







Graham Platner, the Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate in Maine, dismissed concerns about biological males competing in women's sports as a manufactured distraction, telling a podcast audience last week that the entire debate is "funded by an out-of-state billionaire" designed to keep voters from talking about taxes.
Platner made the remarks on Slate's "Death, Sex & Money" podcast, where host Anna Sale pressed him on the issue that has dogged Democratic politicians across the country, including Maine's own governor. His response was to wave it all away as a conspiracy.
"It's funded by an out-of-state billionaire to make sure that we have this discussion, and we don't talk about raising his taxes. That's why it exists."
He also admitted he can't take the issue "seriously" because he considers it "propaganda." This is from a man running for the United States Senate in a state where a referendum to bar biological male athletes from female sports will appear on the ballot this November.
According to Fox News, Platner's central claim is that an unnamed, out-of-state billionaire is bankrolling the "anti-trans campaign in Maine." He offered no name. No receipts. No documentation. Just the assertion that voters who care about fairness in women's sports are puppets on a rich man's string.
Sale, to her credit, distilled Platner's argument into its plainest form when she asked the follow-up question: "So your response is you are being manipulated by billionaires by asking me about this instead of asking me about access to rural healthcare?"
That is, in fact, his response. If you're a parent in Maine worried about your daughter's shot at a fair competition, Platner's message is clear: you've been duped. You aren't thinking for yourself. Some shadowy figure planted that concern in your head because he doesn't want to pay more taxes.
The White House was less impressed with the theory. Spokesperson Kush Desai offered a statement to Fox News Digital:
"We get it's hard for Democrats to admit that there's no logic or common sense to letting biological men play in women's sports, but conjuring up made-up conspiracy theories isn't making them seem any less crazy."
Whatever Platner thinks about billionaire puppet masters, Maine voters are about to have their say. The Protect Girls' Sports in Maine organization secured a referendum that will appear on the November ballot, asking voters directly whether biological males should be barred from female sports competitions.
That referendum didn't materialize from a boardroom. It came from petition signatures, from parents and athletes and citizens who organized because the issue mattered to them. Dismissing that grassroots energy as astroturf is a familiar Democratic reflex. It is also a politically dangerous one when you're running statewide.
Maine became a flashpoint on this issue after Governor Janet Mills sparred with President Donald Trump over his executive order prohibiting biological males from competing in female sports. Trump threatened to cut off federal funding if Mills refused to comply. Her response: "We'll see you in court."
So Maine's Democratic governor is fighting the policy in court, and now the state's Democratic Senate candidate is telling voters their concerns aren't real. The pattern is consistent, even if the strategy is baffling.
Platner attempted to bolster his case with a personal story. He recalled wrestling girls in high school in 2003 and noted that "nobody cared" at the time. He added that he "won" all the fights he had with girls. He described wrestling as "about as like actual violence," adding, "quite literally."
Think about what he's actually saying. A biological male beat biological females in a contact sport, and his takeaway is that this proves the issue is overblown. He is his own counterargument and doesn't realize it.
The fact that "nobody cared" in 2003 is not the vindication he thinks it is. People also didn't care about concussion protocols in youth football or lead in drinking water until they did. Public awareness evolves. The question isn't whether people cared two decades ago. The question is whether the policy is fair now, when women's athletic scholarships, titles, and competitive slots are on the line.
The transgender sports dismissal is not Platner's first brush with controversy. Since launching his campaign last year, he has accumulated a colorful portfolio of problems:
A self-described communist with a tattoo resembling Nazi iconography who supports the Second Amendment only as a tool for political violence. Maine Democrats picked this man to carry their banner for the U.S. Senate.
There is manipulation happening in this story, but it isn't flowing from some unnamed billionaire to the people of Maine. It's flowing from a candidate to voters he hopes won't look too closely.
Platner's argument follows a template that has become standard on the left: when you can't win the debate on substance, attack the motives of the people raising it. Don't explain why biological males competing against women is fair. Don't cite data. Don't engage with the women who've lost races or roster spots. Just say "billionaire" and "propaganda" and change the subject to healthcare.
It works in faculty lounges. It works on podcasts where the host nods along. It does not work when voters are staring at a ballot question in November and making up their own minds.
Maine voters weren't manipulated into caring about women's sports. They organized, gathered signatures, and earned a referendum. Platner's real problem isn't a billionaire. It's a public that refuses to be told what it's allowed to care about.


