đ° Full Story
Maine Governor Janet Mills on April 30, 2026, suspended her campaign for the U.S. Senate, citing insufficient financial resources and effectively clearing the way for progressive newcomer Graham Platner to become the presumptive Democratic nominee to challenge five-term Republican Sen.
Susan Collins in November.
Mills, 78, had been recruited and backed by Senate Democrats including Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and the DSCC, but struggled to match Platnerâs grassroots momentum and fundraising; Platner raised roughly $4 million early in 2026 and led Mills by wide margins in recent polls.
Platner has secured endorsements from progressive figures such as Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren but has faced scrutiny over past inflammatory online posts and a chest tattoo critics say resembled a Nazi symbol, which he has since covered and disavowed.
Maine â a swing state where Democrats see a path to pick up a seat critical to their hopes of regaining Senate control â will hold its Democratic primary on June 9; Mills said she will remain governor and did not endorse a replacement in her announcement.
đ Based On
CBS NewsJanet Mills Ends Senate Campaign
NBC News Top StoriesMaine Gov. Janet Mills suspends Senate campaign
đ¤ Social Media Insights
Social Summary
Past Maine races show incumbency and split-ticket behavior can overcome polling and fundraising deficits. That precedent implies Platnerâs grassroots lead, while significant, may not ensure a November win and the general election outcome remains uncertain.





đŹ Commentary