The Unlikely Candidate Who Shook Up Maine
In August 2025, a 41-year-old oyster farmer from Sullivan, Maine announced his candidacy for U.S. Senate in a race that would upend Democratic politics in the state and capture national attention. Graham Platner's entry into the race to unseat Republican Susan Collins came as a bombshell to establishment Democrats who were hoping Governor Janet Mills would challenge the five-term incumbent.
What followed was a meteoric rise that surprised political insiders. Within days of announcing, Platner's campaign raised $1 million and signed up 3,000 volunteers. He began drawing massive crowds to rallies, with venues having to expand to accommodate the overflow of enthusiastic supporters. Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders threw his weight behind Platner, fundamentally reshaping the Democratic primary into a battle between the party's progressive wing and its establishment faction.

Platner's appeal is rooted in his authentic working-class background and populist messaging. Born in Blue Hill, Maine, he grew up in the rural coastal town of Sullivan and represents the kind of candidate Democrats have struggled to attract since losing ground with working-class and male voters. His campaign centers on a simple premise: Maine is becoming unaffordable for ordinary people because the government serves billionaires instead of working families.
From Military Service to Aquaculture Entrepreneur
Platner's journey to political candidacy is unconventional. At 18, he secretly took his birth certificate from his father's office to enlist in the U.S. Marine Corps during the height of the Iraq War. This wasn't a spur-of-the-moment decision—it was the act of a young man driven by a sense of service and shaped by his childhood fascination with military history.
After his initial infantry training, Platner was assigned to Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion 8th Marines and deployed to Al-Anbar Province, Iraq in January 2005. He served primarily east of Fallujah, where he participated in some of the war's most intense combat operations. In 2006, he deployed to Ramadi, Iraq, where he served as a machine gun section leader at the Government Center. He would return for a third deployment in 2007.
Following his Marine Corps service, Platner used his GI Bill benefits to attend George Washington University. However, military life called him back. In 2009, he joined the Maryland Army National Guard and deployed to Afghanistan in 2010 as a rifle team leader. When he returned in 2011, Platner struggled with undiagnosed PTSD and combat-related physical challenges, ultimately withdrawing from university to return home to Maine for recovery.

Upon his return to Maine, Platner found healing in the maritime community he grew up in. In 2018, he became involved in oyster farming, eventually taking over operations of Waukeag Neck Oyster Company in 2019. He transformed the small experimental farm into a commercially successful aquaculture operation while also operating a mooring service and serving as Sullivan's Harbormaster. His success in the oyster industry wasn't just about business—it was about reconnecting with his roots and becoming an active member of his community again.
The Bernie Sanders Effect and Rising Momentum
When Bernie Sanders endorsed Platner in August 2025, it wasn't merely a symbolic gesture. It represented a validation of Platner's populist message and a signal that the Vermont Senator believed he could beat Collins. Sanders wrote that Platner was "building a movement strong enough to take on the oligarchy that is making Maine unaffordable for all except a privileged few."
This endorsement proved transformative. Platner quickly received backing from organized labor, including the United Auto Workers, who praised his commitment to working-class causes and economic justice. Progressive Democrats who wanted to shift the party's direction toward younger, more anti-establishment candidates rallied behind him. Other Democratic senators, including Elizabeth Warren, Chris Murphy, Sheldon Whitehouse, and Andy Kim, expressed support for his candidacy without formally endorsing in the primary.
Frequently Asked Questions
A Family Legacy of Design and Disruption
Few people know that Graham Platner carries significant artistic pedigree. His grandfather was Warren Platner, a legendary 20th-century architect and furniture designer who fundamentally shaped modernism. Born in 1919 in Baltimore, Warren Platner created the iconic Platner Collection for Knoll in 1966—a series of chairs, tables, and ottomans that remain instantly recognizable symbols of 1960s modernism.
Warren Platner's career included designing the Ford Foundation building headquarters, the original Windows on the World restaurant atop the World Trade Center, and the Georg Jensen Design Center in New York. Each chair in his furniture collection required over a thousand welds and used more than one hundred cylindrical steel rods, demonstrating the meticulous craftsmanship that defined his approach to design.
There's an interesting parallel between Warren's revolution in design and Graham's attempt to revolutionize Maine politics. Both eschewed convention in their respective fields. Warren rejected the austerity that dominated 1960s modernism in favor of what he called "the kind of decorative, gentle, graceful design" that appeared in period styles like Louis XV. Graham similarly rejects the political establishment playbook, positioning himself as a disruptor willing to challenge both Republican incumbent Susan Collins and Democratic power brokers.
The Controversy That Changed Everything
Platner's surge came to an abrupt halt in October 2025 when his past collided with his present. CNN's KFile team uncovered a trove of deleted Reddit posts spanning from 2013 to 2021 under the username "P-Hustle" in which Platner made offensive statements that contradicted his current messaging.
The posts included controversial comments about race and policing. In 2013, he had posted asking "Why don't black people tip?" In 2021, he wrote that rural white people were "actually" racist and stupid. He called all police officers "bastards" and suggested that violence might be necessary to combat fascism. Most strikingly, he had referred to himself as a "communist."
Platner responded swiftly with a video apology, attributing these comments to a period of alienation following his military service. "I see someone I don't recognize," he said in the five-minute address. He explained that post-traumatic stress disorder and disconnection from his community had led him to express opinions online that didn't reflect who he actually was. He acknowledged that the language was indefensible and that he had changed dramatically since those dark years.
His political director, former Maine State Representative Genevieve McDonald, resigned immediately in response. McDonald stated she could not stand behind a candidate for U.S. Senate given the volume and nature of the past comments, many made as an adult rather than a young man. The resignation signaled cracks in his campaign just as momentum was building.
The Nazi Tattoo Bombshell
But the Reddit controversy proved to be only the opening act. On October 21, 2025, Pod Save America—a popular liberal podcast hosted by former Obama administration staffers—interviewed Platner in what was supposed to be a controlled media appearance to manage the narrative around his past statements. Instead, the interview inadvertently triggered an even larger crisis.
During the podcast, Platner's campaign shared a video of him dancing shirtless at his brother's wedding. The video, intended to demonstrate his authenticity and humanity, instead exposed a large tattoo on his chest that resembled a Totenkopf—a skull-and-crossbones symbol historically associated with Nazi Germany's SS.
Platner claimed he had gotten the tattoo in 2007 while on military leave in Kosovo during his third deployment as a Marine. According to his account, he and fellow Marines became "very inebriated" and decided to get tattoos from designs on a shop wall. "We chose a terrifying skull and crossbones off the wall because we were Marines and skulls and crossbones are pretty standard military thing," he explained.
However, the account immediately faced skepticism. Jewish Insider reported that an acquaintance of Platner's recalled him specifically referring to the tattoo as "my Totenkopf" back in 2012—suggesting he had known for years what the symbol meant. The Anti-Defamation League confirmed that the Totenkopf was adopted by the Nazi SS during World War II and has since become a white supremacist hate symbol used by neo-Nazis today.
"I was unaware of any Nazi link when I got this tattoo," Platner told POLITICO. "I am not a secret Nazi," he added, pointing to his Reddit comment history arguing against racism as evidence of his lifelong opposition to Nazism and antisemitism. He committed to having the tattoo removed.

Platner's campaign also noted that his Army National Guard service had involved maintaining security clearances, and that the tattoo had never triggered any concerns during military vetting processes. Nevertheless, the tattoo revelation reignited questions about his judgment and credibility at a critical moment in the race.
The Schumer Intervention and Party Fracture
The controversies gave Senate Democratic leadership cover to make their preference explicit. Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who had been quietly backing Governor Mills, abandoned neutrality on October 21 and publicly stated that Mills "is the best candidate to retire Susan Collins." This was a significant moment—national Democratic leadership was effectively trying to kneecap Platner's campaign.
Bernie Sanders, however, stood by his endorsement. Defending Platner on camera, Sanders acknowledged that many people go through dark periods and said Platner had apologized for his comments. "I'm confident that he's going to run a great campaign and that he's going to win," Sanders told reporters.
The controversy highlighted a fundamental divide within the Democratic Party. On one side were establishment figures and moderate Democrats who preferred the experienced Governor Mills. On the other were progressive activists, younger Democrats, and Sanders who saw Platner as the more authentic, anti-establishment choice who could energize voters frustrated with politics as usual.
Platner's campaign pushed back against the national party interference, with a spokesperson telling Axios: "This is the establishment backing the establishment. Graham was never going to win this race because he had the DC establishment behind him. He's going to win because he has Mainers behind him."
What's Next for Maine Democrats?
As of late October 2025, the Maine Democratic Senate primary has become a proxy war between the party's competing visions for its future. Platner leads his opponents in fundraising with over $3.2 million in contributions as of September 30. Yet the controversies have undeniably damaged his candidacy and given ammunition to Republicans and establishment Democrats alike.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Question of Authenticity
At its core, the Platner saga raises uncomfortable questions about authenticity in politics. Is someone's past defined by their worst moments, or by their journey toward redemption? Platner clearly struggled after returning from combat, expressing anger and alienation through incendiary online posts. He's also clearly involved in his community through his work as a harbormaster and oyster farmer and has built genuine grassroots support.
Yet the sheer volume of offensive comments, the question of whether he truly didn't know what his tattoo meant, and the speed with which controversies have multiplied raise legitimate questions about whether voters should trust him with a U.S. Senate seat.
What's certain is that Graham Platner has transformed Maine's Senate race from an expected establishment coronation into a genuine contest between competing visions of the Democratic Party's future. Whether that transformation survives the mounting controversies remains the central question heading into 2026.



