Maine was supposed to be the Democrats' shot at taking down Susan Collins. Instead, they got Graham Platner — a candidate propped up by progressive fantasy, waved through by a vetting process that missed a Nazi tattoo and a trail of Reddit posts, and now hemorrhaging credibility in real time. Paul Rieckhoff joins Bangor Daily News political editor Michael Shepherd, former DNC Chair Jamie Harrison, and Puck's Leanne Caldwell to litigate what went wrong — and to say plainly what most Democrats are thinking but won't say out loud: the establishment that keeps losing needs to be fired.
Paul makes the case that Maine isn't New York, Seattle, or LA — it's an independent-minded state with a Republican senator, an independent senator, and 300,000 unaffiliated voters who haven't had a real choice in years. He points to Seth Bodnar in Montana as the model: a legitimate outsider running as an independent, not another party-approved product of the consultant industrial complex. Jamie Harrison pushes back hard, defending the process and the people who build state parties brick by brick. The result is one of the sharpest, most honest exchanges you'll hear about why the rigged two-party system keeps producing candidates nobody asked for — and what it will actually take to break the cycle.
In this episode
- Why Paul saw the Platner collapse coming after the very first interview
- The Nazi tattoo, the Reddit posts, and a vetting process that somehow missed both
- Jamie Harrison defends the Democratic establishment — and Paul pushes back hard
- "Grown in vats": the fantasy of the outsider candidate versus the reality of governing
- Why Maine's 300,000 independents are the group nobody is actually running for
- The Seth Bodnar model: independent veterans as the real answer in states like Maine and Nebraska
- How Republicans will weaponize the Platner tape into attack ads against Susan Collins
- The reckoning Paul says most of the Democratic Party leadership needs to face
- Why progressive playbooks don't translate outside New York, Seattle, and LA
- Two weeks, small state party, one Senate seat — what Maine Democrats actually have to work with