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Graham Platner Launches Ethics Attack on Senator Susan Collins

Democratic Senate nominee Graham Platner is framing the political career of Senator Susan Collins as an exercise in personal enrichment, releasing a campaign ad Wednesday that characterizes her support for specific legislative policies as a blatant conflict of interest involving her husband’s high-level lobbying work.

Bio & NewsJune 17, 2026446 reads0

The campaign’s latest broadside centers on Tom Daffron, a longtime Republican operative and Collins’ husband, who worked until last year for a firm owned by Scott Reed. Reed leads Pine Tree Results, a billionaire-funded super PAC currently pouring millions into Collins' reelection effort. While federal law prohibits direct coordination between campaigns and super PACs, the Platner team argues the connection highlights a cozy Washington ecosystem that has persisted for decades.

Platner’s critique focuses on over $76 million in federal contracts awarded to Jefferson Consulting Group, where Daffron served as chief operating officer. The campaign contends that contracting reform legislation authored by Collins in 2008 created niche requirements that directly benefited the firm. Beyond these contracts, the ad targets Collins’ legislative record, specifically her opposition to 2006 and 2012 ethics amendments designed to increase transparency regarding private-sector ties and the political intelligence industry.

Collins has dismissed the allegations as false, stating that her opponent has a fundamental problem with the truth. Meanwhile, the Platner campaign continues to spotlight the senator’s personal financial growth, noting her reported net worth has climbed from approximately $205,000 in 2011 to at least $4.3 million today. Platner argues this wealth disparity stands in stark contrast to the economic realities facing Maine residents, framing the situation as a systemic issue of self-dealing at the public's expense.

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