After Graham Platner officially withdrew from the Maine Senate race this week, Democrats are now in the process of naming his replacement - a task that has all the urgency of a fire drill but with more hand-wringing. On Washington Week With The Atlantic, panelists gathered to discuss how the party is trying to salvage its chances in Maine, a state that was supposed to be a stepping stone to flipping four Senate seats in the midterms. Adam Harris, host of Radio Atlantic, explained that Democrats have been eyeing Maine, Michigan, Ohio, and Alaska to pick up at least four seats in the Senate. But Platner's sudden exit suggests the party may have learned the 'wrong lesson from 2020 and 2024,' Harris argues. Instead of building a broad coalition, they were 'looking for the prototypical candidate who can win back the isolated white male voters who they may have thought they lost to President Trump.' Joining the editor in chief of The Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg, to discuss this and more were Peter Baker, chief White House correspondent at The New York Times; Leigh Ann Caldwell, chief Washington correspondent at Puck; Susan Glasser, a staff writer at The New Yorker; and Harris himself - a panel so stacked it could almost pass for a Senate committee.