Steve Mistler

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Steve Mistler

Steve Mistler

@stevemistler

Reporter for Maine Public Broadcasting. Assignments for @npr. Former 🗞️ guy now on the 📻. Signal: @stevemistler.83

Maine Katılım Aralık 2008
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Henry J. Gomez
Henry J. Gomez@HenryJGomez·
Cass has been close with Vice President JD Vance and others in the administration and, as he notes here, rarely wades into these debates.
Oren Cass@oren_cass

I mostly avoid commenting on what President Trump says from day to day, while pulling no punches in my assessments, whether positive or negative, of his policy. His Iran ultimatums feel different. Making such threats is a policy. If he were to follow through on them, the consequences would be immediate, irreversible, and catastrophic on a world-historical scale. So while some will inevitably insist he should be “taken seriously rather than literally,” or that he is executing a sophisticated “madman” strategy in a complex game of 5-D chess, or that he needs everyone’s steadfast support to maximize his leverage, now rather than later seems the time to say that the actions that he is proposing would be a disaster for our country, both strategically and morally, which makes the remarks themselves a terrible mistake. Simply put, what’s the point of all this? If these are empty threats that we all know he will not carry out, then they are ineffective threats (the Iranians are on X too!), merely making the president and our nation look foolish. If they are not empty threats, then the president is asserting the American position that such actions are acceptable in this situation and ones we are willing to take. We are not living in some quantum thought experiment where he simultaneously is and is not serious. We cannot expect the Iranians, but only the Iranians, will believe him. Whether the threats are empty or not, we should be willing to say: This is wrong. We should not establish a pattern of threatening escalation from a blockaded strait to elimination of a civilization. We should not launch strikes intended to devastate the lives of millions of people and take our nation to total war without indisputable justification, or before the American people have deliberated upon and assented to the path with full understanding of what total war might mean for them. Those principles are vital to our Republic, independent of whether the strategy could “work.” But it’s also worth emphasizing that the strategy is a dead end. This war is actively weakening American power, increasing the danger to American citizens, and frustrating the president’s important efforts at addressing our many domestic challenges. It has closed a strait that was previously open, strengthened the incentive for other nations to pursue nuclear weapons, and in this most recent rhetoric made more plausible their use. Our choices for continuing the war appear to be catastrophic escalation of the air war or extensive deployment of ground troops, neither of which were planned or had support at the outset. Stepping back from these threats and admitting such actions do not offer a path to resolving the conflict may be unpalatable, but it is by far the least unpalatable option available. Let us all hope cooler heads prevail.

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David Weigel
David Weigel@daveweigel·
Seeing this attack pop up in Dem primaries. But the anti-billionaires line (if you start w Bernie) was about super PACs and unlimited donations. Haven’t seen legit left-wing/populist anger about billionaires personally donating inside contribution limit (w disclosure).
Daniel Lippman@dlippman

SCOOP: Manny Rutinel, who’s running a progressive populist congressional campaign in Colorado and has said that “billionaires” are not “powering this campaign,” has received a number of donations from billionaires and their relatives, per FEC records. politico.com/newsletters/po…

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Will Skipworth
Will Skipworth@WillSkipworth·
Publicly, New Hampshire has remained uninvolved with the Northeast Public Health Collaborative created by its neighbors. However, I've obtained a trove of internal emails and documents that show, behind closed doors, it's deeply involved. #NHPolitics newhampshirebulletin.com/2026/03/30/pub…
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Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Володимир Зеленський
When I travel outside of Ukraine, I get daily intelligence updates online. This morning, I was briefed that U.S. military facilities in the Middle East and the Gulf region were photographed by Russian satellites in the interests of Iran. On March 24th, they imaged the U.S.–UK joint military facility on Diego Garcia located in the Chagos Archipelago in the Indian Ocean. They also captured pictures of Kuwait International Airport and parts of the infrastructure of the Greater Burgan oil field. On March 25th, they took pictures of the Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia. The Shaybah oil and gas field in Saudi Arabia, İncirlik Air Base in Türkiye, and Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar were all imaged on March 26th. There are no Ukrainian facilities on this list. But who is helping whom when sanctions are lifted from an aggressor that earns daily revenue and provides intelligence for strikes against American, Middle Eastern, UK, and U.S.–UK bases and so on? When surveillance is carried out over facilities in Ukraine, we always understand that they must be protected, since plans are in motion to destroy them – energy and water infrastructure, military facilities, and so on. Everyone knows that repeated reconnaissance indicates preparations for strikes. How can sanctions be eased if this is what the Russians are doing? There must be pressure on the aggressor. And lifting sanctions is certainly not pressure. It looks strange. Sanctions are being lifted, while the aggressor is providing intelligence to strike facilities, including those of the countries that are discussing or have already lifted sanctions. From my conversation with journalists (3/3).
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Steve Mistler
Steve Mistler@stevemistler·
An increasingly bruising primary between the two leading Dem candidates vying to topple Republican Sen. Susan Collins has both contenders dipping deep into their campaign coffers, while Collins has so far spent little on her reelection bid via @npr ✍️ 📻 npr.org/2026/03/26/nx-…
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Steve Mistler
Steve Mistler@stevemistler·
One Nation has spent $15 million so far and its messaging is EVERYWHERE ... TV, digital, mail. That's more than Mills and Platner combined to raise after Q4. And Pine Tree Results, financed by these folks. It's booked $2M for the weeks after 6/9 primary. Maine rates are cheap
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Steve Mistler@stevemistler·
Collins has spent little, but she's getting big boosts from the Pine Tree Results super PAC financed by well-heeled donors, as well as One Nation, the dark money group doing spade work on the issue that arguably won her the election in 2020: bringing home federal cash 2/
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Steve Mistler
Steve Mistler@stevemistler·
Analysis by AdImpact shows spending in Maine Senate race is already above $37M with 8 months until election. On pace to shatter the 2020 state record of more than $200M. It's accelerated by the Dem primary where Platner and Mills are battling to face Sen. Collins. 1/
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Steve Mistler
Steve Mistler@stevemistler·
Not sure how I missed this, but it seems the geniuses at google are “experimenting” with changing news headlines in search results to clickbait, AI trash, changing meaning, ignoring style, etc. theverge.com/tech/896490/go…
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Steve Mistler
Steve Mistler@stevemistler·
@LyftLady11 @EricMGarcia I do. Some of the polling suggests it's a strength for her. And the governor has an established track record of pushing for things many in their cohort seem to care about.
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Steve Mistler
Steve Mistler@stevemistler·
Trailing in polls, Mills' attack ad leans on one of her strengths to try to expose a potential weakness in her opponent’s resilient candidacy: women voters. It's a confrontational primary tack, outracing the armada of PACs that often assume that role mainepublic.org/politics/2026-…
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David Weigel
David Weigel@daveweigel·
Platner up w a response ad to Mills attack in #MESen. “Maine, I’m asking you not to judge me for the worst thing I said on the internet on my worst day 14 years.” He’s putting more points on air this week; Mills buy is $87k in Portland market, Pratner at $350k in Portland.
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Steve Mistler
Steve Mistler@stevemistler·
during the governor's race; the leader of a national group aimed at electing Dem women; and a local ad executive who has been critical of Platner since last fall.
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Steve Mistler
Steve Mistler@stevemistler·
The humans in the ad will be familiar to those covering Maine politics. Shown are the former vice chair of the Maine Democratic Party, a former Dem legislator who created the pass-through PAC in 2018 to route Emily's List cash to attack Mills' primary opponent (1/)
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Steve Mistler
Steve Mistler@stevemistler·
No idea if this is actually an AI generated voiceover, but there's a bill in the Maine Legislature right now that would require campaigns to disclose AI use in ads/messages. If it passes, Mills would be in a position to sign or veto. #Paper/517?legislature=132" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">legislature.maine.gov/billtracker/#P
Ryan Grim@ryangrim

Mills appears to be using a fake AI recreation of Platner's voice here. At some point, if we care about our democracy, we're going to have to develop rules around this stuff.

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