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The Daily

Graham Platner Thinks a Political Revolution Is Coming

8d ago1:17:2014,103 words
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The presumptive Democratic Senate nominee from Maine on his controversies, contradictions and pitch for radical change. Thoughts? Email us atΒ [email protected] Watch our show on YouTube: you...

Transcript

EN

I'm Anna Martin, the host of the Modern Love podcast.

In every episode, we peek into an intimate corner of someone's life

β€œand learn about what love means to them.”

You know, I can tell you 35 years with another person.

I've never spent that much time with anyone else either.

So we both kind of said I love you pretty fast. My advice is that it's okay if it's hard. You can listen to modern love wherever you get your podcasts. From the New York Times, this is the interview. I'm Lulu Garcia Navarro.

In Maine, there's a candidate for Senate who's electrifying the democratic base and worrying the establishment. Graham Platner is a progressive 41-year-old military vet and oyster farmer. His pitch is starting a working-class revolution. But he's been dogged by controversy in his short time in a national spotlight.

Starting with the revelation of a tattoo on his chest that's widely recognized as a Nazi symbol and continuing with the publication of past offensive social media posts. Now that his primary opponent, Governor Janet Mills, has dropped out of the race, Platner will be taking on long time Republican Senator Susan Collins and Washington Democrats are pinning their hopes on him to help win back the Senate in November.

Is he ready? I sat down with him to find out. Here's my conversation with Graham Platner. Thank you so much for coming to New York on this great day, but I guess you're used to it, Maine. Yeah, well, let me a little bit. This is nice though.

At least we're inside on the-- We're inside, exactly. We're not out in the elements as you normally are. You are now the presumptive Democratic nominee for Senate in Maine after Janet Mills dropped out. Your opponent, Susan Collins, is viewed as--

β€œI think one of the most vulnerable GOP senators up for reelection.”

I'm sure you know this. A ton of cash is about to drop into the race on both sides. Are you ready for prime time? Yeah, I mean, I'll be entirely honest. Like, when we set this thing in motion back in August,

the entire idea was we wanted to build a different looking politics in the state of Maine.

Right, so that's basically our own community organizing.

I'm a firm believer that organized people is the only actual place of power to conflict with organized money and in our society money is very organized. We set out on that. You know, we were hopeful. We thought it was going to work.

It's of course worked in a pretty spectacular fashion thus far. We're just going to continue doing exactly that. We're going to continue doing the public events.

β€œWe're going to continue focusing on the field organizing.”

And we knew that all the money was going to come. We knew that we were up against the establishment of the American political system. In many ways, we were up against the Democratic establishment up until last week.

And we figured at some point we're probably going to win that. And we were going to go up against the Republican political establishment, which is where we find ourselves now. You know, obviously the test right now is if you can run in a general election. And so I want to ask straight up because there've already been quite a few controversies.

And we're going to talk about that a little bit later. But the GOP is going to dig up everything and more that they can. Yeah, and probably lie at some point. Is there something new you want to get ahead of? No, I mean, like, we've, I've been, I've lived my life.

I've, like, I've been there for the whole thing. And it's, and because of that, like, I, I, I mean, I know what I've, what I've been through. I know what I've, I know what my behavior has been. I know all of it. And the, I mean, there's a reason

that even after, however many months that was October, when they drew out the opposition research stuff on us.

And the whole time there was always this like, oh, there's more coming.

I always like, I don't know, like, what this more is going to be. And he's all your social media posts, et cetera. Which again, we'll talk about it in a minute. And, and, but there was always this like, oh, no, they're, they're going to dig up everything in your life. And, you know, it's everything you've ever done.

I'm like, yeah, I mean, I get that, but like, I've, I've been through my life. And, like, I'm certainly an imperfect person. And I certainly went through my struggles. And, I mean, I'm, I'm, which I'm sure we'll talk about. But I also know, for a fact that, like, I've never been close to money.

I've never been close to power. I've never been able, I've never, like, you know, I don't think anything I've ever done has been outside of the realm of, like, what people do when they struggle when they suffer. You know, I'm thick on the stuff.

And I'm, yeah. You know, I think those controversies in the fact that you're such an unknown

Is part of the reason why the democratic establishment was worried.

Not the whole reason, but certainly part of it.

β€œSenate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer recruited obviously Janet Mills to run against you,”

because she did have that track record of running statewide. And she was viewed as more moderate in his view. There were no skeletons in her closet, so to speak. And so I'm wondering if you feel a lot of pressure right now, because yours is one of the very few races that could really help

to flip the Senate into democratic control. As you know, the Democrats are extremely anxious about resting. Some control back in their favor for good reason. You know, I've had Democrats tell me that the fate of the country is sort of in the hands of you and a few other people now.

I mean, how do you feel about that?

Yeah, I don't engage with it emotionally because it's way too much.

Like I, this whole experience has been just a continual, one intensely surreal thing after another. I mean, it's like I, like last summer when this all happened. I mean, my wife and I went from one day, living a very small, simple life to,

I mean, literally within days, having this whole thing, like upend our entire existence.

β€œAnd so there's a, because you were recruited, right?”

Because they saw a video of you and somebody saw a video of me talking about fighting in Norwegian salmon farm in our area. They were like, "I seem to be well spoken, maybe we should go talk to him." They came to my house and they said that we should run for US Senate. My wife and I were like, "That's the most insane thing.

We've ever heard, please get out of our house." And then they came back a few days later with more of like a fleshed out plan and at that point we're like, "Oh my God, it's still insane." But there's something to it. For us, we've spent a long time being very engaged politically at the local level.

And I think both of us are deeply committed to building a significantly better future. And this was an opportunity to do something about it on the scale that, you know, is just, frankly, hard to comprehend. Still hard to comprehend to be entirely honest. I mean, I'm, I still live in Sullivan Man.

I still live in my small house across the street from the boat launch. So my business partner is still like in the yard this week getting the boats ready because it's this time you're putting boats in the water and getting the oysters up. So like, that's all still happening. Well, all this other stuff is happening, too.

So it's a strange disconnect, I guess. Yeah, and it brings you to this idea that you've been running as this anti-establishment candidate. But we've talked a little bit about the Republican money that's going to be dropping on you. But there's also the Democratic Party's money and they're organizing power to win this campaign.

β€œDo you think that hurts your message of being an outsider?”

No, I think it's very clear to everyone just how not the establishment candidate I am or have been. You know, the question of the Democratic Party wants to retake the Senate more than anything else. And almost no map that has a Democratic Senate does not include flipping the state of mind. We have to flip the state of mind. We have to get rid of Susan Collins for a whole myriad of reasons, not just flipping the Senate.

So they're going to come and help us out. The thing that's important to know is we welcome their support in like the, for like with the money.

Because we're going to be up against, I mean, the NRC's already put aside almost 50 million dollars.

It's the number I heard. Yeah, for this race. That's insane. Also, by the way, could you imagine investing 50 million dollars in the state of mind? Again, anything, different looking state.

The fact that they're just going to blow it on like negative TV ads is just shows how gross and insanely flawed the system that we have is around politics. But the, we'll take their help because we're going to need it on that front. But we're not going to take as like, frankly, direction or advice on what we're doing. Because we just, what we've built as hours and we have, we have 15,000 active volunteers in the state of mind.

And we have more signing up every single day. And a lot of people who are supposed to be really, really good at politics who were the experts. They also that all this was entirely impossible. And we didn't just prove them wrong, but we did so in rather spectacular fashion. And we're just going to keep doing that.

You know, you had said that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer had not really reached out to you until Janet Melso dropped out. And you've had a conversation with him recently. Did you tell him that? Did you say, hey, bud, stay out of my business? No, I said, like, we are happy to work together to beat Susan Collins.

I mean, nothing brings people together, like wanting to beat Susan Collins. That's a, it's a very unifying thing. The conversation was short. We did not get a details. He said congratulations. I said, thank you very much.

He said the priorities to be Collins.

And however we can work together to do it effectively is what I'm willing.

I mean, that's what I want. Yeah, I mean, I've watched you on the campaign trail. And one of the main messages that you have, though, is not to put to find a point on it. But, you know, F the establishment.

β€œYeah. Do you think Schumer should be replaced as leader then? I mean, are you?”

Yeah, I don't. I, I, I, my criticisms remain exactly the same as they were last Wednesday. I do think that the, that leadership in the Democratic Party has been has really failed the moment. I don't think everything for a bunch of different reasons. I do think that. I do think a Senator Schumer has has not really risen to the occasion. And I think we do need new leadership within the party without question. Last question on this. And it is about Susan Collins. As you know, she has been there since the 90s.

She has been a very deaf fundraiser and campaigner in the state of Maine. And what do you give your chances, really? Very high. Extremely high, actually. One polling bears that out. Now, I am a Democrat in Maine. So I'm wary of polling. There's no question about it. But there is a consistency to it, which is nice.

β€œBecause I think there was another candidate that was trying to run against her.”

Yes. She was up in the polling. And I think a couple of things have changed. You want to think polling methodology has changed significantly since 2020.

In Maine has always been notoriously a hard state to poll, because we have an aging population.

There are a lot of people that still use land lines or a lot of people that still like to mail. So there are, but a lot of the, a lot of the more recent polling takes all that into account, which it didn't use to. But there's a deeper change. And I think it's a couple things. First and foremost, people often forget this 2020. Collins had already voted for Brett Kavanaugh, but Roe had not been overturned.

And Collins' real pitch for a long time was, like Olympia Snow, she tried to make herself look like. Olympia Snow actually was this, by the way. But Collins has tried to make herself look like this moderate Republican who will buck her party. A woman's son, other from Maine, who is pro-choice, who supports reproductive rights.

That fiction could still exist in 2020, because Roe was still in place. Roe was no longer in place. I mean, she said it was settled law.

She said it was never going to change, which is why she voted for Brett Kavanaugh.

Well, this point, it has changed because of her vote for Brett Kavanaugh. So either she was lying or she completely misunderstood what was happening. Either way, that doesn't show, like, a really solid, I don't know, political acumen.

β€œAnd I think in many ways, that, I mean, that alone is relatively disqualifying, not just because of the implications,”

but because of the, frankly, just incompetence of it. Then there's the element where, at this point, I don't think you could come up with a better avatar for the long-serving, self-enriching established from politician, then Susan Collins, who raises an immense amount of money outside of the state of Maine, who takes an immense amount of money from APAC. She takes an immense amount of money from specialist groups and fossil fuel companies, and she has a very high-performing stock portfolio.

You know, I mean, I think a lot of people in Maine look at that and I'm like, "Yeah, I don't think that that is actually the politics I want representing me." I want to take a bit of a step back and talk a little bit about you, because I think for many people across the country, you're an unknown quantity, you're, I don't know where. I'm a random oyster farmer from Sullivan Maine. So, yeah. So, you're pitching yourself as a working class man. You're a firearm instructor, a gun owner.

In your campaign launch video, you're wearing a dirty hoodie, you're shotgun oysters, you're swinging a kettlebell, you're chopping wood. What kind of masculinity are you trying to evoke with that? A healthy one. It is entirely fine to be a weightlifting kettlebell swinging gun-owning kind of like rugged guy. You can do all of that and see your strength or see your privilege as things that are to be used specifically to uplift and help other people, not to impose on them. I think right now, especially there are a lot of young men in our society who are being dragged into this kind of like really dangerous misogynistic, like manosphere.

But I just watched Louis Therose documentary the other night, it's horrifying. Sadly, for me, having spent like having spent my life as an angsty young man and then being in the service, in the Marine Corps, in the army, in the infantry and both very, very masculine spaces.

I have seen that kind of toxic masculinity really attract a lot of young men.

And a lot of it comes in the fact that I think that there are a lot of men who are deeply, deeply insecure.

Who, whether it's because of trauma, whether it's because society is told them, they're supposed to be a certain level of successful, and they aren't that. And so then they feel like they've failed or that society is somehow failed them.

β€œAnd then they're given the story that the only way to make that up is to like impose on other people, to uplift yourself.”

You have to put others down. Which I think is nonsense. I think that just results in you being alone. Why have Democrats struggled so much with men lately? Honestly, I think it's because they've left behind working, like the working class. In here and out here, there was a time where people who like worked for a living use their hands were very, very close to the Democratic Party.

Through the labor movement, through just kind of general policies, the Democratic Party was once the policy that really represented working folks. And there is this vision of masculinity in America, which has a lot to do with that exact thing, right? Like kind of working building, creating. There are elements of that that I think are very positive.

I do not believe in this whole like white working class, that the working class is just a bunch of rugged dudes and hard hats.

That's not the working class, it's significantly bigger than that, and it's very multicultural, multi-gendered, multi-racial, the whole nine yards. But there is an element in our society that we view, you know, we view like kind of working class people like that. And I think as a Democratic Party has, for a while now, kind of, begun to look like the party of liberal elites. There's just an element. You don't have to whisper it.

I'm in New York, but it looks like this party of, and sounds like, and in some ways kind of did become this party of sort of Ivy League schools and elite. I mean, the data shows it. Yeah. I mean, the strength of the Democratic Party is in cities. It's among the educated, it's among women actually.

β€œI think a lot of that came because the Democratic Party abandoned organized labor quite frankly.”

Is that what you were tapping into when you did your thing? Yeah, I mean, it wasn't, yes, I mean, but I mean, not, not performatively. This is just my life. I mean, I do swing kettlebells, I lift weights, I work on the ocean with my hands, I shoot guns. Like it's by, yeah, that's it's all.

It's not even performative about it. It's just kind of my existence. So I want us to be able to reconnect with a healthier version of masculinity. One that is rooted in hard work and building things. You know, it looks max, sir.

Definitely not a looks max or I'm not going to smack myself in the face with hammers because that seems to be like possibly the dumbest thing that human being could ever do. But, you know, it's just me. One of the things that I have heard debated about you quite a bit is you're working classrooms. Because, you know, you grew up in a small town. Yeah.

Didn't graduate college became a bartender. Yeah. Also, your father was an attorney. Yep. Your grandfather was a Cornell-educated architect quite quite well known. You went to private schools. So kind of, well, the private school thing I would just like to.

So I, okay. So in, I mean, I, so I grew up in Sullivanman. I went to Mountain View Elementary School, which is very small. I think my graduating, I think we had like 12 kids or 12 to 14. And my mom really, really wanted my brother and I to get like a high quality education.

And this place in Connecticut, Hachkus gave us a really good financial aid package. So my mom was like, all right, that's where you're going. I did not want to go at all because I didn't want to leave men. So I got sent down there.

β€œAnd there was a moment, which I will never forget.”

And it was a moment I knew that I had to leave this place. I went down to Hachkus and they had like, you know, monthly or weekly, I think it's called a chapel or something like that.

And people, you know, graduates or, you know, people would always come and give speech.

Motivational speeches and whatnot. The first thing I went to, some guy came, some business magnate type. And was trying to kind of inculcate and everyone liked the concept of work ethic. And at some point he was just like, who in years had a job? And I put my hand up and I was the only kid in the room that put his hand up.

And I realized that it wasn't a real question. It was a rhetorical question. Because of course none of these kids had held jobs. And I then felt really embarrassed because I'm like 13. And like I realized, oh my god, like I'm like,

There are a lot of people who are like super wealthy. And I'm like, I'm not. And my family's not. And like it's, and we're fine for the record.

I grew up solidly middle class without question.

But like worked for, I mean, all the way,

I worked through high school, I bagged groceries. I had landscaping, work for the Appalachian Mountain Club and the professional trio crew for two years, before I joined the Marine Corps. And so like there was just this, I don't know, this, this real sense of,

like I was very out of place. So I got myself kicked out by Christmas. I was at Hatchkis for like three months. And then I went back to Maine and I went to John Baps, which is up in Bangor, which was far more my speed.

Lots of, lots of just normal main kids who were more of my, kind of world. I mean, how do you think about class?

β€œIs working class how you grew up or how you live now?”

Like how do you, because you grew up, you're describing it as solidly middle class. I think we did it for today. And you make your, you know, your pitches. I'm of the working class now.

I work with my kids. And I am, I mean, I work with my hands. I don't make a lot of money. My wife and I work incredibly hard. And we probably make like $60,000 a year combined.

We don't have money left over. We're not saving for retirement. I'll tell you that. I was lucky. I got to buy my house in 2017.

And I could not afford my house today. My, my house has gone up almost three times in value. But my family money. The, was that? Do you have family money?

My, my father gave me the, the mortgage, except of course, because he's my dad and he's an attorney. He gave me a significantly higher interest rate than the bank would have. Because he's a lawyer. But, but it was, but I also, I had, I could use the VA home loan.

If I had wanted to, but at that point, it was just easier to do it that way.

And, and, I mean, I, I just, but to be, like, I could never get that today.

Because I can't afford the monthly. I can't afford the mortgage. If it was three times where this, my income hasn't gone up three times. So I was lucky to get it then. And so we, like, we, my wife and I very much recognized the life we've been able to build,

has come from a lot of, like, luck. And, but on top of that is also my VA health care in my VA pension, which that really is kind of like the, that's the baseline that really allows all this to happen. If it wasn't for the VA health care thing, I would have had the freedom to start a business to move back to my home town,

figure out, I mean, I was flat, but I moved back to Maine in 2016 from D.C. And I had, I was broke broke. I was living at my mom's house, because I had spent a number of years very depressed, which we can get to about after my combat service. But, you know, when it comes to, like, middle class working class,

I will be very upfront. I think this, this day and I age, you are working class if you work, and you make your money from work and wages. Like the, the world of wealth disparity has become so intense that there are just so many people now who are sitting on so much money

who do not work. They make money off their investments. They make money off of their wealth. And I know it's an expansive definition of working class,

β€œbut I think you need to have an expansive definition of working class”

when we have the most expansive margin of wealth inequality in the history of the country. In the state of Maine, almost everybody's working class. Everybody works. Everybody works.

Everybody struggles. Everybody has, like, if the hospital closes and that really impacts you, you're probably working class person. If you're really rich, you don't, it doesn't matter where the hospital is. You probably can go wherever you want for health care.

You know, it's interesting. I'm listening to you and I'm, and on the one hand, it makes political sense to say the working class is this very expansive group that anyone who gets a W2 and has to pay taxes off a salary, which is different than if you're making it. And if your investments is working class, right?

And that's, it's, you get a different kind of hit as we all know, just having been in tax season. By the same token, it's a strange kind of idea of what working classes. I know people who really consider themselves working class who grew up, you know, with a lot of struggle. And that feels probably to them like that's too expansive, a definition.

I mean, I, I spend a lot of time around labor unions. I spend a lot of time around community groups that focus on, I mean, everybody seems these days, everybody seems to subscribe to the same definition. Yeah, because it is so substantial.

β€œAnd to me, that's, it is expansive, but I think it's also pretty,”

I think it's the most accurate definition of what we're seeing right now. And in that way, I'll be very up front. I get a chuckle out of the fact that like a lot of folks in this political system

who come from incredible amounts of privilege and wealth.

They're the first ones to be like, are you really working class? Are you, are you, are you really like, well, I don't know, you're just out there not making a lot of money and working on the ocean,

Your dad was a small town attorney.

Does that mean that like, you can't actually represent working people?

β€œHonestly, I think it's a tool. It's a political weapon that throughout history has been deployed”

against people whose primary political goal is to improve the lives of working folks around them.

It's always to call into question like they're their bona fides.

Well, to be clear, I'm asking you, because I'm interested in hearing how you describe yourself. I know how you do. Well, it's, yeah, yeah, yeah. Just to understand how you tell your own story and also how you view what your coalition is because obviously you're pitching yourself to the working class.

Yeah, I mean, which is also why I think we're winning by spectacular margins because in the state like mine, everybody's like, yeah, that makes perfect sense to me. And we all do. We all do feel very much that us and our neighbors in our communities were all kind of suffering the same way. Hmm.

So after high school. Yep. You joined the Marines at 19. Yep. 19.

And I want to ask you about your tours in the Middle East. You went to Iraq in 2005, is that right? Yeah. I mean, we were there at the same time. I covered Iraq from 2002 before the invasion to 2010.

What do you want to serve? Because you were anti war. Very. You were out protesting the conflict. Yeah.

I just saw this post about you actually in Maine kind of protest. I think George shall be brought.

β€œI dragged out of a bush rally and I think November to December of O2.”

Yeah. So it's a strange thing to sign up.

I see, everybody says that, but like it never was for me.

I mean, like one, I wanted to be a soldier since I was about two. I mean, I was singing the Marines him as like, I think I was like four or five when I first memorized it. And I don't know why that is. I mean, I, I, we have a long lineage of military service and my family, but like my dad wasn't in the service. My parents were not enthused about my joining of the of the of the of the Marine Corps.

But I always had an attraction to, I think, service, but I also had an attraction to adventure. And, you know, in our society, we do very much self militarism and war in this very romantic fashion about like about adventure and excitement. And then there's also, I think you can probably understand this too. There is this weird attraction when everyone tells you that the only way you could ever experience it is to be there. That it's a thing that is so unique and so it's own thing that no one could ever get it unless you had seen it.

β€œAnd I think for me, there was an element of curiosity to that, where it's like, well, I mean, like, what am I, what is it then?”

And, and you know, I grew up reading military history books and I was in the Civil War reenacting and I was like, very, it's like a little military nerd.

But I also, when high school became pretty critical of certain elements of, I think, America foreign policy.

Certainly when the war in Iraq was kicking off, I was like, this seems like a deeply stupid idea. Yeah, I mean, you had an image of you in high school holding up a signed sing free cost of a treachery in Kashmir, Palestine, Kurdistan and Tibet. Yeah, I got it, I got really into Irish politics when I was in high school, which introduced me to, I think, some sort of like a, yeah, connection to like national liberation struggles. And seeing the world through that lens, the exact same time though, I was still like a young man in the United States.

And I was very patriotic. To me, the two things never, you know, I'll be, I mean, a lot of guys in the reencore that thought that the war was done. And we're there, you know, but they were there, because it's a, like the attraction is more to like the camaraderie and the kind of whole, like, I don't know, the whole, like the infantry combat unit thing. It's, it's less about like why you're doing it in my experience. I don't, I, I never, at anybody, I don't have many friends in the Marine Corps who want me to serve in there like, I'm definitely here to like fight for George Bush.

And like, and do whatever, no, no, no, I mean, they're for like, because you join the infantry here there, because you were a young angstie man and you like joined up and you want to go have an adventure, you want to fight. I mean, that's why, that's what the infantry primarily is. Can you tell me, with that in mind in your head, that sort of romantic vision of what it was, what you felt when you first arrived in Iraq, because you were based in what was called, then the Sunni Triangle, very high conflict area.

Yeah, when we first got there, it wasn't so bad. So we January, February, March were pretty mellow. We did the election, late January, first that first Iraqi election, January of '05, somebody shot an RPG at us, but like, it didn't go off. And then on April 2nd, 2005, there was a large combined assault, like, multiple suicide car bombs and a months amount of indirect fire rockets, mortars, the whole nine yards. And that was like my first actual interaction with like combat combat.

The rest of that deployment was fairly mellow.

When summer came, a lot of IEDs, we got blown up a bunch, a couple of serious incidents with my platoon and took some casualties, but for the most part, it wasn't like, it wasn't like continuous.

β€œAnd then that deployment ended January of August of '05, we came home for like four and a half, five months, so much machine and leadership course.”

And then we promptly went to Ramadi for a six and that was like a totally different middle of the civil war. And that was Ramadi, you know, six was eight. The worst of the worst. And we were at the government center in downtown Ramadi and we just lived there. Everybody else came and rotated through and journalist would come and the brass would come and they'd all come down because they all wanted to see the government center, because that's like where all the fighting was.

Like we were like we just we lived there, like just where eight months, no days off didn't have a single day off for eight months, it was exhausting. And it was it was very, very violent. I mean, you know, just like regular contact almost every day. What do you remember about how you felt being part of that war? Because it's just interesting to me, considering where you came from, to suddenly find yourself as part of an occupying army in the Middle East, no less.

I'm just wondering how you sort of made sense of the mission because you wrote to your mom at the time.

The United States is doing an amazing thing here.

It took me coming here to realize that. Don't think we are somewhere we shouldn't be. Yeah, I mean, I remember you know, oh, five. Our, because we were actually engaging in like some building projects. We were like, we were helping turn the water back on.

We were like, it felt, I, I, I actually, I mean, I was also 20. I was still a kid.

β€œSo I get, and you need to make all this stuff mean something, right?”

Like you, you want to be part of something good. And so as I saw us, it's like, what seemed like doing good things for a little bit for a little bit in 2005. I, I did, I did believe that we were doing something good. Um, towards the end of the plan when I started to kind of return to my more cynical kind of state on the whole thing.

Mostly just because I saw like all the contractors and all the, like we've spent so much money.

Like, somebody was clearly getting very rich, but it wasn't us. But then yeah, 2006 comes in Romadi and I mean, at that point, I became very, um, well, I don't even know if I was, you know, let me refresh. At the time, I didn't, I didn't really think about it much. I mean, when you're in it, and you're just doing the work.

And every day is a slog and your friend. You're not reflecting. No, no. No, I mean, you might spend a lot of time being bitter because you haven't slept in three days and some colonel just came down and told you that, like, your boots were dirty.

Like, there's a lot of being angry at everything. But like, but you're still at your part of your unit. You're around the guys that you, you love and that you care about. And you're all kind of in it together. Uh, and there is a deep sense.

I would say of like, camaraderie in, in community that you get from that. Um, that I mean, I certainly, I'm from it. That period I imagine was really hard. Um, just looking back on it. Yeah.

And you, you know, have been diagnosed with PTSD. You talked about that.

β€œWhen you look back now, when do you think you started to suffer from that?”

Because I was also diagnosed from PTSD. And for me, I can remember exactly what happened that caused the sort of cascade. What was it for you? It was, it was 2006. And it wasn't a specific moment.

I'll just be, I, I, I think. That's not actually true. Fuck. Um, yeah. I'm sorry.

That's okay. Um, in 2005, my vehicle got hit by an ID outside of, a place called Karma, North, North of Felicia. And, uh, we, uh, was myself and my best friend. I was in the back of the truck.

Uh, another Marine, another Marine was driving. And yeah, we drove over an ID and blew the truck up. I got knocked on. We all got knocked on conscious. Um, I come to, whole front of the truck is ripped off.

Um, I like, I thought we had engine trouble. I was all like, discombobulated. I ran around the back of the truck and there's my friend. Uh, you know, um, he's alive, but a piece of sharpness. Like, come up under his helmet and ripped a lot of his butt and his head off.

And, uh, you know, I'm 20. And this guy's my best friend. We went infantry school together. We came to the fleet together. We were like, we were at Thickestaves real close.

And I, I just remember, I was like, yeah, I was a combat lifesaver.

I got this training on like how to, but they never told me what to do when yo...

And I remember standing there being like, I don't know what to fuck to do. Uh, like, and this is my best friend.

β€œAnd I'm like, and I, I'm supposed to save him.”

But I like, I don't, I have no idea how to even do that. Um, and then luckily this guy, uh, doc, Huey, um, spectacular, spectacular Navy corpsman comes running up and starts immediately going to work. And, uh, and say, save his life, um, and he survives. Uh, but, but has some pretty significant, it was a significant head wound. And, you know, it, like, it happened.

I was, of course, distraught because he was my best friend. And I'm a kid, and, you know, you're like, you're in, and. It's scary. It's very scary. Well, and then we also like came under fire.

So like all this is happening.

And we're always also a gun flag going on.

So then I got to go, like, get in the gunfight for a while. We, we, we get the vehicle back. We drop, drop him off at the medical station. And, and then, like, I'm at the back of the truck just like cleaning the blood out, uh, and like mopping it up. And I, I remember being, there was a moment, and they were like, well, we got to go back and patrol in like three hours. And you're just like, yep.

So there was a, there was like a hardening at that point for me. Where I was like, you don't actually get to engage with it. Because if you do, you're going to be worthless. And you can't be worthless out here. The whole point of this is like to be effective at your job.

You're not going to let down your fellow Marines. And I realized looking back on it now. Like that was, because I saw a frankly worse things after that. There was much more horrific violence. I saw people in, in far worse physical, I mean, a far more death awful stuff.

But like that was, that was like the first time it happened to me.

β€œAnd I think, you know, we got back from that deployment.”

And, you know, with the young Marines, we all drink a lot. We all party a lot, you know, high risk behaviors pretty standard for young Marines. But when I got back from my remodied deployment, no six. In between my second and third deployments, that was when I know that I was absolutely self-medicating. And drinking heavily, really not wanting to engage with like feelings and emotions.

Becoming very emotionally distant. I had like a girlfriend. Relationship totally fell apart because I was just a wreck of a human being. Sadly, that kind of remained sort of the case for a while. After that, not being a very emotionally connected human being.

But I think it all starts back then. You end up serving quite a few more tours. You go to Afghanistan. And then in 2018, you go as a military contractor to Afghanistan for six months. Didn't last very long.

How had your views at that point evolved from that, from that first letter that you wrote Home to your mom to then? I mean, it is entirely, they had changed into something else entirely different. When I went back in 2018, I didn't believe in any of it. I went back in 2018 because I was broke and lost.

And I had no idea what to do with myself and my skills. Because all I'd ever really done was carry guns for a living. And the friend of mine was just like, "Hey, man. I'm going to contract a couple. We don't do anything.

All we do is lift weights. The ambassador doesn't really go anywhere. So we don't really have to do much driving around. He's like the pace pretty good. It's not bad.

So I went over for six months. And at that point, whatever disillusionment was, became something much deeper because I'm in Kabul. And I'm like seeing it from like at the embassy and seeing it from the high side. And I was like, "Oh my God.

Seven years. Seven years I haven't been in this country. And no new ideas." Then we're out there dropping bombs on people's houses. There are special operations units kicking in people's doors in the middle of the night.

It's all the violence is still happening. And nobody down here has an inkling of what to do. Or what we're even attempting to do. And so I quit. Move back to Sullivan.

But a 19-foot C-way skiff.

Started farming oysters and decided I never wanted to look back.

And I wanted to get us far away from all of it as humanly possible.

β€œWhen you look back at that, do you feel angry that you were part of that violence?”

Do you feel, do you regret that you were part of that violence? I have a complicated relationship with it because I am still proud of being a Marine. I am very proud of my service and the service of the guys that fought next to me. We tried our best. We truly did.

But it doesn't matter if you try your best inside of a flawed policy and a flawed system. It's flawed from the top down.

It's bound to fail.

It's bound to bring in immense amounts of violence upon people who, in no way, in the former deserving of it because we destroyed Iraq. And we destroyed Afghanistan. And all the suffering, all the killing, all the dying, all the displacement, all of it. We brought that.

We, the United States, did that. In that amount of shamed of. The anger that I feel is for the people that sent me. Who are, frankly, still the same people who are sending people off right now to go, but be in harm's way so we can start and have the stupid war with Iran.

I mean, Susan Collins voted to send me to Iraq. And she's also there to help Donald Trump continue this absolutely insane conflict and destroy some of her moves. It's the same people. And if I have any anger, it is reserved for the political system itself.

And the people in it who view war not as like a thing that has a human toll. But they view war as like a political game, something that they can use. Do you see yourself as anti-war now? Yes. The war with Iran, but just in general, absolutely.

In general. Yeah, I do. I'm not a pacifist, but I have essentially anti-war.

β€œAnd I think the way that we, you know, it states wages war.”

I mean, really going, I'm pretty critical of most of our military engagements.

Because I failed to see money that made lives better here for Americans. There are a lot of examples of it being good for multinational business interests. There are a lot of examples of it being good for people in place of the political power. Rarely good for the people who have to go fight and die. And rarely good for like the American people who have to pay for this nonsense

and deal with the repercussions of it. Meanwhile, you know, Raytheon executives get a, get a yacht. People make a lot of money off of this thing. You know, it's interesting. Here and you talk like that.

I mean, there are some on the right who have very similar views. Yeah. I mean, how do you think about that? Do you think that there's like a natural alliance there perhaps, or is... I don't know, there's an alliance.

But I think it's just a reflection of the fact that it's hard not to come to that conclusion these days. I mean, the forever wars that we have been in now,

β€œreally since 2001, I mean, what good has it done us?”

Your politics do not have to remotely align with mine to still like see that very clear reality, which is I think what we're seeing. I want to come back to something that we mentioned at the top, which is something else that happened during your time in the Middle East. And that is, of course, that you got a tattoo.

Well, that wasn't that was in Croatia. That was in Croatia, but it was during this period. Yeah. 2007. Right.

And it resembles Nazi insignia. Yeah. It's a skull and crossbones. I, for the, I just want to, I got a skull and crossbones with a bunch of other marines in a tattoo parlor and Croatia, because skull and crossbones are things that marines get.

And I had it for 17 years. And I took my shirt off. I was out in public. I took pictures with it. I went through two security clearances where I got screened for gang and hate tattoos.

And it never once came up on a screening.

Yeah.

β€œSo that was, that's what I, I had a skull and crossbones on my chest for 17 years.”

Until after the campaign started. And then the, the, you know, the establishment candidate got in the race. And suddenly they drop all this opposition research and part of it is that grand planner has like this, this like tattoo with white supremacist ties or Nazi ties. And at that point, I took a look at the things and I'm like, well, I don't want something that has that kind of connotation on my body.

And so I promptly got to cover that. Mm-hmm. Did other people get the same tattoo? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Other guys might get it.

Yeah. I mean, you say it's opposition research that may well be true.

But ultimately, it is hard for voters to know what the reality of why you got that is.

It doesn't seem like to be the case for people in Maine. I mean, I've, I've talked about this ad nauseam. And I mean, have you made outreach to Jewish voters? Of course. And I mean, I have, I have they have funded half of my family is Jewish.

I, in fact, the video in which the tattoo was displayed, which was the video that was shut around was at my brother's wedding to my Jewish sister-in-law with her whole extended Jewish family where I was taking my shirt off and dancing. If I thought I had something that was this obvious like anti-Semitic thing, I would not have done that because that would be utterly insane. Yeah, no, I do a lot of, and I mean, to be honest, like we have, we have, we have a lot of close supporters who are in the Jewish community in Maine.

Primarily because I've, I've been close with people in the Jewish community in Maine, my entire life. Does it make you concerned about who you engage with? Because obviously this issue is very sensitive for many voters. As you know, I recently interviewed Tucker Carlson, he told me he was interested in meeting you.

I saw that.

I mean, hearing about it ever since. I mean, you told independent journalist David Sorada that you're weighing, talking to him. Yep.

β€œWhat are you weighing? Do you think Tucker Carlson's an anti-Semitic, are you worried that by going on to his show?”

Because this is, this is still a part of the conversation that this could lend itself to. Oh, I'm not worried about that part. I mean, you know, people tagging you with the way that they might hate you.

I mean, I'm like, I'm not an anti-Semitic. I never have been.

I've been very dedicated actually. Do you think Tucker Carlson's an anti-Semitic? I do not know enough about the end to know. But I will say I am not a fan of his form of like right wing kind of. There's a lot of like, I think unhealthy nationalism and xenophobia in there.

And that's, I don't think a helpful thing. What I'm weighing is the fact that I and I often talk about on the campaign trail. I do think it's necessary to have conversations with people we disagree with, especially these days. I think if we always just stay in these kind of ideologically peer spaces, we're just never going to talk to anybody.

And I firmly believe in the need to find common ground and to rebuild like communities and relationships in which the average person actually has like almost everything in common, when it comes to material needs. But at the exact same time, I say that I also don't want to elevate hateful or, or, I mean, frankly, any kind of thing that I personally view as being dangerous.

And that's a, that's a, that's a tough needle to thread is because in order, especially if somebody like Carlson has such a huge reach. I mean, I'll be very honest, a lot of the guys I served with. Big Tucker Carlson fans. And I want to be able to engage those kind of people with my kind of politics.

And in my, my answer on these things that it isn't, it isn't immigrants.

β€œWe need to be afraid of it's, and that's not why your life is hard.”

So that's a yes, you would go, I guess. It's oh no, I, I, we, I still do not know. I'll be honest, I have not, I bounce back and forth on this one all the time. I just want to bring up something else. There are controversial statements also on social media.

You posted over 1800 comments under the username P hustle from 2009 to November 2021. And some of them are objectively concerning. You said, role mainers are racist and stupid. You said that sexual assault victim should take responsibility for themselves. This all came out in the national press.

Yeah.

Why didn't you disclose this stuff first?

Oh, we did. We, we released all of the comments. I mean, when the, when people came to us, they're like, oh, we've got these very, we've got a couple little ones. Uh, and we were like, I mean, there's a lot more than a couple. So we just put everything out there.

So I, you did till 18. Before the campaign launched. I deleted them a while ago.

β€œI, a guy even used Reddit in, I think this is 2021.”

Um, and I don't, I'm being honest, and I don't actually know when I, when I did lead everything. I, uh, so wasn't because you were gonna run. No, no, no, I got, like, I just, I, I stopped using the internet. I mean, that which is, I stopped using the internet because I got happy. I mean, I, I, I sat on the internet for, for a number of years.

Getting in fights, trying, I mean, quite frankly. Uh, and in the parlance of the times, shit posting. Trying to get a rise out of people. Trying to get an arguments because it, you know, brought me some form of, I don't know, like, serotonin boost or something. Because, truthfully, I was really, really isolated and alone.

Very angry. And a lot, I mean, a lot of the worst comments definitely come from the years where I was in my, like, at my absolute worst. Which really is between, like, 2012 and 2017. Um, 2018 is when I was actually, like, in a pretty dark place, all in all. I just want to clarify something about the Reddit comments.

Can you walk me through the timeline again? Yeah. So you decided you were going to run. Did you worry about those old comments immediately? I mean, when exactly did you delete them?

When did you decide to release the others? Well, if we released, we, we like, just put everything out. Because it was, what is it? The way back, machine. I think is what, what got used.

Um, right after we got contacted by, I think it was CNN who was the first, the first outlet that reached out to us.

Because they'd found some. And we were like, there are more, um, because they're out. I mean, it's, I'm an elder millennial. I grew up on the internet. I'm well aware that everything you post on the internet is there forever.

It's not like, uh, it's not a, it's not a thing I don't know. Um, so you deleted them like in 2021, 2021 issue, is that? I accept, I'll be honest, I don't know. Uh, I don't. But well before you were considering running for office.

Yeah, I mean, I, I didn't, uh, yeah, I'm trying to think of, 'cause I deleted my Reddit profile, because I just stopped using Reddit.

I, and, but I, I don't know, actually when I did that, because I,

because I, I just, I, I had, I hadn't used Reddit since I think 21.

So somewhere in those five years between 21 and 2026. Did the people who recruited you? Did you disclose it to them? No, yeah. That this was there.

Oh, yeah. I was like, look, I mean, because, I mean, we talked about everything that I could have ever, 'cause, you know, this, we, that's, this is how politics is now. Even though I don't be honest, I think it's a pretty ridiculous way of conducting politics. But this is how politics is.

β€œSo you have to go through like everything you've ever done that could be like,”

portrayed as a bad thing.

And, you know, one of the first questions was, do you have social media posts?

And like, oh, yeah, man, like I spent 18 years on, or whatever, 12 years on Reddit. And made a whole bunch of comments. Uh, because I did. Can I ask you about something else? You wrote in 2018 about armed resistance to fascism.

You said, quote, an armed working class is a requirement for economic justice. How do you think about that now? As a student of history, it is difficult for me to not see elements of that as being like a reality, especially in resistance to fascism. But we didn't beat the Nazis with smiles.

We did, we did beat them with a war. I don't think it's a very controversial statement to tell you the truth. Hmm. I mean, I guess in the context of political violence, some might see it as worrying.

Well, it would be very, I was talking about it as a private citizen with no visibility. And mostly just talking about what I thought was a very clear historical, like reality. Hmm. Which I would, you know, I would say it's still true. I mean, again, I mean, historically fascism has been beaten with armed resistance in conflict.

I mean, World War II was mostly us and the Russians and using, you know. Do you think there needs to be armed resistance in this country? No, good Lord, no, the way that we use the term political violence right now and are kind of current discourse, violence is absolutely no place. And I don't think it moves us any closer to a better or freer society.

β€œThat's what I think the organizing is for, fun to be up front.”

I mean, I think one of the reasons we actually see an explosion of political violence today is because we do not have more effective outlets. Like there are people who want to see change. They want to see and, you know, especially for folks who are kind of either ideologically more, or just mentally more attracted to using violence. That when there is no other outlet, when there is no healthy place to put that energy, I do think you see an explosion of violence. Which is kind of what we're seeing right now.

A lot of people are angry about the system, people are angry about the state of things. But there isn't like a very clear and healthy way to use it. And I think that's one of the reasons why building organizing at the community level is paramount for the future of our political system. 2017, my mom and I went down to the women's march in DC. And I remember going there and being like, "Oh my God, look at all these people."

Like we're clearly going to resist, we're going to fight back. The pussy hats. Nothing happened. Because it was just mobilization. Mobilization is a tactic, turning people out in the streets, protests, that's part of it.

But there needs to be deeper. And I think when the problems is that we haven't had that in quite some time outside the labor movement and certain organizations in civil rights groups and what they mean. They've kept the flame alive. But I think right now that's the work we need to be doing is tying into those skills and those legacies of organizing and expanding them to everybody else. To give a lot of people who are feeling hopeless and angry, a place to come in and a place to put that frustration at anger to positive use, working with their neighbors, building trust building relationships at the community level.

I think that's without question. That is the only way we're going to effectively resist the Trump administration.

β€œBut also the only way we're going to effectively build power to I think rebuild the American political system to be more representative of the average American.”

And the way you've discussed this is revolutionary.

You have talked about wanting to completely break the system. We need a political revolution in this country. Bernie said it in 2016. It was right then. It remains right today.

I mean, I think structurally, our political system at this point, whether it's money, whether it's the way that are democratic. The way that our democratic systems have been kind of subsumed by corporate power, we need to change the structures of how this thing works. We're going to talk again and I'm interested in how you think about building power because you've talked a lot about your theory of power and what should happen once you have it. But that should be for another time. Okay.

Graham Platner, thank you very much. I really appreciate your time today.

Of course, thank you.

After the break, I talked to Graham again. I think well, Republicans and I would say corporate conservatism has very much developed a theory of power over the past 40 odd years. The Democratic Party developed a theory of management. And that is not sufficient. Hi, you're a regular listener of the Daily.

You like knowing what's going on in the world. Well, you could know way more if you subscribe to the New York Times. I'm Michael Simon Johnson. I'm one of the producers that makes the Daily. What we can cover on the show is really just a sliver of the incredible reporting that's being published every day in the New York Times.

Unexpected insightful articles you might never otherwise come across.

For me, that's this piece about how states legally classify butterflies.

β€œIt has to do with whether they're considered wildlife that's hard to explain, but it's fascinating and you should just read it.”

The Times obviously delivers the vital essential news of the day, much of which we cover on the Daily, but there is so much beyond that to explore. And yes, you support all of this journalism when you become a subscriber to the New York Times, but you also get to experience it. You get your curiosity fed. You get to know cool stuff and you get to be informed about what's going on in the world.

You can subscribe at nytime.com/subscribe. Hey! How are you? Good. I went in today's the first day of really voting.

Oh, exciting! So I went and voted the town office. What was it like to vote for yourself? Very weird. Very weird, deeply surreal.

Not a thing that I've ever pictured what happened. It's very strange seeing your name on an actual ballot. So I want to talk to you about your plans for the Senate if you are elected, because it is, as you well know, very hard to get things done in the Senate. And you've talked about Bernie Sanders a lot.

β€œAnd I think he's someone who has moved the party on ideology,”

but not necessarily on legislation. And you've exhorted voters in the past to elect people who want to wield power. And I just wondered what you think that means. What is this sort of philosophy of Graham Platter? The philosophy is that we don't have things that most of the American people want,

like universal healthcare, like a foreign policy that isn't just based around militarism. We don't have them not because we don't know what they are or not because we haven't been able to define their even right policy. There hasn't been the political will to make it reality. In the Senate, what we need is more numbers.

We need more people who are willing to vote for things like universal healthcare. And like, I've actually had a bit of a...

There's always been like a frustrating relationship with a lot of kind of the pundit class over the course of this campaign,

which is always this like, well, we've never got... It hasn't been able to get, say, Medicare for all. So why do you think we can get it now? And it's like, well, we're definitely never going to get it. If we elect people who don't want to get it.

I mean, that's kind of like where we... that seems fairly obvious to me.

β€œAnd so I think we need to very much look at the United States Senate as a place where we have to engage in a power building process,”

which is going to be electing more people who want to advocate vote for. But in many ways, also elevate the conversation around these things. You know, I kind of agree with you on Bernie. Bernie has been able to change the narrative and change ideology, but hasn't been able to move votes.

That's because he's one vote. At this point, we need to add to that. We need more.

I'm interested in this because I think one of the critiques of Democrats has always been that they're weak.

And that's from Democrats, right? Other Democrats are always complaining that Democrats lose their way, that they get power, they don't exercise it in the way that they should, et cetera, et cetera. I saw that you want to impeach members of the Supreme Court. Is that what you mean by wielding power, thinking action that's concrete, that is aggressive?

Yes, absolutely. I mean, that is, and by the way, I didn't, this is not just like my opinion. I mean, just an accurate reading of American history shows that this is the case. I'm going to use the example of FDR New Deal programs in the Supreme Court. You know, FDR implements a bunch of New Deal programs.

The Supreme Court says a lot of these might be unconstitutional.

We're going to rule that they're unconstitutional, and we're going to shut down the New Deal programs and progress.

β€œThen FDR, much to the Shagrin of his own party, I may add, threatens to pack the court.”

Suddenly, overnight, no change to the words in the policies. Everything became constitutional. No longer came up for a vote in front of the court. Power is more than just the words on the page. Power is something that needs to be wielded, used when you have it.

It's just rooted in historical reality. That when you look at American history, when you look at moments in which the nation was in crisis. And when large programs were necessary, when things needed to be protected, or when new things needed to be built. It wasn't enough to simply stay within the norms of the institutions as they had been built recently. You had to create new forms of power.

You had to use them.

And it's amazing to me that that very clear history has existed the whole time.

But I would say for the past, well, for the recent past anyways, the Democratic Party is not had a theory of power. I mean, the Republicans have certainly had a theory of power. Absolutely, which is why we have lost. I mean, when you run up against the theory of power and you don't have one of your own, you're going to lose every single time.

β€œI think, well, Republicans and I would say corporate conservatism has very much developed a theory of power over the past 40 odd years.”

The Democratic Party developed a theory of management. And that is not sufficient. Isn't your theory of power simply like the Republicans' theory of power, which is we will do the things that we want to do and that we need to do, regardless of whether the institutions or the history and niceties allow us to do it or not?

No, there's one major difference.

Like right now, the Trump administration breaks the law every single day. The Trump administration does not use funds have been appropriated by Congress by law. The Trump administration has started what I would call an unconstitutional war overseas in Iran. You know, there are the Trump administration has been sending ice out to terrorize American communities and murder American citizens with at this point no accountability. What I want to see is a creative use of constitutional power.

Let's talk about impeaching justices on the court. What I'm saying is we merely need to hold the court to the same ethics standards. We hold all other federal judges. I'm not saying we should break the law. What I'm actually saying is we should follow the better law.

The Senate could do this. The Senate has the power. The Congress has the power to hold the court to ethics standards if it's so chose to. And curious as someone who wants to be part of the Senate, how you view executive power. Because one of the things that we've seen obviously during this Trump administration is a real coalescing around executive power.

And in many ways that has allowed the Trump administration to really push the boundaries of what it can do. And Republicans might say do exactly what you're saying remake the country in the way that they want to see it remade.

β€œHow do you see that relationship between executive power and the power of the Senate and Congress with large?”

I firmly believe that certainly over the past 40 years. We have seen a coalescing of power in the executive branch that far outweighs what it was supposed to be in the constitution. You know George, George W. Bush, era, unitary executive theory. Much of course, which all comes out of the same people who were in the Reagan White House, who were all actually the same people who were in the Nixon White House. It's just a pretty pretty clear through line through all of that. And in to be honest though, we have to be clear that it wasn't merely Republican presidency's executive power was sometimes created among within executive president or Republican presidency.

But then it certainly wasn't diminished or given up when a follow on Democratic president wasn't placed. I mean Republicans would say President Obama was the prime example of that. And I think that that's an accurate critique or it's a fair critique. This nation was not set up to have a king that wasn't the point. This nation was supposed to be a representative democracy, a republic in which the House and the Senate are supposed to be actual actors in the governing of the nation.

We have seen that disappear for decades now. And what I very much want to see whether reasons I want to go to the United States Senate is a Senate and a House that reassert their power because what we have now, I mean, I don't think this is remotely in line with how the nation was supposed to be functioning.

Some of the reasons why it's not functioning, but over time we have just give...

And I very much believe that structurally these things need to change.

Yes, we want term limits term limits in the Supreme Court absolutely and and and term limits in the House and the Senate as well. But we need to see structural shifts so we can reassert and I mean a big one too as we need to have a new war powers act that really pulls war powers back from the executive and does not allow for what we currently have, which is the ability of the executive branch to begin wars. We claim that they aren't wars and then sometimes have them go on for years and years without a declaration of war.

By the way, I decipher because of that because I had to go fight and two of those versions.

Well, let me ask you this because you brought up the war powers act in conflict and we obviously talked about that a lot in our first conversation.

β€œHow should we deal with a hostile power with nuclear ambitions?”

I think on foreign policy we have to redefine what it is we want. I mean, it not even just recently, but really since the end of the Second World War, a lot of American foreign policy has not been around the elevation of the average American. I mean, the war in Vietnam, I'm not really sure what good that did for the average person in this country. Many of America's interventions in Latin America, they weren't really good for the average American in this country, they weren't good for workers, they weren't good for American families.

They often are very good for corporate interests, defense contractors, and people in places of political power who want to use war as a mechanism of protecting their political power.

β€œSo I think as you again though, what do you do with a hostile power with nuclear ambitions? How do you curtail and around how do you curtail for example?”

You engage in diplomacy like the JCPOA, which we hadn't placed until the Trump administration ripped it apart. I very much think the Biden administration should have brought it back, but that's what you do. You engage in robust diplomatic activity. That's how you do it. You do it as a mature nation that acts like a country that is trying to engage in a long-term project that is going to protect Americans, keep the world safe, and also keep us out of military conflicts. The Trump administration got rid of the JCPOA, which then reset the stage, and then now us and the Israelis, seemingly every couple years, have this idea that we have to keep Iran from having a nuclear weapon.

So we go and bomb things that we claimed just a year ago or less than a year ago, we bomb to destroy their nuclear weapons capability. You can't just keep doing that, and then expect to be taken seriously.

I want to pivot and talk a little bit about the race itself. Since we spoke, you dropped your first attack out against Susan Collins, and in it you say she is selling Maine out to the Epstein class.

β€œI mean, it's an angry ad. What are you channeling there?”

The anger of the average manor. People are angry. People are angry because they are looking at a system that does not represent their needs, their value or their will at all. They are seeing this country continued. I mean, let the war in Iran is a perfect example of this. We have now spent $50 billion, $50 billion in the war in Iran, a war that is uniquely unpopular with the American people. We're angry at a political system that doesn't reflect that in any way shape or form, and also seems to have not one ounce of power to slow it down. Look, things have gotten worse for working people in the state of Maine in the last 30 years.

Things got harder. So, you know, one of the things that you've said again about being a New Deal Democrat and the thing that I understand about that period is that it was about creating programs and spending money. And I'm just wondering, especially in the moment that we find ourselves spending money from where. Our debt has ballooned. Government spending is, you know, many of you, it is out of control and unsustainable. How are you going to find the money to do these very ambitious things like Medicare for all?

These are all very expensive things.

So, we just spent $50 billion in two months in the war in Iran. And I haven't heard a single question of where it came from.

β€œI am always amazed that this nation can just expend billions, trillions of dollars on wars that enrich the military industrial complex, protect people in power, and we never have to have a conversation about where the money came from.”

But the moment you say that Americans deserve to see housing costs come down or energy costs come down. The moment we have to talk about health care, suddenly we have to pull our pockets out and pretend like we're poppers. I just take issue with the framing, primarily because we have taken on an immense amount of debt, specifically over the past 30 years. I guess I'm asking, and people's taxes going to have to go up.

The answer is no, because we're going to go after the money where it went.

The reason this nation isn't immense amount of debt, and this is important to understand, is because we created lots of new public money. Put it out into the world where it went into a speculative financial system, where it has now been horded and invested in truly ridiculous things for a long time. The debt that this nation holds, it holds it because we made public funds, and we put them out not into the real world, not into programs that are going to uplift the average American, not into small businesses, not into small farms.

No, we put this money out in the form of fossil fuel subsidies, we put it out in the form of tax cuts for billionaires and for corporations, we put it out into massive amount of funding for the American military industrial complex. That's where the money is gone. The reason we have such debt, but we also have essentially a crumbling society, is because we have taken on that debt merely to enrich the already wealthy.

β€œWe didn't take on that debt to create new programs to elevate all of us as a nation. I think this is really important to understand.”

One of the reasons we will never be able to pay off our debt if we don't invest in making America more productive.

And the way that we make America more productive is by uplifting everybody in it to give them the opportunity to create and to produce and to consume. What's funny, people often talk about this, like it's some sort of left-wing fantasy. What I'm talking about is an actual functional market. What we have right now is a non-functioning market because essentially, all the money every single day, wealth and labor gets extracted out of working people and hoarded more and more and more in a part of the economy that doesn't do anything.

And we need to use the tax code to pull that money back. A few last questions, you know, I was thinking about your PTSD and our discussion around that. And I was thinking about your time in DC before that and how you discussed it being difficult and you being unhappy. I thought also a lot about John Fetterman. When I interviewed him, he talked about his mental health struggles that were brought on by the stroke. He talked about how lonely he was in DC. And you are an oyster farmer. You partly healed from your PTSD by being out on the sea in Maine.

Do you think this time will be different? Oh, of course. Oh, because I'd done no healing back then. I hadn't gone through any of the process. I mean, I came back and went straight to college in Washington and had done no therapy. I mean, really was on my own in many ways and isolated. Hence why I was deeply unhappy then. You know, now I'm going back down there with not just in a ray of tools because of years of therapy and years of kind of dealing with stuff, but also a community of people who who love me deeply and who I love deeply.

I've also spent a lot of time recently developing relationships with sitting senators. Relationships that I hope will go far beyond just the professional.

β€œBecause I think it's important to go to a place and to I want to be a functioning part of it.”

I don't I'm not trying to go to just be a pain in everyone's ass, which no offense to the senator from Pennsylvania, but that does to seem to be his primary goal these days. I want to go and create relationships and create a better future for Americans and for the people of Maine. And yeah, I mean, I feel just like I'm a different person now because of the time that I've spent the work that I've done, the tools that I have now. Yeah, I think it's going to be incredibly different. I saw this thing in the board that argued you have a chance of being the Democratic nominee for president in 2028.

I think it's indicative of people looking for a savior and radical change.

Yeah, I'm definitely not a savior, so.

β€œI mean, who do you want to actually lead the party?”

Don't you want to lead the party? I mean, I'll be out who I don't want are many of the people that have been doing it for years. I'll be up front people close with corporate power, people who often waffle on on positions often. I think people are second tired of that. I think people are happy to disagree with you as long as they know that you're who is that governor Gavin news like I'm just trying to understand from the people that we know that are out there who you like and who you don't like.

β€œI will be up. I am I very much like Roe Kana. I think he's done an excellent job and I've heard his name banning around a bunch on this on this topic.”

I think he has a much like myself a connection to the past in understanding that new deal error programs are going to be necessary to meet the challenges of the moment of the future.

And I think that he, he also is interested in long-term industrial policy, which I am as well. It's something this nation really needs to get back to doing. But I also think that I wouldn't be surprised if the person we see in 2028 we haven't even started talking about yet.

β€œI'll be up front. I think that that people are looking for radical change and I don't know where exactly that's going to come from.”

But I'm relatively convinced that we're going to be talking about names next year and the year after in relation to the 2028 presidential race that right now just aren't even on the radar. I think we're in for a generational shift in American politics and it's coming quickly. Graham Platner, thank you so much for your time. I really enjoyed this. Thank you, Luke. I really appreciate it. That's Graham Platner. To watch this interview and many others, you can subscribe to our YouTube channel at youtube.com/@symbolTheInterviewPodcast.

This conversation was produced by Seth Kelly. It was edited by John Wu, mixing by Sophia Landman, original music by Dan Powell, Rowan Nemisto, and Marion Lesano. Photography by Philip Montgomery. The rest of the team is Priya Matthew, Wyatt Orm, Paola Newdorf, Joe Bilmonios, Eddie Costas, Kathleen O'Brien, and Brooke Mentors. Our executive producer is Allison Benedict. Next week David speaks with actor Nicholas Cage.

Amazing how much time I spent in the backyard without anybody checking on me. I started digging a hole and I kept digging and digging and digging and digging and nobody found the hole.

I had a shovel like a digging and I saw roots and I saw weird bugs and I kept digging and digging and someone finally said, "You see what Nicky's doing?" "Oh my god, look at the size of this hole." I'm Luke Orm, and this is the interview from The New York Times.

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