The Democrat Party has spent years branding itself as the unshakeable defender of women — the party that listens to survivors, holds powerful men accountable, and never looks the other way. It’s a compelling pitch. They’ve weaponized it against opponents at every turn. But convictions built on convenience have a short shelf life. And when a critical Senate seat is on the line, those high-minded principles develop exceptions fast.
The latest exception had an expiration date. For months, Democrats tolerated a rolling catastrophe of scandals from their chosen Maine Senate candidate — the kind of rap sheet that would’ve disqualified anyone without a (D) next to his name. Then Monday happened, and suddenly the whole party discovered its conscience at once. Funny how that works.
From Fox News:
Democrats swiftly turned on Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner on Monday after a rape allegation triggered a full-on revolt among his most prominent supporters, with calls pouring in from across the party for him to suspend his campaign.
The mounting defections came after Maine resident Jenny Racicot, 41, accused Platner of rape in interviews with Politico and CNN, alleging the Senate hopeful entered her home uninvited while intoxicated nearly five years ago and forced himself on her despite repeated attempts to get him to stop.
Racicot told CNN the encounter was the “dictionary definition” of rape. Read that again. This isn’t a gray-area misunderstanding or a political smear. This is a woman describing, in detail, a violent violation. It’s horrifying.
Platner, naturally, called the accusation “categorically false.” His campaign waved it off as “coached and coordinated by out of state establishment operatives.” The same playbook he’s run every time something ugly surfaces. Blame the machine. Deny everything. Keep marching.
But here’s what every Democrat stampeding toward the exit Monday needs to answer for: absolutely none of this materialized out of thin air.
The warnings nobody wanted to hear
Conservative media has been flagging Graham Platner’s character problems since his campaign launched. The Nazi-linked tattoo from his Marine days. The sexually explicit texts to other women — discovered by his own wife, who reported them to his own campaign. The Wall Street Journal’s infidelity report. The New York Times investigation into what they diplomatically called “unsettling” behavior toward women he dated, including a physical abuse accusation from ex-girlfriend Lyndsey Fifield.
Oh, and the resurfaced comments calling police officers “opportunistic cowards.” Almost forgot that one. Hard to keep track.
Each time, Democrats shrugged. Each time, they called it a right-wing hit job. And Platner himself seemed almost entertained by the growing list. In an interview with MS NOW before the primary, he assured voters: “There won’t be anything new. It’s going to be a rehashing of essentially the same stuff.”
That aged well.
Fair-weather principles
The speed of Monday’s abandonment was something to behold. But the real scandal isn’t that Democrats finally cut Platner loose. It’s how long they clung to him.
Rep. Ro Khanna flew to Maine to campaign alongside Platner the day after the Times published its abuse report. He told Fox News Digital that Platner was “taking accountability” and was “deserving of redemption.” Khanna had previously stated in multiple interviews that a sexual assault accusation would be his red line. Everything before that? Apparently just background noise.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren endorsed Platner. So did Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand — though only after their preferred candidate, Gov. Janet Mills, dropped out over fundraising troubles. They didn’t pick Platner because he inspired confidence. They picked him because he was their only shot at flipping Susan Collins’ seat.
Now the DSCC says it “will not invest in the Maine Senate race if Platner remains on the ballot.” The July 13 replacement deadline is breathing down their necks. And Bernie Sanders? Conspicuously silent as of Monday evening. Not even a tweet.
Character isn’t a partisan luxury
The real damage here extends beyond one imploding campaign. Women tried to sound the alarm about this man for months. They were dismissed as pawns in a political operation. Their testimony was inconvenient, so it was ignored — by a party that built an entire identity around doing the opposite.
Conservatives have never treated character as optional in leadership. What a person does when no one is watching matters. It always has. The women who spoke up deserved to be heard in May, in June, and long before a single poll number entered the conversation.
The Democrat Party didn’t ditch Graham Platner because they finally believed the women. They ditched him because they finally believed the polls.
Key Takeaways
- Democrats overlooked months of serious red flags about Platner until a rape accusation made him politically radioactive.
- Key allies like Khanna and Warren stood by Platner through abuse claims, breaking only when the math turned.
- The DSCC’s resource threat confirms this was always about winning a Senate seat, not defending women.
- Character in leadership is non-negotiable — a principle conservatives never had to relearn the hard way.
The post Democrats Abandon Socialist Platner After Credible Accusation Ends His Campaign appeared first on Patriot Journal.
