Maine Gov. Janet Mills at podium announcing U.S. Senate campaign suspension, with state flags and press corps.
Maine Gov. Janet Mills at podium announcing U.S. Senate campaign suspension, with state flags and press corps.
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Maine Gov. Janet Mills suspends U.S. Senate campaign

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Maine Governor Janet Mills suspended her campaign for the U.S. Senate on Thursday, citing a lack of financial resources. The move clears the path for progressive challenger Graham Platner to face incumbent Republican Senator Susan Collins in the fall general election. National Democrats had backed Mills as their preferred candidate to unseat Collins.

Maine Democratic Governor Janet Mills announced the suspension of her U.S. Senate campaign on Thursday morning, stating she lacked the funds to continue despite her commitment. “While I have the drive and passion, commitment and experience, and above all else — the fight — to continue on, I very simply do not have the one thing that political campaigns unfortunately require today: the financial resources,” Mills said in a statement. Her campaign had $1 million in the bank at the end of March, compared to Platner's $2.7 million, and stopped running TV ads in mid-April, as reported by NPR and POLITICO. Mills entered the race in mid-October, too late to overcome Platner's early lead in fundraising and polls, according to Maine Public's Steve Mistler on NPR. Platner, an oyster farmer and military veteran with three tours in Iraq and one in Afghanistan, has held over 60 town halls addressing past controversies, including old Reddit posts and a now-covered tattoo resembling a Nazi symbol. He apologized for the remarks, attributing some to post-traumatic stress, and maintained a double-digit polling lead over Mills, per RealClearPolling aggregates cited in sources. Platner praised Mills at a Thursday press conference in Augusta, saying, “We both got into this race because we knew how critical it is to defeat Susan Collins, and her decision today reflects a commitment to that project.” The development is a setback for Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who recruited Mills. Schumer and Senator Kirsten Gillibrand stated, “After years of allowing Trump’s abuses of power, Senator Collins has never been more vulnerable and we will work with the presumptive Democratic nominee Graham Platner to defeat her.” Republicans welcomed the news, with NRSC Chair Senator Tim Scott saying, “Chuck Schumer and Senate Democrats just coronated a phony who is too extreme for Maine.” A super PAC backing Collins spent $2 million on ads attacking Platner this week. The Maine Senate race remains competitive ahead of the June primary and fall general election, pitting Platner against Collins, a five-term incumbent who has won statewide despite past challenges.

What people are saying

X discussions highlight conservative glee over Janet Mills' campaign suspension due to fundraising woes, but mockery of Graham Platner as 'Nazi tattoo guy' with predictions of an easy win for Susan Collins. Progressives celebrate Platner's path forward. Pundits note Democratic tensions favoring the outsider over the establishment moderate. Sen. Fetterman quipped Republicans love facing Platner.

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Maine Gov. Janet Mills announces withdrawal from Democratic Senate primary at press conference.
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Maine Gov. Janet Mills drops out of Democratic Senate primary, handing nomination to Graham Platner

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Maine Governor Janet Mills withdrew from the Democratic U.S. Senate primary on Thursday, leaving oyster farmer Graham Platner as the unopposed nominee against Republican Sen. Susan Collins. Mills cited insufficient fundraising after trailing Platner badly in polls ahead of the June 9 primary.

Graham Platner, a first-time Democratic Senate candidate in Maine, is leading Gov. Janet Mills in some polling averages and surveys ahead of the June 9 primary, while Mills’ campaign has spotlighted his past online posts and a controversial tattoo and Platner’s team says it is preparing for the general election.

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Graham Platner secured the Democratic nomination for Maine’s U.S. Senate seat on Tuesday with about 72 percent of the vote. He will face incumbent Republican Sen. Susan Collins in November. Some Democrats remain hesitant to endorse him amid ongoing controversies.

Maine Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner is dealing with fresh scrutiny after reports detailed explicit text messages he sent to multiple women. The revelations have sparked internal Democratic divisions ahead of the June 9 primary.

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A New York Times investigation published June 4 cited three former girlfriends of Maine Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner who described volatile relationships and alleged he lied about the meaning of his Nazi tattoo.

Steve Mitchell, whose firm regularly conducts polling for the Michigan Information & Research Service, said an unpublished survey showed state Sen. Mallory McMorrow far behind former health official Abdul El-Sayed and Rep. Haley Stevens. MIRS’ editor said he opted not to run the results after hearing objections from McMorrow’s campaign and consulting other pollsters.

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