Presumably, I do not have to go into a great deal of detail, for anyone who reads this blog posting, as I provide a comment on the sad story of Graham Platner, who is pictured above.
Platner, a Maine oysterman, just recently won the Democratic Party nomination for the United States Senate, in the State of Maine, and Platner was set to take on Maine's incumbent Senator, Republican Susan Collins, this Fall. Maine tends to vote Democratic, and there was a lot of enthusiasm for Platner, and it looked like Platner would probably win in November, giving Maine a Democratic Senator, and perhaps giving the Democratic Party a majority in the United States Senate. Obviously, as is always true in politics, there were no guarantees, but that what lots of people were predicting.
Alas (at least for Platner, and possibly for the politics of Maine, and possibly for the politics of the entire United States of America), the scenario just outlined has collapsed. Shortly after he won his primary victory, a former girlfriend accused Platner of rape, and although Platner denies the truth of that charge, the accusation seems to be pretty credible, and many of Platner's supporters (including Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren) promptly withdrew their support for Platner's campaign. Platner has now removed himself from the Senate race in Maine.
So, who is to blame in this sad story - other than Platner, of course? Well, Bruce Neuman, a resident of New York State, not Maine, fired off a letter to The New York Times, which The Times printed on July 9, 2026. Here is Neuman's analysis (emphasis added):
To the Editor:
The issue is not what lessons can be learned from the rank candidacy of Graham Platner for the Senate but the sheer incompetence of the Democratic Party in allowing him to get this far. With so much at stake and with the signals of a problem candidate apparent, how did this guy even get through the process?
We are at a dangerous point in American politics. Corruption abounds, as do moral issues that are seriously testing what kind of nation we are. Our aspirations have unfortunately often been vastly exceeded by the reality of our actions since our founding; what was a steady trajectory upward in our more recent history has all but evaporated. Comparisons can now be drawn to other failed states.
The Platner candidacy was the most recent example of where we now stand. We look pathetic.
Bruce Neuman
Water Mill, N.Y.
Here's my comment on Neuman's assignment of blame. It appears, from the way that Neuman has phrased his letter, that Neuman is suggesting that "The Party" should pick candidates, instead of "the people" picking the candidates.
If politics is held in significant disrepute, nowadays (as I think it really is, and as Neuman suggests that it is), one big factor, in my view, is the dominance of our politics by our political parties, which appear, all too often, to be largely funded by, and largely to represent, those who have a lot of money. In fact, "The Party," whichever "Party" it may be, is really in charge of our politics. That is the premise that underlies Neuman's letter. The editorial that appeared in the July 10th edition of The Times, and particularly the headline - "The Democrats Can't Go On Like This" - also seems to confirm that voters should expect to be given the choice of candidates that "The Party" approves and has presented to them. This is not, in my view, how best to achieve genuine "self-government."
In case that phrase, "self-government" isn't self-explanatory, "self-government" means a government "of the people, by the people, and for the people," as Abraham Lincoln so wonderfully phrased it. That "by the people" part is actually the most important. "Self-government" means something quite different from having the ability to vote (even acknowledging how truly important that is). "Self-government" means that many of us (ideally all of us) are personally involved in politics and government, in some way - and that we are involved ourselves. We, the people, should be picking the candidates whom we believe will best represent us. A potential candidate's party designation is often relevant, but we should be picking the candidate, not "The Party."
Our political parties are supposed to take direction, not give directions. At least, that's the way I see it, and I think that ceding authority to "The Party" to decide who is going to represent us in our governmental bodies is to sacrifice, ultimately, the possibility of a self-government that can accomplish what that phrase promises. Instead of blaming some others, those with "authority," we need to move on from that and take a look in the mirror, and then do just what Michael Jackson says: "Change."
If mistakes were made, as in Platner's case it seems that such mistakes were made, WE, the people, the voters in Maine, made those mistakes. Instead of trying to blame "The Party," let's all take a hint from Michael Jackson, and look in the mirror! Click the link to hear him sing the song!
We've got a big November coming up.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/08/opinion/graham-platner-maine-senate.html













