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US Senate race heats up as Democrat with Nazi tattoo and troubled past emerges as frontrunner

Malay Mail

WASHINGTON, May 4 โ€” A gruff oyster farmer who only recently got rid of his Nazi-style tattoo is the unlikely face of the Democratsโ€™ bid to seize the Senate from President Donald Trumpโ€™s Republicans โ€“ and recover working-class voters.

That a man like Graham Platner finds himself on the front line of the fight for national power in the United States says a lot about a Democratic Party trying to find its way out of the wilderness.

Democrats are bullish about winning the House of Representatives in Novemberโ€™s midterm elections. But the Senate โ€“ and ability to wield real power during Trumpโ€™s last two years โ€“ is a far tougher challenge.

Enter Platner, a 41-year-old former Marine who talks movingly of his opposition to war after serving in Afghanistan and Iraq. He is targeting a key Senate seat in Maine, where longtime Republican incumbent Susan Collins is seen as vulnerable.

Virtually unknown a year ago, Platner has barnstormed across Maine, delivering a feisty, anti-establishment message.

Revelations that he had a skull tattoo similar to a Nazi symbol, as well as strings of troubling past social media posts about sexual assault and gays, failed to stop him.

Supporters gathered in a rustic barn to hear Platner speak and answer un-screened questions from the audience in Appleton, Maine on May 2, 2026. โ€” Getty Images via AFP
Supporters gathered in a rustic barn to hear Platner speak and answer un-screened questions from the audience in Appleton, Maine on May 2, 2026. โ€” Getty Images via AFP

On Thursday, Platnerโ€™s heavyweight rival for the Democratic nomination, current state Governor Janet Mills, threw in the towel. Now, heโ€™ll be trying to dethrone 73-year-old Collins in the election.

โ€œThank you all for believing,โ€ Platner posted in a video highlighting working-class supporters like fishermen and nurses who back โ€œchanging our politics.โ€

Andrew Koneschusky, head of public relations firm Beltway Advisors, said the success of Platnerโ€™s insurgency reflects wider hunger.

โ€œVoters want authenticity,โ€ he told AFP. โ€œThey donโ€™t want robotic poll-tested candidates anymore.โ€

Authenticity or liability?ย 

For years, Democratic activists have been clamoring for everyman-candidates โ€“ populists with blue collar backgrounds who can talk to regular folk, especially non-college-educated white men. Itโ€™s natural Democratic territory that Trump and his hard-right MAGA coalition have done much to poach.

Platner, with his war record, oyster farmerโ€™s gnarled hands, and plain talk, seemed to fit the bill.

But there were problems.

An attendee records US Senate candidate from Maine, Graham Platner, during a campaign townhall event on May 2, 2026 in Appleton, Maine. โ€” Getty Images via AFP
An attendee records US Senate candidate from Maine, Graham Platner, during a campaign townhall event on May 2, 2026 in Appleton, Maine. โ€” Getty Images via AFP

That tattoo and the social media posts โ€“ which Platner explains respectively as the result of a misguided outing during his Marines days and dark post-combat rants โ€“ highlighted the risk of running untested candidates.

And several Democratic grandees like Chuck Schumer, the partyโ€™s leader in the Senate, pushed for Mills as the safer choice.

But polling showed voters were adamant: at 78, Mills literally represented the old guard and the party base wants to move on.

โ€œVoters donโ€™t like it when establishment figures anoint a candidate,โ€ Koneschusky said.

Searching for a big tentย 

Third Way, a think tank pushing for more centrist Democratic platforms, says the party needs to do better at accepting candidates who donโ€™t fit in normal liberal boxes.

A Gallup poll last year showed that 45 percent of Democrats or Democrat-leaning independents wanted the party to become more moderate, up 11 percentage points from 2021.

That search is taking Democrats in many directions.

Another new candidate in the Platner-mold is burly Pennsylvania firefighter Bob Brooks, who is running for Congress.

He too is touted as appealing to working-class voters but ran into trouble from liberal activists over past comments defending gun ownership in the wake of a mass shooting โ€“ a hugely sensitive issue.

Brooks quickly apologized and admitted to saying โ€œa few stupid things.โ€

A graveyard is seen through a window behind attendees during a Graham Platner for Senate campaign townhall event on May 2, 2026 in Appleton, Maine. โ€” Getty Images via AFP
A graveyard is seen through a window behind attendees during a Graham Platner for Senate campaign townhall event on May 2, 2026 in Appleton, Maine. โ€” Getty Images via AFP

But figures like Abigail Spanberger and Mikie Sherill, who convincingly won governorship races in Virginia and New Jersey last year, come from the national security world and pride themselves on centrism.

And then thereโ€™s James Talarico, running for a Senate seat in ultra-conservative Texas.

Another unknown outside his home state until recently, Talarico has become a Democratic star by taking on Republicans at their own game โ€“ by making his Christian faith the cornerstone of his politics.

The Bible-quoting 36-year-old faces a huge challenge in Texas.

But โ€œif anybody can do it,โ€ said Matt Bennett at Third Way, โ€œitโ€™s him.โ€ โ€” AFP

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Rep. Dingell says she's 'very upset' by Platner's past comments on sexual assault

Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) said she was troubled by social media posts that the leading Democrat in Maineโ€™s Senate race made more than a decade ago about sexual assault.ย  Last year, The Washington Post uncovered online comments that Graham Platner posted in 2013, in which the Democratic candidate downplayed the difficulties service members face when...

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