Arms are of little value in the field unless there is wise counsel at home.
- Cicero
This week's featured post is "Graham Platner's exit, and the debate it leads to".
Ongoing stories
- Trump's assault on American democracy. He has used the new powers the Supreme Court gave him to get rid of everyone on the Election Assistance Commission, which used to be bipartisan. The EAC mostly advises states on election practices, but has no power to force them to comply.
- Climate change. Ocean surface temperatures are now higher than they've ever been. And Pacific gray whales are dying out, probably because lost sea ice in Alaska is wrecking their food supply.
- Iran. The war seems to be back on. Traffic in the Strait of Hormuz is down. Oil prices are up. It's still not clear what objectives our air attacks are supposed to accomplish. Trump's various stated goals -- opening the Strait, ending Iran's nuclear program, regime change, etc. -- require either a negotiation that offers Iran things or a ground invasion. He doesn't want to do either. So we'll pointlessly destroy things again for a while.
- Ukraine. Phillips O'Brien's weekend update makes three points: Ukrainian missile attacks are shutting down Russian shipping in the Sea of Azov, isolating Crimea. Attacks on Russian oil refineries are still rising, creating gas shortages in Russia. Trump has begun making Ukraine-friendly noises, but his actions still support Putin.
This week's developments
This week everybody was talking about Graham Platner

Platner leaving the race and the process for replacing him are covered in the featured post. A few points that didn't fit in that article:
In choosing a new candidate, Maine Democrats shouldn't forget what made Platner attractive to begin with. Sebastian Junger explains.
I had breakfast with Platner two months ago - shortly before a blizzard of lesser accusations by other women - and was impressed by his taste for economic and political reform. His view that the political and economic systems of this country are designed to benefit elites resonated with me. It’s been a long time since Democrats had a candidate who worked with his hands, has been to war and wanted to overthrow the economic elite, and that was clearly something Mainers voters were waiting for: He won the Maine Democratic primary by a landslide. ... Meanwhile, it’s vitally important to continue upholding the kind of anti-war, anti-corruption, anti-corporatist platform that Platner so brilliantly articulated. His is a strain of American populism that goes back more than a century and could just as easily fit a Democratic candidate as a Republican one. A lot of things can be extracted from Platner’s painful implosion, but perhaps the most important is the realization that most Americans crave economic justice. Our society has created a small number of grotesquely wealthy people, but we are somehow all discouraged from discussing that with our political adversaries. Platner’s brilliance was that he did not see that boundary; he saw no boundary except the one between the vast majority of decent, hardworking people and the political elites.
Whoever runs against Susan Collins can't afford to lose sight of this: Collins is the candidate of the billionaires. The Maine Monitor has identified 97 billionaires and billionaire-spouses who collectively have donated $9.8 million to re-elect Collins. So far. If polls look close as we get into the fall campaign, expect the money spigots to open wide.
An attitude that seems completely wrong-headed to me is epitomized by what Neera Tanden posted to X:
People who got us into this mess - who vouched for this candidate after 3 different scandals and kept telling us there were going to be no more - may want to take a break from Maine strategizing.
This seems like a good way to get Platner's voters to stay home in November, sending Collins back to the Senate for another six years. Whatever you think of Platner's behavior in his personal life, he won the primary. Maine voters endorsed his message. The ideal replacement, I think, would be somebody who can authentically carry that message into the fall campaign without also carrying Platner's personal baggage.
One thing Platner's withdrawal points out is that Democrats are expected to live by higher moral standards than Republicans. Kevin McCarthy tried to make the opposite claim on Fox News (in the last 15 seconds of his interview), producing a clip that I think Democrats shared far more than Republicans. Referencing when Matt Gates was nominated to be attorney general after being accused of sex with an underage girl, McCarthy said:
The one thing I know about Republicans: When we had a very bad candidate and found out, we walked away from that person.
Of course, their party is led by a guy who has been accused of sexual offenses by more than two dozen women. Two different juries in New York found it more likely than not that he was lying when he denied raping E. Jean Carroll.
Walk away from Trump, Kevin. Then we can talk.
Adam Kinzinger remembers other cases, like Roy Moore in Alabama, who Trump and the Party stuck with all the way into the November election after we found out that he repeatedly tried to pick up underage girls at the mall.
The billionaire-agenda Washington Post lends its spotlight to a "brave" Democrat who criticizes his party.
“The Party’s gaze has drifted beyond the basic needs … and has settled on a culture war that includes gender identity, racial quotas, DEI, and bathrooms,” [former South Carolina Rep. Joe Cunningham] wrote. “It has cost them swaths of voters who may never come back.”
He points out that a tiny percentage of people are transgender and asks what percentage of those want to play sports. Victory for a minuscule slice of the population may fill the virtue cup, but it’s not a win for the country.
Which party has been focusing on gender identity and bathrooms? Late in the 2024 campaign, that was virtually all Republicans talked about. You remember: "Harris is for they/them. Trump is for you."
If Democrats want to abandon trans rights, they can't just stop talking about it. Harris did that. To get credit on this, Democrats will have to actively target people with gender issues. It's kind of like junior high, when you try to join the popular crowd by helping them bully somebody even less popular than you.
Do Democrats really want to go there?
and another ICE murder
As I'm writing this morning, I'm seeing reports of ICE being involved in another killing in Biddeford, Maine. I don't do breaking news, so it's too soon for me to say more.
Tuesday, an ICE agent shot and killed Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, a Mexican national who had been living in the US for 35 years. He had no criminal record, ran a small construction business, and sent his three sons to college. He was driving a van at the time, so ICE claims he was trying to run over the agent -- which is what they always claim when they shoot someone in a vehicle. They were lying when they said it about Renee Good and Marimar Martinez and Ruben Ray Martinez, so there's no reason to believe them now.
Three of his workers were in the vehicle at the time. They are all in ICE custody and reportedly are being pressured to self-deport. Through their attorney, all deny the ICE account. The agents, they say, were shooting from the sides of the vehicle, and no agent was in front. None of the agents were wearing body cameras.
The Mexican government is beginning to get pissed off.
Foreign Minister Roberto Velasco said Mexico has recorded 17 deaths of Mexican nationals linked to ICE since the start of the current U.S. immigration crackdown: 14 in detention centers and three during enforcement operations, including Salgado Araujo.
Sheinbaum said her government would no longer rely solely on diplomatic protest notes. "We are going to do everything in our power," she said, adding that Mexico could not fail to act in response to the deaths of Mexicans during ICE enforcement operations or in detention centers run by private companies contracted by ICE. She said Mexico would continue providing consular support to families and detainees, especially Mexicans "whose only crime is working honestly in the United States."
BBC reports:
Salgado Araujo is at least the eighth person to die during the Trump administration's immigration operations, according to the Associated Press. No immigration officers have been charged in the deaths.
Of course not. Under Trump, ICE thugs have license to kill. In the cases of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, the murder was on video. The murderers have suffered no consequences and are still at large.
ICE not only employs murderous thugs, it is also extremely thin-skinned -- another characteristic of a totalitarian force like the Gestapo or the KGB.
David Streever is a US citizen from Rochester, NY. After ICE murdered Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, Streever sent a critical email to Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons. The subject line was "What's Next?" and its full content is this:
You are a monstrous human being and will go down in history as America's Reinhard Heydrich, the butcher.
The way you are protecting the obvious execution in Minnesota, even as we see the videos, will lead to your downfall. Even Trump will turn on you before the end, and you will be a sad, despised man who eats himself alive with shame at your own pathetic weakness.
You will never know peace. You will seek to lose yourself, to escape the burden of knowing the truth about yourself. But wherever you go, you will find yourself. You will torment yourself until your last day on Earth.
DHS decided this email was a "threat". (To do what?) It sent two agents to Streever's home to deliver an official warning notice that his email may be in violation of federal law, and that he should "discontinue the aforementioned behavior". He wasn't there, and his wife (an Episcopal priest) arrived home to find the agents on her porch. DHS then tracked Streever and his seven-year-old daughter to a hotel in New York City, where they were staying after flying in from Finland. The hotel wouldn't let the agents go to his room, so an agent left a card.
He is now suing DHS. The suit alleges:
Streever fears, as any objectively reasonable person would, that if he continues to engage in expression sharing his views about and to government officials, he will be subject to further coercive activity and retaliatory acts, including through issuance of further “WARNING NOTICE” demands, surveillance, unwelcome visits from federal police, and continued threat of arrest and/or prosecution.
He is asking for reimbursement of his legal fees and an injunction blocking any further harassment as he exercises his constitutional right to criticize the government.
and Mitch McConnell
Yesterday, Mitch McConnell's office released a statement and a photo of the senator in a hospital bed.
McConnell, 84, said in a statement that he was “briefly unconscious” around the time he was first taken to the hospital and has undergone a battery of tests to try and determine what led to his fall. He said he was also treated for mild pneumonia and has been moved to a rehabilitation facility.
“My doctors have confirmed that I didn’t break any bones or suffer a concussion. I didn’t have a heart attack or a stroke. I don’t have any tumors or hemorrhages,” McConnell said, adding that he is now “regaining my strength.”
This came in response to conflicting claims that he was alive or dead or existing in some machine-driven state in between. Many commentators seem to be assuming we have heard the last from him, and so are summing up in the way we do when someone important dies.
Here's my contribution: When this fascist era is over in America, whether that happens soon or decades hence, historians will focus on three main villains:
- Trump, obviously, as the personality at the center of the fascist personality cult;
- John Roberts, who ran roughshod over the Constitution to enable Trump's power grabs and protect him from accountability under the law;
- Mitch McConnell, who played hardball to get Roberts a conservative majority on the Court, and who protected Trump during his two impeachments, when it was still possible to head off the decisive turn towards fascism in Trump's second term.
While we're on this subject of senators dying, Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina died unexpectedly Saturday night. He was 71.
Josh Marshall sums him up:
Graham was a natural follower. He needed a top dog, a daddy figure he could arrange himself around.
The recent Trump-following Graham had little in common with the John McCain-following Graham that preceded him. If Lindsey had any core beliefs, I never figured out what they were.
Democrats are bending over backwards to say good things about Lindsey, in accordance with the old rules that Republicans abandoned long ago. Adam Schiff, for example:
He had ... a wonderful sense of humor that he used to cut through the tension.
By contrast, what I remember about Senator Graham is his snarling defense of Brett Kavanaugh. It was such a blatant expression of male privilege. If Diane Feinstein had responded with the same level of anger, she'd have been roasted as an unhinged women.
and you also might be interested in ...

Remember the airliner that Qatar's royal family bribed Trump with? Well, it's Air Force One now, sort of.
Wednesday, though, as Trump was leaving the Ankara NATO summit, he flew in the old Air Force One because of "security concerns". Apparently the hundreds of millions taxpayers have spent to retrofit the bribe jet wasn't sufficient.
Like the no-bid contractors who screwed up the reflecting pool, this story pulls together the two main aspects of the Trump administration: corruption and incompetence.

West Virginia voters are getting what they voted for: 70% of them voted for Trump in 2024, and he carried every county. Now, thanks to the Trump's Big Beautiful Bill, 14,000 West Virginians have lost food assistance, and the state will have to come up with an additional $27 million to fund SNAP benefits next year.
I mean, somebody had to pay for those billionaires' tax cuts. Sadly, though, West Virginia appears to have no billionaires. Forbes identified the richest West Virginian in 2025 as Intuit's Brad Smith, clocking in around $900 million.

and let's close with something derivative
What if they based a sitcom on Marco Rubio?















