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.

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.

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:
Speaking of JD Vance, the vice-president is pressing federal prosecutors to investigate Minnesota’s Democratic governor Tim Walz and state attorney general Keith Ellison over allegations that they failed to stop widespread social services fraud, amplifying concerns that the White House will use a new DOJ division to target political rivals.
Vance, who has been tapped to lead the Trump administration’s anti-fraud efforts, cited a letter to the justice department a report from the Republican-led House oversight committee that alleges Walz and Ellison were aware of, failed to prevent, and enabled pervasive misuse of government programs for years.
In his referral, Vance wrote that officials in Minnesota or anywhere else in the country “must be held accountable” if they facilitated fraud, prevented officials from stopping it or retaliated against whistleblowers who tried to report it.
“Minnesota state officials are not above the law,” Vance wrote in a post on X.
Democratic Minnesota officials have characterized a separate DOJ investigation involving state leaders as politically motivated.
A spokesperson for Walz didn’t immediately respond to a message from the Associated Press seeking comment.
Ellison called the allegations unfounded and said there’s no evidence his office ignored wrongdoing or failed to act as required by law. He dismissed Vance’s referral as “a political stunt from an administration that uses the machinery of government to target its perceived opponents while extending leniency to those aligned with its interests”.
It is deeply troubling to see official powers and public resources diverted away from serving the people and instead aimed at pursuing political adversaries. That is not what government is for, and it diminishes public trust in our institutions.
Vance’s referral to the justice department’s new National Fraud Enforcement Division marks an escalation in the Trump administration’s stated “war on fraud” in government programs that officials have said would not be political or partisan.
The new division has drawn intense scrutiny over the potential for political influence given its close relationship with the White House, which announced its formation in January and initially said its leader would answer directly to the president instead of the typical DOJ command.
With the Associated Press.
Vice-president JD Vance has added a chicken coop to his residence at the US Naval Observatory, the Daily Wire reports, along with a dozen baby chicks whose new henhouse is designed to look like the Victorian home where the second family lives.
The coop was built without taxpayer money, a person familiar with the project told the Associated Press. The residence hosted a family event over the weekend where local 4-H students taught other kids about the newly installed coup, the person said.
Vice-presidents since 1977 have lived on the grounds of the 72-acre property, with many leaving their own imprint. Joe Biden added a heritage garden, Mike Pence’s wife, Karen, contributed beehives, and Kamala Harris’ updates included pink wallpaper in the house’s library. A heated swimming pool on the property was added by Dan Quayle in 1991.
The House is set to vote today on the GOP $70bn bill to fund Donald Trump’s aggressive immigration enforcement agenda for the remainder of his term.
The House will first have to adopt a procedural rule for consideration of the bill during a series of votes starting at 1.30pm ET. If it is adopted, final passage would take place at a 4.30pm vote series.
It comes days after the Senate passed the legislation 52-47, following a marathon session of votes to knock down proposed amendments – including those seeking to outlaw the Trump’s administration’s “anti-weaponization” fund – as GOP leaders scrambled to prevent the derailment of the wider funding package. Only one Senate Republican, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, voted against it.
Lawmakers are using budget reconciliation to pass the bill, which requires only a simple majority. House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries said yesterday that Democrats will be a “hard no” on the legislation.
“We believe that taxpayer dollars should be used to make life more affordable for the American people, not give ICE another $70bn blank check so they can unleash brutality on American citizens and violently target law-abiding immigrant communities,” he said in a statement. “House Democrats will be a hard no on the reckless Republican budget reconciliation bill this week.”
As you will remember, Democrats have been demanding restraints and accountability measures for ICE and CBP since the fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis earlier this year.
The funding would be used to hire and equip more immigration enforcement agents, ramp up deportations and detentions, and upgrade border security.
in Bangor, Maine
Graham Platner has some vocal supporters. I spoke to Tim Fullerton, a Democratic strategist born and raised in Maine who is now cofounder and chief executive of Find Out Media. Fullerton interviewed Platner on his podcast last year.
“I find him to be somebody that is willing to own up to past mistakes and acknowledges wrongdoing in his past, which is something this president [Donald Trump] has never done,” Fullerton said. “He truly cares about people and he has changed and so Mainers are willing to give him the benefit of the doubt.”
Voters in Maine have an independent streak and are frustrated with do-nothing Washington, Fullerton added, so are unlikely to heed advice from the Democratic establishment.
“The best way to make sure that a Mainer does the opposite of what you want is for somebody from outside of the state to tell them to do something. When you live in a rural state, basically at the end of the country, having somebody in DC in a suit tell you what’s best for you is never going to work particularly well, because those people have never lived the experience of Mainers.
“Graham lives in Sullivan, which is a very small place, and has worked the water, which in Maine is a very big and critical part of the economy there. People in Maine also know lots of people similar to Graham and so they are willing to hear him talk about how he has grown and understand nobody’s perfect. Mainers are not the ones that like the type of candidates that look like they have wanted to run for office since they were eight years old. We all know who those people are.”
Fullerton continued: “They like that he’s a bit gruff. He volunteered to serve his country and experienced some damage and people understand it. People up there know him, vouch for him and see him doing the work that is necessary to make up for some past wrongs.”
In case you missed it last night, here’s Donald Trump being loudly booed when he was shown on the video screens at Madison Square Garden before Game 3 of the NBA finals between the San Antonio Spurs and New York Knicks.
The president was shown on the jumbotron while the Star-Spangled Banner was being sung before the game, and jeers and boos broke out around the arena. Trump was shown for a little over eight seconds and held a salute the whole time with a smile on his face. A few seconds later, the video board showed Knicks players in line and the boos turned to cheers.
Trump, a longtime Knicks fan, attended as the guest of the team owner, James Dolan, as New York hosted its first NBA finals game since 1999. The president entered the arena amid a heavy security presence, and watched the game from the owner’s box above center court, while Secret Service personnel commandeered the neighbouring suites on either side.
Also in the box were Dolan, interior secretary Doug Burgum, transportation secretary Sean Duffy and Trump’s granddaughter Kai.
Later in the game, which the Knicks lost 115-111, Trump appeared to fall asleep.
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.
Hospitality and food service workers in several US cities hosting World Cup games are warning of looming labor disputes and possible strikes as the largest single sport tournament in the world gets ready to kick off on 11 June.
In Los Angeles, California, about 2,000 workers at SoFi Stadium represented by Unite Here Local 11 voted 96% in favor of a strike authorization as workers are seeking a new union contract with wage increases and protections from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Cashiers, dishwashers, cooks, bartenders, concessions workers and food attendants at the stadium, could walk off the job at any time. The US’s opening match, against Paraguay, is scheduled to take place at SoFi Stadium on 12 June.
“We’re just trying to make things fair,” said Eva Miles, a bartender at SoFi stadium since it opened in 2021. “Without us, they don’t have a stadium. Are they going to cook? Are they going to pour those drinks? Are they going to serve these people?”
Few Americans would abandon their party’s candidate over controversies such as Democrat Graham Platner’s Nazi-linked tattoo in Maine or Republican Ken Paxton’s fraud indictment in Texas, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll, highlighting deep partisan divides that make winning paramount.
Two-thirds of party-aligned respondents said they sometimes have to vote for a candidate they don’t like just to stop the other party from winning power, according to the six-day poll completed on Monday.
That principle will be put to the test in a Maine primary election on Tuesday, when Democratic oyster farmer Platner hopes to become a candidate for a Senate seat seen as crucial to Democrats’ hopes of winning a majority in that chamber in November.
In a nationwide poll, just 17% of Democrats familiar with Platner said his tattoo of a Nazi-style skull-and-crossbones would stop them from voting for him if they could vote in Maine’s election.
The same share of Republicans nationwide said they would refrain from voting for Texas attorney-general Paxton, who was indicted a decade ago on charges of defrauding investors, if they could vote in the state’s Senate election in November.
Lesley Groff, Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime executive assistant, is testifying on Tuesday 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. 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 resume 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.
On election night, Nithya Raman seemed as if she was prepared to lose the second spot in the Los Angeles mayoral race to the reality TV star Spencer Pratt, whose viral campaign appeared on track to upend the contest.
“Many thousands of votes will be counted in the days ahead, and we may not get an answer we like. But regardless of what happens next, nobody can take away what all of us have built together,” Raman, a progressive Democrat who sits on the LA city council, told her supporters.
Now in a twist fit for Hollywood, it is Raman who will be advancing to the November election to face off against her one-time political ally, incumbent mayor Karen Bass, for the chance to lead the second largest city in the US.
It was a shake-up in a race that has been defined by the unexpected. Raman rocked the Los Angeles political establishment in February when she threw her hat in the ring hours ahead of the deadline and just weeks after endorsing Bass in her re-election campaign.
Hello and welcome to the US politics live blog.
Left-wing candidate Nithya Raman said she was “incredibly honored” and would “fight for a healthier, safer” and “more joyful Los Angeles” as she edged out former reality TV villain Spencer Pratt in the city’s mayoral race.
The progressive LA city council member, advanced to the November runoff for LA mayor, where she will face the incumbent Karen Bass.
“I’m incredibly honored that voters have given us the opportunity to advance to the general election for Mayor of Los Angeles,” Raman said in a statement posted on X.
“Now our fight for a healthier, safer, more affordable, and more joyful Los Angeles continues,” she added.
Sheheld 28.5% of the votes as of late Monday, advancing past Republican Spencer Pratt who was at 25.8%, according to the Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk.
The incumbent Bass, who is seeking another term leading America’s second largest city, learned on 2 June’s primary election night she had secured enough votes to make it to the November election, but the race for second remained close for nearly a week.
She announced the win in a post on X, saying that “LA rejected Spencer Pratt and the MAGA agenda.”
However, Bass’s campaign released a statement on Monday night after hearing of Raman advancing. “A campaign against Nithya Raman, who allows encampments near schools and cuts the police force, is one Mayor Bass looks forward to winning,” said Douglas Herman, a strategist.
Read the full story here:
In other developments:
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Donald Trump was loudly booed when he was shown on the video screens at Madison Square Garden on Monday night before Game 3 of the NBA finals between the San Antonio Spurs and New York Knicks.
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Trump told supporters in South Carolina the end of the war with Iran is comming soon. “I think we are winning that battle, but you’re really going to win it over the next two weeks when we declare total victory. It’ll be a total victory,” said the president who routinely promises that things will happen in two weeks which never happen at all.
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In an interview at the National Press Club in Washington DC on Monday, Bernie Sanders, the socialist senator from Vermont, was asked if he still supports Graham Platner. “I’m going to do everything I can to make sure Graham Platner is the next senator from the state of Maine,” Sanders said.
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Trump nominated Todd Blanche to serve permanently as attorney general, lining up his former personal lawyer to be the country’s top law enforcement officer.
