Is Graham Platner Already Done in Maine? Shame and the Internet (with Josh Jennings and Andrew Heaton

Is Graham Platner Already Done in Maine? Shame and the Internet (with Josh Jennings and Andrew Heaton

Author: Justin Robert Young October 22, 2025 Duration: 1:26:26

It’s not every day that the most interesting story in American politics is a Senate primary in Maine, but here we are. This race, at least for now, has everything: a populist outsider, a messy internal fight, a supposedly safe Democrat, and a very unfortunate tattoo. If the Democrats blow a winnable seat in 2026, you can probably trace it back to this moment, and to one name: Graham Platner.

Platner launched his campaign with the kind of fire Democrats usually dream of and then quickly move to kill. He’s ex-military, tattooed, and came out swinging against the party establishment. Think Fetterman with a more overtly socialist bent — and the endorsements to match. Bernie Sanders, Ro Khanna, a digital team built for viral insurgency. His launch video was raw and effective, casting him as the only one who’d fight Collins like it meant something. But before he could define himself, the knives came out. Old Reddit comments. Unpolished statements. And most notably, a chest tattoo that bears an uncomfortable resemblance to an SS death’s head symbol.

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Now, he says the tattoo was a drunk decision made while serving overseas — something picked off the wall at a shop in Croatia. That tracks. Plenty of service members come home with something dumb etched into their skin. But politics isn’t fair. The second it surfaced, it became a narrative — a “secret Nazi” smear that, while ridiculous, is now baked into every conversation about the guy. And that’s not something most voters are willing to fact-check. The perception — not the reality — becomes the problem.

Still, the bigger issue isn’t the ink. It’s how Platner handled it. His entire appeal is built on strength and authenticity — and he responded like a nervous staffer trying to keep his job. The apology video was soft. It was long. It was careful. None of that fits the image he’s built. If you’re running on being the guy who doesn’t back down, you can’t fold the first time someone calls you a name. He needed to come out swinging — not just at the press, but at the party that clearly doesn’t want him there.

Because make no mistake, they don’t. Janet Mills is the Schumer pick. She’s the “safe” one — a proven fundraiser, a party loyalist, and the kind of candidate who rarely wins a general in a state like Maine but always gets through the primary. That’s why the long knives came out for Platner. And if he doesn’t wake up and fight them like they’re already trying to end his campaign — which they are — then he doesn’t deserve the spot. Not because he’s a bad guy, or because he’s unelectable. But because he misunderstood the moment.

This is a fight. Not a conversation. Not a listening tour. A fight. And if he doesn’t start treating it like one, he’s already lost.

Chapters

00:00:00 - Intro

00:02:26 - Graham Platner

00:16:10 - Interview with Josh Jennings and Andrew Heaton

00:45:58 - Update

00:46:13 - Trump-Putin

00:49:03 - Israel-Hamas

00:52:30 - Shutdown

00:56:30 - Interview with Josh Jennings and Andrew Heaton, con’t

01:23:09 - Wrap-up



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In a media landscape often defined by partisan shouting, Politics Politics Politics offers a different kind of conversation. Host Justin Robert Young brings a clear-eyed focus on the mechanics of power, cutting through the noise to examine the strategies, historical patterns, and personal ambitions that actually determine outcomes. This isn't about rehearsing talking points or telling you which side to be on. Instead, each episode digs into the tangible factors that signal who is positioned to succeed in a given race or policy fight and, crucially, the reasons behind that momentum. You'll find a blend of current news dissection and historical context, treating today's headlines as part of a longer story about how political power operates. The analysis aims for a straightforward clarity that feels increasingly rare, providing listeners with a foundational understanding of events that goes beyond the day's reactive hot takes. For anyone trying to make sense of the constant churn, this podcast serves as a reliable guide to the underlying forces at play.
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