People Like Us!
A while ago, I surmised that Graham Platner was never actually vetted; it was enough that he was People Like Us, preppie, Ivy-adjacent trustfunders. A detailed piece in the Washington Free Beacon profiles two of the talent scouts who promoted Platner, Morris Katz and Daniel Moraff.
Katz, 27, became a bona fide Beltway celebrity after helping Zohran Mamdani defeat a profoundly unpopular sex pest in the New York City mayoral election. He helped recruit Platner to run in Maine, and made a slickly produced launch video of the unemployed business owner cosplaying as a working-class everyman.
"Like Mr. Mamdani, Mr. Katz is a child of the New York cultural elite, but is fluent in the anti-elite language of progressive populism," the New York Times wrote earlier this year in a profile headlined, "He's 26 and Ready to Fix the Democrats' Strategy."
Like Platner, Katz is a child of privilege who abhors capitalism, functioning societies, and opponents of terrorism. His great-grandfather "made a fortune in hosiery," the Times reports. His grandfather, Harry Jay Katz, was a notorious libertine described as a "playboy prince of darkness" with a "multi-million dollar trust fund." He claimed to have slept with 4,000 women, and ran a vanity publication whose poetry editor, Ira Einhorn, would go on to be known as the "Unicorn Killer" after murdering his ex-girlfriend in 1977.
. . . A left-wing activist with degrees from Brown and Yale, Moraff is the "mad scientist" who helped recruit Platner because he wanted Democrats to nominate "real human beings" who oppose Israel and capitalism. He is the grandson of Seymour Ginsburg, who founded the predecessor to Toys "R" Us and served as the toy chain's first president.
. . . Moraff, 34, reportedly likened Platner to Barack Obama in the early days of the campaign, and didn't bother to subject the candidate to a normal vetting process—an ill-advised decision, in retrospect. Along with his business partner and fiancée, Leanne Fan, Moraff was convinced that Platner was a "historic figure" destined to lead a "revolution."
. . . On Friday, we learned that Moraff and Platner had more in common than anyone dared to imagine. While living off his family wealth and "working" on Democratic campaigns in the Pittsburgh area, Moraff developed a reputation as "the most hated staffer in the region."
In 2022, Moraff was banished from congresswoman Summer Lee's (D., Pa.) campaign after multiple women accused him of sexual misconduct. "None of his current embroilment really surprises me because he doesn't have boundaries with women, nor much of an ethical code," a former Pittsburgh organizer told Payday Report.
So there we are, everyone is a member of a tiny club, no other vetting required. The current front runner to replace Platner is in a similar mold, a blue-collar-seeming manly man with a problematic past:
Maine Democrats are so desperate to replace accused rapist Graham Platner with another rugged “working-class hero” type that the left wing has thrown its support behind an Allagash logger — despite a past that’s anything but progressive.
. . . Troy Jackson, a fifth-generation logger and longtime union member who served as president of the Maine Senate from 2018 to 2024, looks like the natural successor to Platner — at least on the surface.
. . . Jackson, 58, campaigned with both Platner and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) on the “Fighting the Oligarchy” tour at the University of Maine in May. He is a longtime ally of the Vermont socialist, having been one of the few Democratic National Committee superdelegates to endorse him over Hillary Clinton in 2016.
This week, the political organization founded by Sanders after his unsuccessful 2016 presidential run, Our Revolution, said it was throwing its “full organizing machine” behind Jackson’s Senate bid, stating he “spent his life in the fight working people are asking for.”
. . . In fact, Jackson launched his career as a Republican when he first ran for the Maine legislature in 2000. After losing, he tried again in 2002, but as an Independent. In 2004, he morphed again and became a Dem.
But even after that, some of his positions remained very much right of center. In 2009, he voted against same-sex marriage in the Maine Senate and has long thought abortion should be illegal except in cases of rape or incest — even when the mother’s life is in danger.
In 2011, he voted for a state bill that would have declared a fetus a person and in 2013, for mandatory abortion-counseling legislation.
Jackson apparently has his own problems with women:
A progressive advocacy group on Tuesday accused former Maine Senate President Troy Jackson of striking a female colleague with a bottle he threw during a state Senate caucus dispute years ago, complicating his emergence as the leading Democrat contender to replace Graham Platner on the November ballot against Republican Sen. Susan Collins.
. . . In a post on X, the group said Jackson, "in a heated disagreement, struck a female colleague with a bottle he threw at her" during a caucus meeting when he served as Senate president, and it described the episode as "a widespread open secret" in Maine politics that was "not an isolated incident."
At about 3:00 in the video embedded above, Mark Halperin and his guests roast the top three of roughly a dozen potential replacements for Platner, deriding them as "top tier" and the "crème de la crème" -- "These are the A team that's gonna do the impossible task of beating an incumbent senator, Susan Collins, in less than 100 days." Discussing the incongruous background music in Troy Jackson's announcement video, Halperin says, "You wouldn't put that in a deodorant ad. That's the music they play when you're in a sleep study, and they're tryng to put you to sleep."A guest says, "The bigger problem in the video is he's talking to voters, but voters aren't gonna have a say in this, so who cares?" Halperin concludes,
You're gonna have to be a major leaguer to beat Susan Collins. And these peopole aren't even talking about, like, AI or China. And the Collins people are sitting back and laughing at all this. Their view of theae videos matches, at least, my own. . . . It's gonna take so much to raise the money, to do everything you need to do, and first they gotta win the nomination. . . . Here's the dynamic I'm going to predict. These candidates are not interesting. Platner is notr gonna go away, and reporters are going to ask all these candidates, for a good long while, "What did you think of Platner? Why didn't you abandon Platner sooner?"
But the informed consensus seems to be that the Democrat establishment unleashed the rape allegation when it did to get Platner off the ticket in time to replace him, because he was already losing to Collins in the polls -- but they did it without a clear replacement. Who can they find who can outperform Platner against Collins?


