Gordon L. Weil
Graham Platner easily won the Maine Democratic Senate primary
to challenge Republican U.S. Sen. Susan Collins.
Platner overcame sharp criticism of some of his past
personal behavior, already being made an issue by GOP PACs.
From a Maine perspective, the national media missed what is
taking place, preferring its cosmic level analysis. Platner’s victory was not mostly the defeat
of a Democratic moderate by a progressive.
It was about who could capture the seat from an aging, formerly moderate
Republican, who too often supported Trump.
Age is the driving issue in Maine’s campaigns. Platner defeated Gov. Janet Mills, 78,
because she would have been the oldest first-year senator ever. Maine Sen. Angus King is even older. Plus, Mills is not the usual moderate; she
leans to the right. Though she vigorously
challenged Trump, she is more conservative than her own party in the Legislature.
Collins, 73, suffers from visible hand and head tremors. Pledged to serve two terms, she now seeks her sixth. Over her career, she has ossified, going from a popular Mainer to a Washington pro, putting power over principle. Her status as moderate has faded, partly because she backed the nominations of Justice Brett Kavanaugh and Health Sec. Bobby Kennedy, Jr.
Whatever voters’ opinions about the flawed Platner, the calendar
doesn’t lie; at 41, he’s a lot younger and more attuned to today’s average
Mainers. And he tells them what they
want to hear about the need for change, as the state gradually moves from being
bipartisan purple to outright Democratic blue.
The Collins-Platner campaign is likely to follow predictable
lines unless one or both falters badly.
Collins will run on the pork-barrel money she has brought
back to Maine for local projects. As
chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, she has conceded real spending
power to the White House, but she can claim to be the Queen of Earmarks. Every senator gets their share, but she can “bring
home the bacon.”
As the Republican senator who splits most often with Trump,
Collins will try to keep her moderate image alive. Her balancing act has worked, because her disagreements
with the White House rarely make a difference in the final Senate vote. She characteristically explains away and
excuses some of her party-line votes, perhaps because they assure her committee
leadership.
Her backers will hammer Platner’s personal defects. They want women voters to reject him for his
sexual gambits and back the female candidate.
Their attacks will be constant, and the GOP will spend heavily to hold onto
its last remaining congressional seat in New England. Still, given how little Trump’s crotch
grabbling revelation mattered, these attacks might fizzle.
Platner will run like a progressive. His major out-of-state support comes from Sen.
Bernie Sanders and company, not from Minority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer. This will be a hugely costly campaign, so Democratic
money matters, and he knows it. In-state,
he will garner the support of respected Democratic leaders.
To some degree, Platner’s chances will depend on voters in Maine’s
Second Congressional District, which has supported Trump while narrowly electing
Democratic Rep. Jared Golden, who is retiring.
It’s the north-eastern district. Platner
will easily carry the southern, blue First District.
The Democratic governor’s primary is relevant. It ended with one candidate slightly ahead of
three others who are closely grouped.
The winner will be selected by ranked choice voting, and it’s likely the
front-runner won’t prevail. The next three ran as a ticket designed to deny him
second or third choice votes. All four are
decades younger than Mills.
Anything can happen when the votes are tabulated next
week. Troy Jackson, a former state
Senate President, was one of the three and ran well in his northern Maine home
territory. If he’s on the general
election ballot with Platner, Jackson could provide valuable help.
Also on the joint ticket was Secretary of State Shenna Bellows,
considered by some to be everybody’s second choice. Candidate Angus King III, running fifth, will
be eliminated, and if Bellows picks up enough support from his voters, she
could have a chance of moving up to the top.
Maine House Speaker Hannah Pingree, another member of the
trio, ran a strong campaign, backed by Mills.
Like Bellows, she would add a woman to the Democratic ballot, which
could help calm Platner concerns.
Hannah’s mother, Rep. Chellie Pingree, the First District U.S.
House member, will be easily reelected. RCV
will produce a more liberal Democrat than Golden to run against the aging former
Gov. Paul LePage, 77, a Trumper.
There will be more election excitement and spending than usual in Maine. The sharpest irony is that Trump, 80 on Sunday, must back Collins, whom he intensely dislikes but whose Senate vote he desperately needs. His support could hurt her as much as it helps.
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