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Graham Platner, the US combat veteran and oyster farmer running for the Democratic nomination to defeat Republican US Senator Susan Collins of Maine in next year's election, is not interested in mourning the life and legacy of reviled war criminal Dick Cheney, though he does have "some thoughts" on the subject.

While Democratic leaders of the old guard such as Barack Obama and Kamala Harris issued statements Tuesday fawning over Cheney's service to country, contributing to the familiar hagiography that typically follows the demise of even the worst American leaders the nation has inflicted on the world, Platner stuck a distinctly different tone.

"Usually, when a former vice president passes, we all take some time to mourn," Platner says in a video posted to social media Tuesday. "As a veteran of the Iraq war, I’m going to say: No, not this time."

Platner, who served in the US Marines and in the US Army during multiple combat tours in both Iraq and Afghanistan, pushed back against the pattern of whitewashing the misdeeds of the dead, especially for elected leaders never held to account.

"Over the next couple days, I'm sure there are going to be thousands of think pieces about his legacy," said Platner, "but the only legacy we have to remember is that he wasted thousands of young American lives, hundreds of thousands of Iraqi lives, and trillions of dollars for absolutely nothing."

Some thoughts on Dick Cheney and his legacy. pic.twitter.com/vY7S3nu2nt
— Graham Platner for Senate (@grahamformaine) November 4, 2025

"If we take anything" from Cheney's death, continued Platner, "it should be that we need to build a politics that keeps the politicians, like Susan Collins, who support illegal foreign wars like the one in Iraq, accountable and get them out of office."

Platner has spoken at length about his time on the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan and how, after multiple tours, he became not only disillusioned with the wars but also incredibly angry over the foreign policy decisions that started them.

Cheney, who served as VP under former President George W. Bush, has long been seen as the chief architect and driving force behind the effort to manipulate the US public into backing the invasion of Iraq in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, despite Iraq having nothing to do with the plot.

Cheney infamously said after 9/11 it would be time to "take off the gloves," which resulted in a torture regime operated by the CIA and war crimes across the Middle East, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and beyond at the direction of the Bush administration.

Bob Brigham, a self-identified progressive from Montana, was among those who applauded Platner for his statement.

"Dick Cheney was a war criminal who cost my buddy his life in Iraq," said Brigham in a social media post. "Platner has a pitch-perfect remembrance of the a-hole. May Dick Cheney roast in hell!"


From Common Dreams via This RSS Feed.

 

The people of California dealt a huge counterpunch to Republican efforts to gerrymander their way to a 2026 midterm victory, voting overwhelmingly on Tuesday for new congressional maps that are expected to net Democrats an additional five seats in the next US House elections.

Republicans have appeared on track to cling to power after President Donald Trump pushed red states to carry out largely unprecedented mid-decade redistricting efforts. New maps enacted or approved in Texas, Ohio, Missouri, and North Carolina were expected to net the GOP an extra nine seats that may have proven decisive in holding off a blue wave next November.

But on Tuesday, as Democrats romped up and down the ballot nationwide, more than 5.1 million California voters almost singlehandedly stymied the Republican advance in its tracks, passing Proposition 50 with nearly 64% of the vote, and approving new maps drawn up by Gov. Gavin Newsom and state Democrats with a more aggressive partisan gerrymander.

— (@)

David Dayen, the executive editor of The American Prospect, wrote on social media that in one fell swoop, the Democrats "have largely neutralized Trump's gerrymandering push."

However, he noted that the GOP could grab a possibly insurmountable advantage if the US Supreme Court votes to gut Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, effectively legalizing racial gerrymandering and, in the process, potentially netting Republicans at least 19 more seats.

Notably, California's maps only needed to be approved by voters in the first place to override those drawn up by the state's independent redistricting commission, which was also created by a ballot measure in 2008. Meanwhile, the new maps drawn in red states have been enacted by state legislatures without voter approval.

As the champion of Prop 50, Newsom argued that desperate times called for desperate measures, saying it was a necessary counter to Trump's "attempt to rig the 2026 election and redistrict his way out of accountability in states like Texas.”

On Tuesday night, after Prop 50's resounding passage, Newsom told a gathering of California Democrats in Sacramento that the party was "on its toes, no longer on its heels."

— (@)

The passage of Prop 50 may give other blue states a shot in the arm to pursue their own mid-decade gerrymanders and further chip away at the GOP advantage.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul has signaled her support for the state pursuing its own redistricting, and a constitutional amendment has been proposed to override the state's independent, bipartisan redistricting commission.

In Virginia, Democratic leaders have passed the first round of a constitutional amendment to give the legislature emergency powers to redraw maps, an effort that remained viable after Democrats held onto the state’s House of Delegates in Tuesday’s elections.

Earlier this week, Maryland Gov. Wes Moore also announced the creation of a new bipartisan commission to target the state's one remaining GOP district, though some Democrats have criticized the effort as a risky gambit that could backfire and benefit Republicans.

Regardless, Dayen believes that the result in California is a decisive indication of the more confrontational approach Democratic voters are looking for in the second Trump era.

"Prop 50 was called the moment polls closed in California," he wrote. "The blowout showed how showing up to fight is the most important thing in Democratic politics right now."


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Prime Minister Mark Carney’s budget scales back rules around greenwashing, and hints an oil and gas emissions cap is unlikely. But it introduces a youth climate corps and renews efforts to lift boil-water advisories


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Rome, Nov 5 (Prensa Latina) The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) indicated, in its latest analysis of food insecurity and malnutrition in Sudan, famine conditions in localities such as El Fasher and Kadugli.

The post FAO confirms famine in parts of Sudan first appeared on Prensa Latina.


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Moscow, Nov 5 (Prensa Latina) Russian President Vladimir Putin congratulated on Wednesday the military intelligence officers on their anniversary and highlighted their role in maintaining strategic parity and protecting the country's interests and security.

The post Putin congratulates military intelligence staff on anniversary first appeared on Prensa Latina.


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Ankara, Nov 5 (Prensa Latina) The Turkish government rejected the claims contained in the Türkiye 2025 Report published by the European Commission, particularly those concerning the judiciary, fundamental rights, and the country's internal political situation.

The post Ankara rejects European Commission report on Türkiye first appeared on Prensa Latina.


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Jakarta, Nov 5 (Prensa Latina) Indonesian Minister of Social Affairs Saifullah Yusuf proposed to President Prabowo Subianto extending the Free Nutritious Meals program to senior citizens and people with disabilities, a measure currently slated for implementation in 2026.

The post Indonesia to expand food program to include the elderly and disabled first appeared on Prensa Latina.


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Buenos Aires, Nov 5 (Prensa Latina) Twenty years after the historic continental rejection of the United States' hegemonic Free Trade Area of ​​the Americas (FTAA) project, Cristina Fernandez recalls Nestor Kirchner's speech on that occasion.

The post Cristina Fernandez remembers the NO to the FTAA first appeared on Prensa Latina.


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United Nations, Nov 5 (Prensa Latina) United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres stressed the need to strengthen early warning systems, commemorating World Tsunami Awareness Day.

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Luanda, Nov.5 (Prensa Latina) Angola and Germany signed three legal instruments of cooperation today in the areas of transport, civil aviation, and agribusiness, in the presence of the two countries' presidents, João Lourenço and Frank-Walter Steinmeier, respectively.

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Moscow, Nov. 5 (Prensa Latina) Moldova continues its stance of denying and fighting against everything related to Russia, to the detriment of the interests of a significant portion of its population, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said today.

The post Russia regrets the Moldovan government’s policy against it first appeared on Prensa Latina.


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San Salvador, Nov 5 (Prensa Latina) El Salvador went through November without registering any homicides attributable to gangs, according to reports released by the National Civil Police (PNC).

The post El Salvador enters November with no homicides first appeared on Prensa Latina.


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