Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Maine voters go to the polls as scandal-plagued Graham Platner looks to advance in Democratic Senate primary – US politics live

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Controversy-plagued Graham Platner looks to advance in Maine Democratic Senate primary

David Smith

David Smith

Greetings from Bangor, Maine, where voters are going to the polls for primary elections that include a crucial Senate race involving the scandal-haunted Graham Platner.

The oysterman and Marine veteran’s string of controversies, ranging from alleged “toxic” behaviour towards women to a tattoo recognised as a Nazi symbol, have plunged Democrats into debates about double standards, purity tests and not letting the perfect be the enemy of the good.

There was a final twist yesterday when Genevieve McDonald, a former political director of Platner’s campaign, published a column denouncing Platner as unfit for office.

“Graham Platner is not someone who would be good for Maine or for the country,” McDonald wrote in the Washington Post. “He exhibits a pattern of dishonest behavior that is impossible to ignore.

“Despite being exposed by a series of scandals beginning last October, he kept assuring voters and the Democratic Party that there were no more skeletons in his closet. Then more emerged – the latest, in recent days, have involved former girlfriends’ serious accusations of physical mistreatment.”

Even so, all the signs on the ground are that most Democratic voters are sticking with Platner. At a campaign event on Sunday, a supporter presented him with a hand-drawn card that included the message “we’ve got your back”.

Polls close at 8pm ET.

Scandal-haunted Graham Platner speaks at a campaign event on Sunday in Portland, Maine.
Scandal-haunted Graham Platner speaks at a campaign event on Sunday in Portland, Maine. Photograph: Robert F Bukaty/AP
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Jeffrey Epstein assistant Lesley Groff testifies before House panel

Anna Betts

Anna Betts

Lesley Groff, Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime executive assistant, is testifying today before the House oversight and reform committee as lawmakers on the panel continue their investigation into the late convicted sex offender.

Groff worked for Epstein for almost 20 years, beginning in 2001 and ending in July 2019 when he was arrested.

Representative Robert Garcia, the top Democrat on the House committee, told Good Morning America this week that Groff is “really central to Epstein’s organization, we want to know what she saw”.

“We have a lot of questions,” Garcia added.

Lesley Groff, longtime executive assistant to Jeffrey Epstein, arrives for a behind-closed-doors transcribed interview before the House oversight committee. Photograph: Annabelle Gordon/Reuters

Notes from a 2021 FBI interview with Groff, which was included in the millions of documents related to Epstein released by the Department of Justice earlier this year, state that she told agents that she began working for Epstein after she was contacted by a headhunter, who found her résumé and told her that there “was a job to organize one man’s life”.

The man turned out to be Epstein, and Groff told agents that she had not previously heard of him. She said that she interviewed with several people for the position, including Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s longtime associate who is currently serving a 20-year prison sentence for sex-trafficking crimes. According to the FBI document, Groff said that she signed a non-disclosure agreement.

The document states that Groff told agents her responsibilities included scheduling meetings, making phone calls, coordinating with Epstein’s driver and chef and other people, and managing much of his daily schedule and appointments.

According to the FBI notes, Groff told investigators that “from the beginning, massage was a part of Epstein’s day; they were normal appointments” .

“Groff’s job was to make appointments” the FBI notes say. “To Groff, making massage appointments was just another appointment she had to make for Epstein,” adding that Epstein would call Groff “in the morning and say something like, ‘Call and see if she can do a massage at 4.’”

Representative Yassamin Ansari, another Democrat on the committee, told CNN this week ahead of her testimony that Groff “managed every aspect of Jeffrey’s life for around 18 years” and noted that Groff was mentioned in the Epstein files “more than pretty much anybody else”.

“And she was the one setting up appointments with all of these girls to provide massages to Jeffrey Epstein,” Ansari said. “I wanna know everything that she has to share.”

In recent years, Groff has faced public scrutiny after it emerged that she was among four women identified as possible “co-conspirators” and granted immunity from prosecution under Epstein’s controversial 2007 plea deal with federal prosecutors in Florida. Groff, through lawyers, has always maintained that she had no knowledge of Epstein’s crimes, and that she never engaged in any misconduct. No criminal charges have ever been brought against her.

When asked last month about Groff’s knowledge of details surrounding Epstein’s 2008 conviction, her attorney Michael Bachner told the Guardian that “after Epstein’s arrest in 2008, he continuously lied to Lesley and other members of the staff, insisting that he had been blackmailed and set up.”

Bachner added that Epstein “angrily said that the allegations against him were simply false, and he had no idea that the ‘prostitute’ he had contact with was a minor”, adding that “in Lesley’s mind, that was the reason that he was treated so leniently by law enforcement before and after he was sentenced.”

Here’s Anna’s full report:

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