
In a time of war, rising costs and Medicaid cuts, Democrats in Maine say another issue is motivating them in this fall’s Senate race: Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation to the Supreme Court eight years ago. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. A pivotal vote by longtime Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine pushed Kavanaugh over the finish line in 2018 after she famously said he considered Roe v. Wade “settled law” — a comment that turned out to be wrong.
Main Idea: Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court confirmation and later vote to overturn Roe v. Wade have become a major issue in Maine’s Senate race, helping shape attacks on Susan Collins and Graham Platner.
Key Points:
Kavanaugh’s role in overturning Roe may keep abortion and Supreme Court fights front and center, shaping how voters judge Collins and possibly affecting future court picks that influence health care and family rights.
Maine voters get a clearer choice on issues that affect taxes, hospitals, and rights.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Collins’ Democratic challenger whose campaign is using Kavanaugh and abortion as core attacks.
Supreme Court justice whose 2018 confirmation vote and 2022 abortion ruling are central to the article’s political framing.
Main political figure in the Maine Senate race, centered for her vote to confirm Kavanaugh and its campaign.
Named accuser in the Platner allegations and a key figure in the article’s campaign dynamics.
The Senate race battleground state at the center of the political story.
Democratic super PAC reportedly planning abortion-focused ads against Collins in Maine.
The court whose composition and abortion ruling are a major focus of the article.
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Sign in to commentNamed Democratic leader cited in the Collins campaign’s response, but not a central focus.
Cited as the publication that reported allegations about Platner, but not the article’s main focus.