Opinion
The
Editorial Board
The
Democrats Can’t Go On Like This
July 8,
2026
By The Editorial Board
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/08/opinion/graham-platner-suspends-campaign-democrats-lessons.html
The
editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by
expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate
from the newsroom.
Graham
Platner is out. Just months ago, the oyster farmer and Marine combat veteran
looked like the answer to the question Democrats keep asking themselves: Where
are the candidates who can excite people? Mr. Platner, running in Maine for the
U.S. Senate, drew crowds most politicians only fantasize about, won Bernie
Sanders’s endorsement and, after Gov. Janet Mills suspended her own campaign,
pulled even the reluctant party establishment in behind him. Now he has
suspended his campaign, brought down by an allegation of rape, which he denies,
that landed atop months of damaging revelations.
Maine
Democrats are scrambling to field a replacement before the state’s deadline
late this month, leaving in peril a seat that is key to their chance of
flipping the Senate. It’s tempting to treat this as a story of one flawed man
and a vetting process that failed. There is truth in that, and the party should
absorb the obvious lesson about scrutinizing candidates before it pours itself
into them. But the more uncomfortable lesson is the one that the Platner boom
offered before the bust. The hunger that lifted him — the overflow crowds, the
volunteer armies, the sense that here, at last, was someone who meant it — was
real. It was also a hunger the party keeps trying to satisfy with a personality
instead of a purpose.
Let’s
concede what is true in the case for candidates like Mr. Platner. Democrats do
need fresh, charismatic, younger contenders, and they should stop treating the
next name in line as an entitlement. A party is strongest when it is a
genuinely big tent, willing to host real disagreement rather than enforce a
single approved script. Voters can tell the difference between a coalition and
a focus group, and they are drawn to the former.
But a big
tent is only worth pitching if something is argued inside it, and that is
precisely what this midterm cycle has lacked. Handed the chance to litigate
what the party actually believes, Democrats have mostly declined. What is the
party’s answer on immigration, moving beyond its proper outrage at President
Trump’s methods to include an affirmative account of who should be allowed in
and how? What would it do about the cost of housing, beyond lamenting it and
suggesting inadequate fixes? What does it want from the public education
system? What is its response to the disruption that artificial intelligence is
about to send through the work force and society more broadly?
On each
of these issues, voters keep saying the same thing: They want change, they want
action and they are tired of being managed. The discontent reaches the party’s
own base. In Associated Press-NORC surveys, many Democrats have described their
party as weak or ineffective, and by early this year only about seven in 10
still viewed it positively, well below where it once stood. Among all voters,
the party’s favorability rating is below 40 percent.
One sign
of the party’s dysfunction came in May, when the Democratic National Committee
released an embarrassing autopsy on the party’s presidential loss in 2024.
Instead of offering honest reflections and a vision for the future, the report
resembled an incomplete homework assignment, filled with notes like, “This
section was not provided by author.” It was another missed chance to chart a
new path.
The
party’s private answer, too often, seems to be that Washington is broken and
therefore nothing can be done. Why stage a fight over specifics that will only
expose divisions? But that gets the task exactly backward. If Democrats believe
government can still work, the way to prove it is to say, concretely, what they
would do with power. Refusing to say doesn’t make the party look unified. It
makes it look as if it has nothing to say, and it surrenders the language of
change to the other side, which is only too happy to claim it.
This is
the deeper reason the Platner phenomenon should unsettle Democrats. Mr.
Platner’s appeal was never really about oysters or facial hair. It was that he
seemed to stand for something. He was angry on voters’ behalf about an economy
that seems rigged for the powerful, and he was unafraid to say so. People
responded to the promise of conviction. That signal is the one the party ought
to be reading. The tragedy of a campaign like his is not only that it
collapsed, as it deserved to, but that so much energy was poured into a
messenger before anyone was sure of the message.
Maine
will choose someone else, and may yet field a candidate who can take the seat.
But Democrats nationally should resist the comforting conclusion that their
problem was simply the wrong man. The next charismatic outsider will struggle
to succeed if there is nothing solid beneath the charisma. Personality is not a
platform. A fighting posture is not a program.
What the
party owes voters this year is not another savior but a set of answers — plain,
specific, sometimes divisive answers to the questions constituents are asking
to improve their lives. That is how you convince someone that you are
listening: not only by hunting for a better messenger, but also by finally
having something to say. Right now, too much of the Democratic Party’s identity
is defined by what it stands against. The trouble in Maine goes beyond a single
candidate. It is a party still hoping a contender will spare it the harder work
of deciding what it stands for.


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