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Isaac Saul
Good morning, good afternoon and good evening and welcome to the Tangle Podcast. I'm your host, Isaac Saul. It's Monday. I have the distinct feeling that this is just going to be one of those weeks that feels like a month. I don't know why. I just got back from a little family vacation in the beach town of Oak Island, North Carolina, which is awesome. It's the third year I've gone down there. It's kind of what I imagined the Outer Banks used to be like a few decades ago. It's becoming this now annual tradition with my family because we have this miraculous stretch of nine birthdays, including my own that fall in this four week span, which feels like some kind of record. So we've been going down to Oak Island, North Carolina to celebrate and I love it there. It's just like a beach town that's not overcrowded and overpopulated, which is really hard to find these days. But I'm back to the real world now here in New Jersey and today we are diving into the latest Graham Plattner controversy, which feels like it's not going to be the last time we have to talk about him, but we're doing it. Also, we wanted to remind you guys that on our newsletter and our website we just launched new and improved comments which you might have missed in our Friday Edition podcast, but our new publishing platform Goats just rolled out several new commenting features which makes commenting on our articles way more interesting and less cumbersome and easier to do. So if you are ever reading our content online or if you're a podcast listener who wants to engage with our audience, I highly recommend the comments section right now. It's a good place to be. All right, with that, I'm going to hand it over to John to break down today's main story and I'll be back for my take.
John Law
Thanks Isaac, and welcome everybody. Hope you all had a wonderful weekend. We've got a lot to cover today, so let's jump right in with today's quick hits. First up, the United States said it bombed Iranian radar and drone sites in response to Iran shooting down a US Drone over the weekend. Iran accused the US of ceasefire violations and said it will cut off discussions on a peace deal for now. 2. A federal judge blocked a plan to rename the Kennedy center for the Performing Arts to include President Trump's name. The judge also ruled that the center's board improperly voted to approve a two year closure and renovation set to begin this summer. Separately, a federal judge temporarily halted the Trump administration's $1.776 billion anti weaponization fund while challenges play out in court. 3. The organizers of the Great American State Fair, part of the planned celebrations for the United States semiquincentennial this summer, said President Trump will headline the start of the event on June 24 after several scheduled musical guests dropped out of performing. Number four Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke with Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over the weekend as part of a push for a renewed ceasefire between the countries. And number five, no candidate reached the 50% threshold to win Colombia's presidential election to replace term limited President Gustavo Petro, sending the race to a runoff between right wing candidate Abelardo de la Espriela and left wing candidate Ivan Cepeda, whom Petro endorsed on Sunday. The Colombian president cast doubt on the initial result, alleging flaws in the vote counting process.
News Reporter
Still, a developing story that first broke yesterday by the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times. They're reporting that last year, as Graham Platner's campaign for Senate was getting underway, his wife came forward to the campaign and said that she was aware of sexually explicit text messages that her husband was exchanging with other women. The New York Times reporting that it was up to a dozen other women. Again, sexually explicit messages. This came up as part conversation that is common on campaigns during the vetting process.
John Law
On Saturday, the Wall Street Journal published an expose on the behavior of Graham Platner, the presumptive Democratic nominee in the main Senate race. According to the Journal, Platner's wife, Amy Gertner, disclosed to his campaign last August that she had discovered sexually explicit texts between Platner and multiple women on his phone last spring. Furthermore, the Journal found that Platner has an active account on Kik, a private messaging app often used to arrange sexual encounters with. Also on Saturday, the New York Times revealed that Gertner had disclosed this information to a senior aide who later left the campaign, and Platner had been sending explicit messages to up to 12 women. The reports represent the latest controversies in Platner's campaign to defeat Senator Susan Collins in November's election. We covered Platner's earlier campaign controversies in October, and you can check those out with the link in today's episode. Description Platner, 41, is a progressive Democrat and military veteran who deployed to Iraq with the Marine Corps three times and served in Afghanistan and the Maryland Army National Guard. After his service, he returned to Maine to seek treatment for post Traumatic stress disorder and later worked as an oyster farmer. His campaign highlights his support for Medicaid for all campaign finance reform, addressing income inequality and antitrust enforcement. Platner has no political experience beyond serving as harbor master and chair of the planning board for the town of Sullivan, Maine, but his campaign has risen to national prominence since he declared his candidacy in August 2025. He was expected to face Maine Governor Janet Mills in the Democratic primary on June 9, but Mills dropped out of the race in April, citing insufficient campaign finances. Polling at the time showed Platner with a sizable lead, and he is heavily favored to beat the remaining Democratic candidate, environmental policy consultant David Costello. For the early days of his campaign, Platner has faced controversy for past statements and actions. Most notably, he had a tattoo on his chest of a skull symbol associated with the Nazi police, which he claims he did not know the meaning of. When he had the tattoo done while on leave from the military in 2007, he had the symbol covered up once it was publicly revealed. Separately, his past activity on the social media platform Reddit has drawn scrutiny for his repeated use of slurs and disparaging comments made about various groups. Platner has apologized for many of the comments and said he made them while he was struggling with his mental health after his time in the military. In response to Saturday's reporting on her husband's sexually explicit texts, Gertner released a statement accusing the campaign aide with whom she shared information about the messages of spreading malicious gossip, adding, I am deeply hurt by her betrayal and by the invasion of our privacy. She acknowledged challenges in their marriage from that time period, but said they have sought counseling that has strengthened their relationship. In his own statement, Platner said, amy and I went through something hard because of me. We did the work and I'm grateful for her every hour of every day. Recent polling shows Platner with a lead over Susan Collins in the race that could decide control of the Senate, but some elected Democrats have expressed unease about his candidacy. Last week, Representative Jake Auchincloss, the Democrat from Massachusetts, said he found Platner's tattoo personally disqualifying, adding, I hope Maine voters agree with me. On Sunday, Senator Cory Booker, the Democrat from New Jersey, said he has concerns about Platner and thinks he has questions to answer. Other Democrats have continued to back Platner. Senator Chris Murphy, the Democrat from Connecticut, said, he certainly admitted that he has made mistakes, but I think this is going to be a pretty clear contrast in Maine between somebody who has spent his life protecting us versus somebody who seems to be protecting Donald Trump's corruption. Senators Bernie Sanders, Ruben Gallego and Elizabeth Warren have also endorsed Platner. Today we'll share views from the right and the left on Platner's campaign and the latest controversy, and then Isaac's take.
Isaac Saul
We'll be right back after this quick break.
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John Law
Alright, first up, let's start with what the right is saying. Many on the right say controversy is defining Platner's campaign, and more could be on the way. Some argue Democrats won't be able to distance themselves from Platner if they want to. Others suggest Trump's rise has made scandals like these survivable. In National Review, Jeffrey Lahar asked what other skeletons are lurking in Graham Platner's closet. Mainers and the national media were certainly sold. One story about Platner the that of an anti war Marine during the Iraq war, a hard scramble oyster man and a working class straight talker, blahar wrote. And then one by one we discovered that each of these biographical points was, when not outright false, distorted beyond all recognition. It turns out that Platner, who frequently accuses Senator Collins of voting to send him to Iraq, actively volunteered two years after the United States declared war because, in his own words later hastily erased from Reddit, I wanted to have an adventure and kill some people. Now the latest scandal emerges, and it's quite the doozy. It turns out that earlier in the spring of 2025, mere months before he declared his candidacy, Graham Platner was caught by his wife juggling as many as six separate sexting relationships with other people. Blahar said Democrats were already concerned enough about having to back a man who proudly tattooed a Nazi death's head across his chest and kept it even after the moment he decided he wanted to run for Senate as a progressive leftist. But but what will they do if they find themselves politically committed to an actual moral monster? In Fox News, David Marcus wrote establishment Dem's turn on Graham Platner, but it's way too late. What was most telling about these sordid new sexting revelations wasn't that it exposed Platner as a creep. We already knew that it was that the leak came from a fellow Democrat. The party may be starting to realize that they've created a Marxist monster they can't control, marcus said. Over the past several days, there has started to be what looks like an effort by establishment Democrats to tank Socialist Platner's campaign. We have known for some time now that Platner is not exactly the poster child for impulse control. So why now? Platner's backers in the party, many of them the same people who propelled Zohra Momdani to success, are circling the wagons around their guy. They say the leaking aide committed a terrible act of betrayal and with a straight face, suggest Platner is the victim in all this, marcus wrote. There are two problems with this. One is that voters don't care about internal campaign disputes. Nobody watches that much C span. The second is that this time, after Democratic Socialists have swallowed so much of the party, the establishment seems set to strike Back in the Los Angeles Times, Matt K. Lewis suggested in politics after Trump, nothing is disqualifying under old pre Trump rules, Platner's campaign would have withered instantly after revelations that he once had a Tottenkopf SS tattoo, previously identified himself as a communist. Black people were poor tippers and wrote that white people actually are as racist and stupid as Trump thinks they are, lewis said. Instead, after all this surfaced, Platner actually rose in the polls. Considering the circumstances, there are several reasonable explanations for this. Maybe Maine Dems have concluded that moral purity tests are political suicide after years of watching heterodox figures like Joe Rogan and Elon Musk drift away from the party. Or maybe Maine Democrats have absorbed the same lesson Republicans adopted in 2016. Once voters stop treating scandal as disqualifying, policing your own side for off the field behavior starts to look like unilateral disarmament, lewis wrote. I mean, who could blame them for thinking you've got to fight fire with fire? America, after all, reelected Trump after 34 felony convictions. a certain point, continuing to insist that character matters starts sounding like advice Ward Cleaver might have offered. Wally on Leave it to Beaver. Alright, that is it for what the right is saying. Which brings us to what the left is saying. The left is unnerved by Platner's ongoing controversies, but many still believe he can win. Some say he's a superior option to Susan Collins, despite his baggage. Others suggest his past mistakes, while serious, don't define his candidacy in slow, boring. Matthew Iglesias asked, can Platner make the case for himself? I find the meta narratives around this race annoying. If Democrats want to do better, they need to win in places that Trump won. If you pay attention to Josh Shapiro, John Fetterman, Ruben Gallego, Mark Kelly, Katie Hobbs, Tony Evers, Tammy Baldwin, Gretchen Whitmer, Alyssa Slotkin, Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossif. You won't necessarily answer all the questions, but you're looking in the right places, iglesias said. It's also probably helpful to look at how Mary Peltola and Roy Cooper became favorites in their Senate races. But Maine is a blue state. The only lesson to be learned from Maine is that Susan Collins overperforms because she's moderate. If Platner were the world's greatest husband and had impeccable taste in body art, there would be still no lessons from any political success he might or might not achieve, because beating Collins in Maine doesn't generalize to anywhere, iglesias wrote. Platner needs partisan Democrats to win. Platner needs Democrats who don't hate Chuck Schumer and aren't enraged by the establishment to to take a generous view of his personal life. This should not be that hard for him to do, but he does have to try. In USA Today, Sarah Paqueno argued, graham Platner isn't perfect, but he's better than Susan Collins. Platner made a series of concerning comments on social media years ago. He until very recently had a questionable tattoo. He's unpolished and casual, nothing like the polished candidates we've come to expect from the Democratic Party. That's exactly why people like him, because, Pecaniar said Platner comes with a lot of baggage and that baggage presents risks to the Democratic Party. But it doesn't seem to be phasing Mainers who see themselves in his campaign and candor. Politics may look different in each state, but strong progressive messaging and vigorous organizing efforts are paying off across the country. It's unwise of Democrats to consider Platner a lost cause because of things he's said and done in the past, pecano wrote. Platner is a lesson to national Democrats that it's not about having a polished, pristine image and minimal skeletons in the closet. I'd go so far as to argue that these things can be forgiven so long as the candidate appears genuine and homegrown. In the Portland Press Herald, Reverend Stephen Eddington suggested Robert C. Byrd might help us better understand Platner. Byrd began his Senate career as a right wing Democrat. He opposed the 1964 Civil Rights Act. While he didn't remake himself into a leftist, he made his way along the political spectrum to become one of the more distinguished and longest serving members of the Senate, eddington said. Byrd began his political career in the 1940s as the organizer and as an exalted Cyclops of a West Virginia chapter of the Ku Klux Klan. Senator Byrd characterized his KKK involvement as the greatest mistake of my life. But it was a mistake, putting it mildly, that he moved well beyond I've thought of Senator Byrd while following the Senate campaign of Graham Platner as reprehensible as Mr. Platner's baggage may be, and for which, as noted, he has apologized and looks to move beyond his baggage does not, as I see it, rise to the level or sink to the depths of Robert Byrd's one time leadership in the Ku Klux Klan, eddington wrote. I am not touting Graham Platner as the next Senator Robert Byrd. I'm saying, I don't feel that Mr. Platner's previous indiscretions, serious as they are, should define him politically any more than Robert Byrd's Klan membership in the end defined him. Alright, let's head over to Isaac for his take.
Isaac Saul
All right, that is it for what the left and the right are saying. Which brings us to my take. A few weeks ago, I listened to Graham Platner's lengthy interview with the New York Times. I've been following Platner's rise for a while, of course, but the conversation offered a good look into what has made him a successful candidate. A former Marine, he offers a specific and powerful anti war perspective on politics. He has adopted the economic populism currently succeeding on the left and the right, and he conveys an earnestness that is hard to find among more buttoned up and experienced politicians. But Platner's problem has never been a reticence to stake out an anti war position or project authenticity. His vulnerability has always been questions about his character. The former Marine's most notorious issue was a tattoo on his chest of a symbol that was used by the Nazis. Platner says he got the tattoo while drunk in Croatia, didn't know about its Nazi association, and has Jewish family members whom he loves and respects. From a purely political view, that defense seems to have satisfied Democratic primary voters, even though his responses haven't fully put the issue to bed yet. This now infamous scandal isn't the only worrisome incident from Platner's past. He posted on Reddit regularly for over a decade, denigrating various groups, minimizing concerns about rape in the military and praising the military tactics of Hamas. Platner has apologized for these posts and suggested they were a byproduct of his ptsd, but they present another political problem for him in the general election. Platner's defense worked insofar as the controversy didn't appear to hurt him with primary voters. And I'm sympathetic to his explanation as friends of mine who have come home from war acted out in similar ways as they process what they saw. But the latest revelations about his texting with women and presence on a messaging app known for its young user base and focus on anonymity bring those questions from behind the keyboard into the real world. This shows a real world deviancy and dishonesty, one that is distinct from and worse than typical online shit posting. The most pressing question about Platner to me is a political one. Does any of this matter anymore? Last week I excoriated Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, who has Bob Menendez levels of corruption on his record, along with the same kinds of questions about infidelity and treatment of women that are on Platner's resume. I view Paxton's record as far worse than Platner's, given the decades of public service and corruption paired with the infidelity. But the comparison invites itself and is top of mind. If Platner were a Republican Senate candidate who had a Nazi associated tattoo, said he went to Iraq because he wanted to kill people, downplayed rape, disparaged black people as cheap and rural white people as racist and stupid, and then got caught sexting several women while married, Democrats would be having a field day about the racist fascist womanizer heading to the Senate to do Trump's bidding. But he has a D next to his name, so it becomes necessary for his party and some pundits to justify all of the above, especially when the Senate majority in stopping Trump hangs in the balance. In the post2016 political realm after President Trump survived the Grab them by the Pussy Access Hollywood tapes, it's hard to know when a scandal is going to actually harm a politician. Democrats in Maine know all about Platner's controversies and are pretty much set to rubber stamp him through the primary anyway. Texas Republicans just sent PAX into the general election, yet there are counterexamples, too. Cal Cunningham, the Democrat from North Carolina, lost the Senate race he was leading in 2020 to Thom Tillis after news broke of a sexting relationship with a campaign aide. Herschel Walker, the Republican from Georgia, failed in his 2022 bid for a Georgia Senate seat, and one of the primary attacks against him was a history of abusing women. I don't actually know what distinguishes the politicians who survive these scandals from the ones who don't. It's a sort of political intangible that is not easy to identify or describe. Is it how earnest the apologies feel? Is it particularly unlikable opponents? Is it just a matter of when a race could flip the Senate or stop a widely disliked president's agenda? Or is it something closer to random? My suspicion is that in this environment, Democratic voters are not going to be guilted into abandoning their support for Platner, but he'll need to win independents and moderate Republicans if he wants to flip Maine's Senate seats. Whether he can do that is a different question. The Platner communications team has done its best to manage a candidate, dealing them bad hand after bad hand, and they have landed a few solid talking points while also offering up some embarrassing attacks. On the upside, Platner's wife has said they are in marriage counseling to work through their issues, saying she loves her husband and knows who he is. That'll land for a lot of people, especially anyone who has endured struggles in their marriage. She also attacked a former campaign official who leaked the story, saying she confided in her as a friend and had her trust broken. This, too, is a sympathetic talking point. On the other hand, the campaign threatened the former aide if she went public. Those messages then predictably leaked to the press right away. Platner, in a very Trumpian move, has also attacked the media for reporting on the facts of his bad behavior. It's no surprise to me that the establishment media outlets are just going to run gossip instead of wanting to talk about the things that actually matter matter in this race, which are the material realities that Mainers are working with, he said. These people are going to try to make this race about anything but what it's supposed to be about, which is policy. Amy and I have a very loving and very happy marriage. They would very much like to rip that apart, end quote. Sorry, but no. Platner screwed up and the public has a right to know. The media is just doing its job. Platner is new to this life with zero time in the public eye before running for one of the most contested Senate seats of this cycle. But this is the kind of dirty laundry that gets appropriately aired when you run for office. Character still matters to some voters, and it's not the media's fault for getting answers to relevant questions about Blattner's behavior once that happens. Actually, it's the press's responsibility to inform the public, not protect the candidate. For now, the appeal of fresh blood and new faces in the Senate continues to float his campaign. A poll released last week from the University of New Hampshire showed Platner leading Collins by nine points and up to 19 points among women. I'll be curious to see if or how those numbers shift as the latest story trickles down to the public, but I'm skeptical. It's the last time Democrats are going to have some explaining to do on Platner's behalf, like Paxton's victory in Texas last week. None of this is good for my prediction of a return to decency in politics. In fact, that Platner is an odds on favorite to win this Senate seat despite the Nazi associated tattoo, marital indiscretion and ugly Internet posts is a reminder that in indecency desensitizes and compounds over time. What once would have been an easily disqualifying rap sheet for a Democratic candidate is now compared to bad guys on the other side and excused, diminished or ignored. All the indecent characters in politics benefit from this environment, and until partisan voters are willing to risk an important Senate seat for a moral high ground, we're sure to be stuck in the mud trying to climb out
John Law
foreign.
Isaac Saul
We'll be right back after this quick break.
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Isaac Saul
All right, that is it for my take. I'm going to send it back to John for the rest of the pod and I'll see you guys tomorrow. Have a good one. Peace.
John Law
Thanks, Isaac and now for our segment this day in history, two states, Kentucky and Tennessee, were admitted to the Union on this day in 1792 and 1796 respectively. In 1775, the Transylvania Company signed the treaty of Sycamore Shoals, which with Cherokee leaders purchasing land that comprised much of modern day Kentucky and Tennessee. Many Cherokee and other native tribes fiercely resisted the treaty and existing colonial law voided it, but its signing sped up settlement of the region west of the Appalachian Mountains. At first the settlements were governed by Virginia, but settlers clamored for independent statehood as their population grew, culminating in Kentucky's official admission to the Union as the 15th state in 1792. Modern day Tennessee had to take its own meandering path to statehood. Much of Tennessee was initially considered part of North Carolina, but a growing population, difficult journeys and conflicts with native peoples made the governing relationship tenuous. In 1784, East Tennesseans unsuccessfully tried to establish the state of Franklin after North Carolina ratified the Constitution in 1789. It ceded control of the land to the United States government and became known as the Southwest Territory. The Southwest Territory presented itself to Congress for statehood in 1795, and Tennessee became the 16th state in 1796. And last but not least, our have a nice day story. Rustem Basumatari spent his childhood as a poacher hunting small game inside Manas national park as part of his upbringing in the indigenous Bodo community. Now he's one of northeast India's most celebrated environmentalists. Basumatari grew up to become a park guide, help rediscover the critically endangered white bellied heron, and found a youth conservation initiative to pass the work to the next generation. For every tree I plant, there are many people ready to cut it down, he said. Conservation is not easy. It's a tough task. Still, we are doing it and we will continue our efforts. In 2023, he received the Asam Gaurov Award for his conservation efforts, one of the region's top civilian honors Good, Good Good has this story and there's a link in today's episode Description all right everybody, that's it for today's episode. As always, if you'd like to support our work, Please go to readtangle.com where you can sign up for a newsletter membership, podcast membership or a bundled membership that gets you a discount on both. We'll be right back here tomorrow. For Isaac and the rest of the crew, this is John Law signing off. Have a great day, y'.
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John Law
Peace.
Isaac Saul
Our Executive editor and founder is me, Isaac Saul, and our Executive producer is John Lawrence. Today's episode was edited and engineered by Dewey Thomas. Our editorial staff is led by Managing Editor Ari Weitzman, with Senior Editor Will K. Back and Associate Editors Audrey Moorhead, Lindsay Knuth and Bailey Saul. Music for the podcast was produced by Diet75. To learn more about Tangle and to sign up for a membership, please visit our website@retangle.com.
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Host: Isaac Saul
Date: June 1, 2026
Episode Focus: The unfolding controversies surrounding Graham Platner, the presumptive Democratic nominee for Senate in Maine—specifically new revelations about sexually explicit texts, earlier scandals, and the broader question of whether any political scandal is truly disqualifying in today’s climate.
In this episode, Isaac Saul and the Tangle team break down the latest scandal engulfing Graham Platner, a prominent progressive Democrat running to unseat Senator Susan Collins in Maine. The discussion covers newly revealed sexting allegations, Platner’s complicated history, reactions across the political spectrum, and the broader implications for American politics in the era of normalized scandal.
[05:27–09:49]
Recent Revelations:
Background on Platner:
Past Controversies:
Responses:
[11:05–13:57]
Main Arguments:
Notable Quotes:
[13:58–18:53]
Main Arguments:
Notable Quotes:
[18:53–27:40]
Platner’s Appeal and Vulnerabilities:
Does Scandal Matter Anymore?
Media and Public Responsibility:
Broader Implications:
Amy Gertner (statement):
“I am deeply hurt by her [the aide’s] betrayal and by the invasion of our privacy.” [08:18]
Platner:
“Amy and I went through something hard because of me. We did the work and I’m grateful for her every hour of every day.” [08:31]
Senator Chris Murphy (supporter):
“He certainly admitted that he has made mistakes, but I think this is going to be a pretty clear contrast in Maine between somebody who has spent his life protecting us versus somebody who seems to be protecting Donald Trump’s corruption.” [09:38]
Isaac Saul:
“If Platner were a Republican Senate candidate who had a Nazi associated tattoo… and then got caught sexting several women while married, Democrats would be having a field day about the racist fascist womanizer heading to the Senate to do Trump’s bidding. But he has a D next to his name, so it becomes necessary for his party and some pundits to justify all of the above, especially when the Senate majority in stopping Trump hangs in the balance.” [21:30]
This episode offers an in-depth, bipartisan analysis of the controversy-plagued Senate campaign of Graham Platner. Through news recaps, perspectives from both political right and left, and a detailed personal analysis from Isaac Saul, it examines not just Platner’s actions but the shifting standards for political disqualification in America. The main takeaway: as scandals increasingly fail to bar candidates from office, the electorate and parties alike must reckon with the consequences for democracy and public trust.