism until it was too late. Now the party has few, if any, good options in one of the nation's most important Senate races.
Why it matters: Platner's rise and fall shows a key way President Trump has changed Democratic politics. If it means diminishing his power, Democrats are willing to surrender or temporarily ignore their own stated values.
There are parallels to 2024, when Democrats sleepwalked into disaster by publicly attesting to Joe Biden's fitness as president despite private doubts.
Zoom in: Many Democrats blame Platner's team β particularly his political advisers at the media consulting firm Fight Agency β for not revealing or pushing to find out the extent of his baggage while continuing to rake in money over the past year.
Around Platner's campaign launch in late August 2025, senior Democrats in D.C. questioned people at Fight Agency β which had helped democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani win the Democratic primary for New York mayor β about rumors of skeletons that could become liabilities, including issues in Platner's former relationships with women.
Fight Agency representatives assured them all was well, and that part of Platner's appeal was that he had overcome his past problems, according to a person familiar with the conversation.
A couple of months later, as some of Platner's controversial past social media posts were becoming public, a person familiar with the campaign's internal dynamics said that Fight Agency knew about rumors that Platner had cheated on an ex-girlfriend and had been "creepy" with women.
Platner denied the claims to his team at the time, that source said.
It's unclear how much money Fight Agency or other groups have made from Platner's campaign. As of May 20, Platner's campaign had spent over $14 million. Much of it went to LLCs with little public information.
A spokesperson for Fight Agency told Axios: "Fight Agency is a media firm. We make ads. For the Platner campaign, we made one launch video and over 40 ads."
The spokesperson added: "A vast variety of rumors swirled throughout the entirety of the campaign. We took those rumors seriously. The first time we heard any allegation that extended beyond problematic posting and infidelity was when the New York Times reached out."
"The first time we heard a specific allegation of non-consensual behavior was in the days prior to the Politico story breaking."
The big picture: The cracks in Platner's well-crafted image were evident from the beginning if Democrats were willing to see them β especially progressives who believed they had a potential heir to Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, and wanted a champion to fight the Democratic establishment.
Starting with their launch video last August, Platner and his team billed him as an oyster farmer β a titlemost of themedia, including Axios at times, repeated without scrutiny.
But as early as August, he told ideologically friendly outlets that he makes little money from selling oysters and it's not how he makes a living.
"I bought my house in 2017," he posted in September 2025. "If I hadn't bought then, if I hadn't had the support of the VA, my wife and I would now be priced out of the town I grew up in, like the millions of Americans being exiled from their towns and cities."
In fact, Platner's father β a lawyer β loaned him $200,000 for the home.
Platner said last fall he's "never been close to money and power," but he briefly attended the elite prep school Hotchkiss in Connecticut before attending a private school in Maine.
The scandals surrounding Platner began piling up.
In October 2025, CNN reported he had made several controversial posts on social media in 2020 and 2021, denigrating police and rural white people. He also posted dismissively in 2013 about sexual assault concerns.
Days later, news broke that Platner had a Nazi-linked tattoo.
Rumors continued to swirl about future negative stories about him, and severalstaffers fled his campaign.
Even as Platner was trouncing Gov. Janet Mills in the Senate primary campaign, the revelations didn't end there.
In May of this year, the Wall Street Journal reported he had sent sexually explicit text messages to people outside of his marriage.
They also found that he had an at-the-time active account on the private messaging app Kik, with a profile picture of him shirtless with a towel around his waist.
Then in June, the New York Timespublished an on-the-record interview with a woman who said she had dated Platner and claimed that he had been physically threatening. He denied it.
Throughout the controversies, Platner presented himself as a reformed man after struggling with PTSD and drinking in the mid- to late 2010s after his military tours of duty.
He asked voters not to judge him on his worst posts and behaviors from over a decade ago.
A Platner campaign spokesperson told Axios: "The notion that Graham Platner was a 'time bomb' is an editorial characterization, not a factual statement."
"It also ignores the reality of this campaign: Hundreds of Mainers packed town halls across the state, more than 15,000 volunteers joined this movement, [record-breaking] voter turnout compared to any primary in Maine's history," they added.
Zoom out: Platner and his campaign also used the rise of progressive and partisan media and influencers to bolster his profile and present his narrative with limited scrutiny.
When reports of his old Reddit posts, Nazi-linked tattoo and other scandalous details emerged, Platner often retreated to progressive media spaces such as "Pod Save America" and MS Now to explain himself.
"Graham has made himself available to reporters throughout this campaign and has answered tough questions from local and national media," the Platner spokesperson said.
The other side: The Democratic establishment also bungled the Maine contest from the beginning.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) endorsed then 77-year-old Maine Gov. Janet Mills in the Senate race at a time when many Democratic voters were angry about the status quo and wary of older elected officials hanging onto power.
The party's establishment then quickly soured on Mills β believing she was running a lackluster campaign β but didn't offer an alternative before she suspended her candidacy this spring.
After Platner became the presumptive nominee as part of a wave of progressives winning Democratic primaries, Schumer endorsed him.
Schumer β and many other top Democrats who'd backed Platner β took back their endorsements this week.
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