2026-06-09T10:06:57.523Z / 路透社
提要
- 缅因州民主党人格雷厄姆·普拉特纳陷入性短信丑闻,危及本党参议院竞选希望
- 特朗普最新打击目标是南卡罗来纳州联邦众议员南希·梅斯
- 内华达州第三国会选区对民主党掌控众议院席位至关重要
华盛顿6月9日路透电 —— 一位牡蛎养殖户、政坛新人正饱受其不当短信行为的质疑。一位曾被唐纳德·特朗普总统冠以“不忠”“卑劣”标签的共和党女议员。
这些都是周二缅因州、南卡罗来纳州、内华达州和北达科他州初选选民投票时我们关注的两大事件线。
订阅《每日案卷》新闻简报,最新法律新闻直接送达您的收件箱,开启您的晨间资讯。点击此处注册。
格雷厄姆·普拉特纳大概率将赢得缅因州联邦参议院民主党初选,尽管《纽约时报》的一篇报道援引其前女友的说法,称他有时的行为令人不安,令其所在政党感到不安。
与此同时,在南卡罗来纳州州长初选中,众议员南希·梅斯可能成为特朗普推翻共和党同僚行动的最新受害者——此前她要求公开政府所持杰弗里·爱泼斯坦相关文件。
缅因州事件
民主党原本对拿下缅因州联邦参议院席位抱有厚望,该州现任参议员苏珊·柯林斯已任职五届,正寻求连任,而当前选民对高消费品价格和美以与伊朗的战争感到不满。
普拉特纳曾是海军陆战队作战人员,他以“普通人”的形象展开竞选,打动了温和派和进步派选民,筹集了大量竞选资金,甚至促使民主党州长珍妮特·米尔斯放弃了初选参选。
如今,已婚的普拉特纳正竭力否认去年他向多名女性发送露骨性短信的报道。41岁的普拉特纳已为该行为道歉,并表示他在伊拉克和阿富汗服役后饱受创伤后应激障碍和抑郁症的折磨。
核心问题:考虑到特朗普本人尽管被曝多次涉及婚外情争议,包括一段他吹嘘“抓女人私处”的录音带,仍在政坛顺风顺水,这些丑闻是否会影响普拉特纳的选情?答案或将决定民主党能否拿下参议院多数席位。
如果普拉特纳无法平息这场争议,他可能面临党内压力,要求他在7月13日——即替换候选人纳入11月大选选票的截止日期——前退出竞选。
共和党人的黄金契机?
联邦众议员贾里德·戈尔登是美国国会最温和的民主党人之一,现已宣布退休,共和党人有望在其继任者的竞选中获胜。
特朗普曾在2024年赢得该选区,前共和党州长保罗·勒佩奇正参选该席位,他获得了特朗普“完全且彻底的背书”,正如这位总统常说的那样。
三名民主党人似乎正在激烈角逐本党提名。这场竞选将有助于决定共和党能否保住其微弱的众议院多数席位。
特朗普的又一个初选打击目标
在今年的初选中,特朗普支持的候选人已击败了路易斯安那州联邦参议员比尔·卡西迪、得克萨斯州联邦参议员约翰·科宁以及肯塔基州联邦众议员托马斯·马西。
南希·梅斯在竞选共和党州长提名时,是否也会落败?5月下旬特朗普背书南卡罗来纳州副州长帕梅拉·埃维特后,这种可能性越来越大。埃维特以“美国优先”为竞选纲领。
候选人众多可能导致6月23日举行前两名候选人的 runoff(决胜初选)。《库克政治报告》已提及梅斯可能无法进入决胜轮。
由于近30年来该倾向共和的州从未选出过民主党州长,共和党初选获胜者预计将轻松赢得11月的大选。
民主党在内华达州的博弈
如果民主党要在11月赢得众议院控制权,就必须保住内华达州第三国会选区这一席位。该选区位于拉斯维加斯周边,目前由民主党议员苏西·李掌控。
特朗普在2024年仅以微弱优势赢得该选区,但李也以近7个百分点的优势成功连任,该席位是特朗普2024年获胜但目前由民主党人占据的13个席位之一。
李正在寻求连任,对手是自费参选的医生詹姆斯·莱利——这位曾是共和党人的民主党人为竞选注入了100万美元资金。
共和党方面有四人参与初选,其中三位主要自费参选的候选人分别是:获得特朗普背书的电子游戏作曲家马蒂·奥唐奈、神经外科医生奥里·纳吉以及前美国驻冰岛大使杰夫·冈特。第四位候选人是企业家特蕾莎·安德森。
理查德·考恩报道;迈克尔·勒姆蒙特和霍华德·戈勒编辑
Maine sex scandal, Trump’s sway: What to watch in Tuesday’s US primaries
2026-06-09T10:06:57.523Z / Reuters
Summary
- Maine Democrat Graham Platner faces sexting scandal, risking his party’s Senate hopes
- Trump’s latest target is Representative Nancy Mace in South Carolina
- Nevada’s 3rd District key for Democrats’ House control
WASHINGTON, June 9 (Reuters) – An oyster farmer and political newcomer besieged by questions about his sexting practices. A Republican congresswoman who was years ago branded “disloyal” and “nasty” by President Donald Trump.
These are two of the story lines we are watching on Tuesday as primary voters go to the polls in Maine, South Carolina, Nevada and North Dakota.
Jumpstart your morning with the latest legal news delivered straight to your inbox from The Daily Docket newsletter. Sign up here.
Graham Platner will likely be the winner of Maine’s U.S. Senate Democratic primary, even though his own party has the jitters over a New York Times report quoting former girlfriends saying he at times behaved in ways they described as unsettling.
Meanwhile, in the South Carolina primary for governor, Representative Nancy Mace could be the latest casualty of Trump’s efforts to topple fellow Republican officeholders after she demanded the release of the government’s Jeffrey Epstein files.
THE MAINE EVENT
Democrats had high hopes of capturing a U.S. Senate seat from Republicans in Maine, where five-term Senator Susan Collins is running for reelection at a time when voters are soured by high consumer prices and the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran.
Platner, a former combat Marine, built momentum on a pitch as a man of the people that resonated with moderates and progressives, drew substantial campaign funding and led Democratic Governor Janet Mills to suspend her primary bid.
Now, the married Platner is fighting off reports he sent sexually explicit texts to multiple women last year. Platner, 41, has apologized for the behavior and said he struggled with post-traumatic stress disorder and depression following combat duty in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The big question: Does any of this matter, considering that Trump himself has thrived politically despite successive controversies over his alleged extramarital activities including a videotape in which he is heard boasting of grabbing women’s genitals. The answer could determine whether Democrats can capture majority control of the Senate.
If Platner cannot put the controversy to rest, he could be facing intra-party pressure to drop out of the race by July 13, the deadline for putting a replacement on the November ballot.
GOLDEN MOMENT FOR REPUBLICANS?
Representative Jared Golden, one of the most moderate Democrats in the U.S. Congress, is retiring and Republicans can taste victory in the race for his replacement.
Former Republican Governor Paul LePage is running for the seat in a district that Trump won in 2024 and he has Trump’s “complete and total endorsement” as the president likes to say.
Three Democrats appeared to be locked in a tight race for their party’s nomination. This race could help define whether Republicans hold onto their narrow U.S. House majority.
ANOTHER TRUMP PRIMARY TARGET
Already in this year’s primary elections Trump-backed candidates have defeated Republican Senators Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, John Cornyn of Texas and Representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky.
Will Representative Nancy Mace lose out too as she seeks the Republican nomination for governor? That is looking more and more likely following Trump’s late May endorsement of South Carolina Lieutenant Governor Pamela Evette, who is running on an “America First” platform.
A crowded field could result in a June 23 runoff between the top two contenders. The Cook Political Report has raised the prospect of Mace failing to make the cut.
The Republican primary winner is expected to also win the November general election as it has been nearly three decades since a Democrat has been elected governor in this Republican-leaning state.
DEMOCRATS’ NEVADA GAMBLE
If Democrats are to win control of the House of Representatives in November they need to hang on to Nevada’s 3rd congressional district, a Las Vegas-area seat now held by Democrat Susie Lee.
Trump narrowly won the district in 2024, but Lee also won her race by nearly 7 percentage points and the seat is one of 13 that Trump won that are currently held by Democrats.
Lee is seeking renomination against cardiologist James Lally, a self-funded Republican-turned-Democrat who has infused his campaign with $1 million.
Republicans have a four-way primary, led by three largely self-funded candidates: Trump-endorsed video game composer Marty O’Donnell, neurosurgeon Aury Nagy and former U.S. Ambassador to Iceland Jeff Gunter. The fourth candidate is businesswoman Tera Anderson.
Reporting by Richard Cowan; editing by Michael Learmonth and Howard Goller
发表回复