Actor Patrick Dempsey rules out run for US Senate in place of Graham Platner

As Democrats launch a frantic search for a US Senate candidate in Maine, to replace their nominee Graham Platner, who is expected to withdraw after being accused of sexual assault, the actor and Maine native Patrick Dempsey just announced that he will not enter the race, after giving it some thought.

In an opinion article for the Portland Press Herald published on Wednesday afternoon, headlined “Why I’m not running for US Senate,” Dempsey wrote:

double quotation markOver the past several days, I’ve been asked a question more than once: Would you ever run for the United States Senate?

It’s flattering, and I don’t take it lightly. I love my home state of Maine. I care deeply about the people who live there and, like so many Americans, I’m concerned about the direction our country is heading.

I gave it real thought.

The actor went on to explain that he concluded that he can do more productive work through his non-profit, the Dempsey Center in Maine, which provides supportive care to people affected by cancer at no cost.

“As I reflected on all of this, I kept coming back to one question: Do I truly want to serve in Congress?” he wrote. “After a lot of thought, I realized the answer is no. Not because public service isn’t honorable – it absolutely is. But because I believe I can contribute more effectively through the life I’ve already built.”

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Polling for Platner campaign shows three possible replacements in Senate race fare better than him – report

Polling commissioned by Graham Platner’s campaign shows that three possible replacements for him as the Democratic nominee for US Senate from Maine would have a better shot at defeating Susan Collins, the Republican incumbent, Politico reports.

According to the outlet, which obtained a copy of the survey conducted by Public Policy Polling, former Maine state senate president Troy Jackson leads Collins 49%-44%; Maine’s secretary of state, Shenna Bellows, is level with Collins at 47% each; and former public health official Nirav Shah is also tied with Collins on 45% apiece, with more undecided voters.

Platner’s support in the match-up with Collins has fallen to just 42%, after a sexual assault allegation, with the incumbent senator at 47%.

Two other potential replacement candidates tested in the poll did worse than Platner: Maine’s governor, Janet Mills, who lags 11 points behind Collins, and Jordan Wood, who finished third in a recent Democratic primary for the House and trails Collins by 9 points.

Jackson has already filed to potentially replace Platner if the Democratic nominee drops out, as is widely expected.

Bellows, who was trounced by Collins in the 2014 Maine Senate race, despite support from Zohran Mamdani, a Maine college student at the time, said she would seriously consider joining the race if Platner withdraws. Bellows lost to Collins in a bad midterm year for Democrats, without much support from the national party, and has gone on to hold statewide office and build a reputation in the state as a fighter against Donald Trump.

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