The Maine Senate race is much from the primary time that an American political social gathering has had to decide on between character and energy.
In 2017, Alabama Republicans nominated a state supreme courtroom decide named Roy Moore for U.S. Senate. A month earlier than election day, The Washington Put up revealed a report that when Moore was a 32-year-old assistant district legal professional, he initiated sexual contact with a 14-year-old woman. Three different ladies alleged that Moore had additionally pursued them after they, too, had been underage. Requested on Sean Hannity’s radio present whether or not he had ever dated underage ladies, Moore replied, “Not usually, no.” Then a fifth girl stepped ahead to accuse Moore of sexually assaulting her in her teenagers. 4 days after the Put up story broke, native Alabama media reported that it was frequent information within the space that Moore stalked teenage ladies—so flagrantly {that a} native mall banned him from setting foot on their property. By Moore’s personal account, he had change into within the girl he subsequently married when she was in her mid-teens and he was in his early 30s.
The allegations created a quandary for Republicans. They’d emerged from the 2016 elections with a slim majority within the Senate, simply 52 seats. In the event that they misplaced in Alabama, they’d be lowered to 51—that means that Republican Senate management could be completely depending on the shifting moods of the Senate mavericks John McCain, Lisa Murkowski, and Susan Collins.
Then again, Moore’s reported sexual misconduct not solely embarrassed his social gathering colleagues but additionally threatened to discredit them. The Jeffrey Epstein story was not but the firestorm it might later change into. However newly elected President Trump had already been scorched by allegations of unseemly curiosity in underage ladies. In October 2016, 5 ladies informed BuzzFeed Information that Trump walked unannounced into their altering room through the Miss Teen USA pageant. Trump had informed a variant of that story to Howard Stern in 2005. (In Trump’s model, he entered an grownup altering room.) Moore’s elevation to the Senate might intensify the affiliation between the GOP and males who as soon as preyed on youngsters.
The primary main Republican to interrupt ranks was McCain. After the Put up revealed its story, McCain described the allegations as “deeply disturbing and disqualifying” and mentioned that Moore “ought to instantly step apart and permit the folks of Alabama to elect a candidate they are often pleased with.” Two dozen different Republican senators accepted the allegations as credible and urged Moore to step apart if the claims proved true. When the second spherical of stories appeared on November 13, Republican Senate chief Mitch McConnell mentioned he believed Moore’s accusers and demanded Moore finish his run.
Moore refused to withdraw. His social gathering then took an much more radical step: Two weeks earlier than the December 12 particular election, Moore’s potential Alabama Senate colleague, Richard Shelby, informed reporters that he had solid an advance poll in opposition to Moore. “No, no, no, I voted absentee. I didn’t vote for him. I voted for a distinguished Republican write-in.” On December 12, Moore misplaced the Alabama Senate seat to Democrat Doug Jones by 22,000 votes.
Senate Republicans nonetheless performed the political recreation exhausting and hard. McConnell delayed seating Jones till January 2018, an interval lengthy sufficient for the Senate to cross the 2017 tax minimize with the vote of Alabama’s appointed interim senator, Luther Unusual. Everybody understood that Jones’s tenure could be transient: Jones misplaced his seat within the common election in 2020 to Tommy Tuberville. Even after Jones was seated, Republicans nonetheless succeeded in passing some main laws, together with a partial rollback of the 2010 Dodd-Frank monetary rules, signed by Trump in Might 2018. Senate Republicans retained sufficient votes to verify Trump executive-branch and judicial appointees, together with Supreme Court docket nominees Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett.
Not as paragons of ethical advantage however as pragmatic politicians, the Senate Republicans of 2017 made and executed a calculation: We’re higher off sacrificing the Alabama Senate seat for 3 years than enduring Roy Moore as a Senate colleague for who is aware of how lengthy. If Moore had received in 2017, then gained reelection in 2020, he’d have been serving that first full time period through the congressional Epstein hearings of 2025. How would that have seemed for the GOP?
In 2026, it’s the Democrats’ flip for strategic alternative. The allegations in opposition to Graham Platner differ from these in opposition to Moore. As of June 6, Platner stands accused of laying palms on one named girl, and of intimidating conduct in opposition to two different ladies who to date haven’t been named. (Platner informed The New York Occasions that he “strongly disputes” any claims of bodily intimidation or altercations.) All three accusers had been and are adults. No Platner supporter, nevertheless, can really feel sure that the shocks have ceased. Platner’s personal reassurances by now lack credibility, and fellow Democrats specific deep unease about his probabilities in November.
The stakes are excessive this yr. Maine was the Democrats’ brightest hope for a web achieve within the Senate. Drawing a path to a Democratic Senate majority that bypasses Maine is tough, if not not possible.
However sticking by Platner has prices too.
Excluding Maine, the yr’s most high-profile Senate races may be Texas, the place a Republican impeached by his personal social gathering for corruption faces a former candidate for the ministry; North Carolina, the place a business-friendly two-term former governor faces a Trump ultra-loyalist who has by no means received an election to any workplace at any stage of presidency; and Georgia, the place one of many Democratic Get together’s most adept communicators faces a bitterly divided Republican Get together that has nonetheless not united on a nominee.
With Platner, the Maine election will supply voters a contest between a reasonable Republican girl who voted to convict Trump at his 2021 impeachment trial and a person who could be plausibly depicted as a violent misogynist whose working-class picture is constructed on fictions and fakes. How a lot will Roy Cooper, Jon Ossoff, and James Talarico love seeing Platner’s {photograph} alongside theirs in TV graphics in regards to the 2026 election? Not a lot, one ought to assume.
To defend Platner, Democrats should select between two methods: denouncing as liars a presumably rising variety of ladies—or else accepting the tales, however then arguing that twisting a lady’s arm and locking her in a room is just not fairly the identical as beating her. Do they wish to haggle over simply how inappropriate these romantic relationships had been, at the same time as they argue that carrying an SS tattoo all through most of 1’s grownup life doesn’t show that one is a literal Nazi? These aren’t conversations that Democrats ought to want to delay in a yr which may in any other case cope with Trump’s abuses of energy, corruption, and financial mismanagement.
A majority of the American citizens is feminine. Practically half of American ladies have suffered some type of intimate-partner violence. Platner’s most fervent supporters appear to be playing that Democrats can win extra votes from males who’re sick and uninterested in ladies’s bellyaching than they stand to lose from ladies who may affiliate Platner with the abusers in their very own lives. That appears a long-odds wager. A politician as unsentimental as Mitch McConnell might acknowledge when it was time to chop free an ethical and political legal responsibility. Can the Democrats of 2026 muster equal shrewdness and toughness?