Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Graham Platner continued his statewide campaign Wednesday with a well-attended rally in Cumberland, where supporters gathered despite oppressive summer heat to hear a speech centered on economic inequality, health care, housing, campaign finance reform and what he described as the need for sweeping political change.
Speaking for roughly 40 minutes, Platner delivered remarks that echoed many of the themes he has emphasized throughout his Senate campaign, sharply criticizing President Donald Trump, billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk and incumbent U.S. Sen. Susan Collins while arguing that the nation’s political and economic systems increasingly favor wealthy interests over working families.

The event drew a sizable crowd despite temperatures climbing into the 90s. Before Platner took the stage, supporters described him as a candidate who spends time listening to voters and engaging in conversations rather than simply delivering campaign speeches.
When Platner addressed the crowd, he thanked supporters for attending despite the heat before outlining what he said was a campaign focused on rebuilding trust in government.
“I think we have to do politics so much differently,” Platner said. “Our political system has really become one of performance and theater.”
Throughout his remarks, Platner argued that many Americans have become frustrated with politics because they believe elected officials are more responsive to corporations, wealthy donors and special interests than to ordinary voters.

Drawing on conversations he said he has had while campaigning across Maine during the past 10 months, Platner said Republicans, Democrats, independents and politically disengaged voters have expressed similar frustrations with Washington. According to Platner, many Mainers feel government no longer represents their interests.
That message has become a defining theme of Platner’s campaign as he seeks to unseat Collins, who is running for another six-year term after first being elected to the Senate in 1996.
Much of Platner’s speech focused on what he described as the economic struggles facing working families in Maine.
He argued that rising housing costs, declining access to rural health care, aging infrastructure and increasing wealth inequality have left many Mainers working harder while falling further behind financially.
Platner pointed to the consolidation of hospitals and the loss of maternity services in rural Maine as examples of declining access to health care. Reflecting on his upbringing in eastern Maine, he said communities once had more local medical services than they do today.
Housing affordability was another major focus of his remarks.
Platner argued that many young Mainers can no longer afford to purchase homes in the communities where they grew up and said rising rents have forced some families to postpone homeownership or leave the state in search of greater economic opportunity.
He contrasted those challenges with the growing fortunes of some of the nation’s wealthiest business leaders, including Musk, arguing that decades of federal policy have contributed to widening income and wealth inequality.
Platner also criticized financial deregulation and other federal economic policies adopted over several decades, arguing that they shifted economic benefits toward large corporations and investors while leaving working families behind.
Again and again, Platner tied those concerns back to Collins, contending that Washington has failed to adequately address the economic pressures facing Maine families during her nearly three decades in office.
As an alternative, Platner called for what he described as a new era of ambitious federal investment modeled after President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal.
He praised Frances Perkins, the Maine native who became the first woman to serve in a presidential Cabinet, crediting her with helping establish Social Security and expand workplace protections during the Roosevelt administration.
Among the policy priorities Platner highlighted were universal health care, expanded public education through college and trade school, overturning the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision, prohibiting members of Congress from trading individual stocks, strengthening organized labor and increasing federal investment in infrastructure and energy projects.
Rather than asking supporters only for their votes, Platner repeatedly encouraged them to become active participants in the campaign.
He said his campaign has built a volunteer network of approximately 15,000 people and urged attendees to continue organizing in their communities, arguing that major political reforms throughout American history have come through sustained grassroots activism.
Throughout the speech, Platner cited the labor movement, the women’s suffrage movement, the civil rights movement and other historic social movements as examples of citizens organizing to bring about lasting political change.
The race between Platner and Collins has become one of the nation’s most closely watched Senate contests, with national Democrats viewing Maine as a key pickup opportunity and Republicans defending one of their longest-serving incumbents.
Collins has campaigned on her record of securing federal funding for transportation projects, military installations, health care facilities, economic development initiatives and coastal infrastructure across Maine, while emphasizing her seniority and bipartisan relationships in the Senate.
Recent public polling has shown a competitive race. One recent statewide survey found Collins holding a narrow lead over Platner, while other recent polls have shown the contest within the margin of error.
Although Platner focused heavily on housing, health care, infrastructure and economic opportunity, he did not discuss the respective roles of state and federal government in addressing many of those issues, several of which involve shared responsibilities among state agencies, the Legislature and Congress.
Platner concluded by urging supporters to continue building what he described as a broad grassroots coalition capable of carrying the campaign through Election Day and beyond, arguing that the effort is about more than a single Senate race and should become part of a larger movement for political reform.
Maine Wire Reporter Confronted While Covering Event
Before Platner began speaking, this Maine Wire reporter covering the public campaign event was approached by campaign staff and told he needed to leave after one staff member referred to him as a “paid agitator.”

The reporter identified himself as a member of the media covering the event and advised campaign staff that he was there to report on the candidate’s remarks.
Campaign staff later stood between my camera during portions of the event, making it difficult to record Platner’s speech. The interaction was recorded live the Maine Wire TV, and video of the encounter will be published separately.




Ro Khanna, the Democrat socialist from California recently endorsed Platner. Ro Khanna’s pre-teen children are the proud owners of 2 golf courses and worth 2 million each. Khanna himself is worth $232 million. Most of his goofy, sun bonnet wearing dolt supporters evidently slept through any world history courses that they may have attended back when they were younger and never learned what socialism always unfailingly accomplishes.
There will always be charlatans in life but these idiots might just topple our Republic for no other reason than their own stupidity. Hopefully these same people are just as gullible when they get email and and phone calls from 3rd world fraudsters.
Gee, what has Platner, Mills, Pingree, Sanders, King ( none have held a private sector job, well Platner has a hobby business )produced to justify their wealth? At least Trump and Musk are productive cirtizens.
” Platner cited the labor movement, the women’s suffrage movement, the civil rights movement and other historic social movements as examples of citizens organizing to bring about lasting political change.” All were opposed by the democrat party.
100% mentally disabled, and for that reason I’m out
There was a time in Maine when every media outlet would’ve raised holy hell about any journalist being treated the way the Maine Wire’s journalist appears to been treated.
Back in the 80s, the Bangor Daily was conservative and anti-gay, not just homophobic but outright anti gay. But when a Bangor police sergeant lost his stripes for telling their reporter that he thought that Bangor needed a gay bar, the BDN went after BPD until the sergeant got his stripes back.
The BDN viewed it as an attack on the rights of the press as something that tore the space time continuum. I hate to think of what would have happened to a candidate who tried to exclude unfriendly press back then.
Platner comes out of nowhere suddenly months ago. Planned by swamp creatures? Yeah you bet. He is an embarrassment and given the chance I’d tell him to his face. He is NOT representative of the majority of we Mainers.
Typical spend o crat, portray themselves as the enemy while projecting the fact that they really think you’re the enemy because of opposite beliefs. This is just parroted well known fact, no new ideas or any innovation. The latest dem puppet works perfectly!
“Much of Platner’s speech focused on what he described as the economic struggles facing working families in Maine.”
Yes I am one of the working stiffs paying the government to give him is disability payments. Guess I am a fool.
“Large” audience?!?
I count maybe 30 people.
if Mein Oyster Fuher’s Brownshirts prevented a more representative photo from being taken, well sucks to be them. The photos the Maine Wire was able to take show about 30 people being there. And how many hundreds of thousands of registered voters live within 30 miles of there?!?
If things are not affordable in Maine it is 100% the fault of the democrats who have run this state into the ground after 60yrs of ruling us, not governing, ruling us.
He just wants to feed at the public trough just like Chellie, Agnus and Schumer and do not do a damed thing except bitch about why illegals can’t automatically be citizens.
Take good look at Lewistons new Americans to see what they are doing to the state.
Trash in the government trash in the cities they control.
“Our political system has become one of performance and theater” Platner speaks of what he knows: This is the Democrat Socialist of America-Theater Kids from wealthy families that haven’t worked a day in their lives, telling the hard workers of Maine (and the country) that the DSA is going to work for them, all the while living off their parents “teets”.
Is there a country he can point to where his ideas are working, besides Russia and China?
He’s a fraud and an embarrassment.
Reality is if Maine people do not vote this November and I mean Republicans and Independents this scumbag will win. Look at Lewiston, Portland, Bangor and Waterville each of these cities have commonality, Marxist-DemocRATs have imported illegal aliens, homeless and let them destroy the cities. If that is what Mainers want keep voting for pieces of trash like Platner, Pingree, King, etc.
He should start with calling out his own party, if he wants to have any credibility on this one subject.
He’s as legitimate as a three-dollar bill.
Jon, I was almost impressed with you since you began your article giving a fairly honest report but then ended up Jon had to be Jon when you boasted that Collins had a survey saying she was “holding a narrow lead” without mentioning that Graham had a 2-point lead in one of the more recent polls. And you talk about Collins running on her supposed record of getting funding for some Maine projects without mentioning that she voted to strip Maine of billions recently on that big, beautiful bill. I know you are going to say she voted against it but just like with other votes in her past once she knew there were enough votes to carry it, she safely voted against it after she made sure it made it to the floor in the first place. She could have stopped it then if she really wanted to protect Maine.
Platner complains about “performance and theatre” while pretending to be working class. You couldn’t make this stuff up. Every one of these DSA nominees is a trust fund baby, or the equivalent thereof. The Republicans better use this farce to their advantage.
Elon Musk is a trans humanist and a trillionaire (not a billionaire), thanks to govt contracts and low employee wages. Musk also has a transvestite offspring. Musk has been to Epstein’s rape island. Prove me wrong.
The USA economy is in the fecal matter hole. If you make less than $100 thousand a year you are now feeling the crunch. Your money goes to housing, automobile, groceries, and beer or wine. In that order. It’s a nicer house, car and organic groceries at the upper end but it’s still the top three expense. It will get worse. DJT is a POS billionaire that forged his own gold statue and he does not love you. DJT just surrendered to Iran with his signing at Versailles of the Iranian written MOU.
The wealthy donors and special interest groups are mass murdering jews and zionist pigs. They are the reason we are over run with off color migrants that all of your daughters are voluntarily humping. The jew is not your friend. The zionist is probably worse. Take back your country!!
Planter is a clown. Sure. But he’s a man. He has a cool mustache. Susan commie Collin’s has done nothing for Maine. Susan is a 30 year in congress aipac POS.
Dump commie Sue!!
PS
F.D Roosevelt was a twat loser. He allowed Pearl Harbor attack to happen to stimulate economy with war industry cause his new deal was not working.
Which is better — to be ruled by one tyrant 3,000 miles away or by 3,000 tyrants one mile away?
— Rev. Mather Byles (1706-1788