Rushed background check complicated Platner Senate bid

A fast-tracked vetting process for Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner has allowed multiple controversies to surface after his campaign launch in Maine.

Top strategist Dan Moraff ordered a background review completed in three days by New York-based Northside Research. The check cost $6,250 and produced only a brief risk assessment memo rather than a full report.

A campaign official said limited resources prevented a more thorough examination and that extra work would not have revealed new details. Researchers skipped a candidate interview or questionnaire.

After Platner entered the race, issues emerged including explicit messages to women other than his wife, a Kik account described as a "predator’s paradise," a tattoo linked to Nazi imagery, and allegations of abuse in prior relationships. Researchers also missed much of his social media history.

Platner won more than 70 percent of the vote in Maine’s Democratic Senate primary and now faces Republican Sen. Susan Collins in November. Some Democrats worry the revelations could hurt the party’s chances of flipping the seat.

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Graham Platner meeting with Democratic senators in a formal Washington conference room amid controversy discussions.
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Platner meets with Senate Democrats in Washington as party weighs fallout from personal controversies

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Maine Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner met with Democratic senators in Washington on Tuesday as party leaders privately and publicly assessed a string of controversies surrounding his personal conduct and past online activity. The gathering took place at the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee’s headquarters, where senators questioned Platner about his background and the risk of further damaging disclosures ahead of Maine’s Democratic primary.

New allegations from a New York Times report have prompted concern among Democrats about Graham Platner, the leading candidate in Tuesday's primary for Maine's U.S. Senate seat. Platner denies claims of physical intimidation toward ex-girlfriends and prior knowledge that his tattoo resembled a Nazi symbol. The developments come days before the primary election.

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Democratic voters in Maine head to the polls Tuesday to select their nominee for the U.S. Senate race against Republican incumbent Susan Collins. Graham Platner remains the frontrunner despite multiple controversies surrounding his past.

A years-old Reddit comment attributed to Maine Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Graham Platner—mocking Jesus and the Virgin Mary—circulated online this week, prompting sharp criticism from Republican groups that also pointed to earlier controversies involving Platner’s past online posts and a tattoo he has said he covered after learning it resembled a Nazi-era symbol.

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Army veteran Ted Daniels, a Purple Heart recipient, has criticized Maine Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Graham Platner over resurfaced Reddit comments that multiple outlets say were posted under an account attributed to Platner and mocked Daniels’ survival of a 2012 firefight in Afghanistan.

Maine Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner’s attempt to gain coverage from Barstool Sports was rejected by founder Dave Portnoy, who cited a controversial tattoo. The exchange followed Platner’s ad criticizing private equity’s role in Red Sox ownership.

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Rep. Eric Swalwell, a Democrat running for California governor, has denied an online allegation that interns were required to sign nondisclosure agreements to conceal inappropriate conduct. No accusers have publicly come forward, and major news outlets have not independently confirmed the claims.

 

 

 

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