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Chuck Schumer Backs Nazi-Tattooed Senate Candidate Despite Abuse Allegations from Three Women

PBD Podcast · SAVE Act FAILS + LA's CROOKED Election? | PBD #813 · June 5, 2026
Chuck Schumer Backs Nazi-Tattooed Senate Candidate Despite Abuse Allegations from Three Women
PBD Podcast
PBD Podcast
SAVE Act FAILS + LA's CROOKED Election? | PBD #813
"As I said, I endorsed Graham Plattner. We're going to take back—we're going to beat Susan Collins and take back the Senate."
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer doubled down on his endorsement of Graham Plattner despite revelations about his Nazi tattoo and New York Times reporting based on interviews with over two dozen people including three women alleging physical abuse, womanizing, and disturbing comments about rape. When pressed by reporters about the endorsement, Schumer refused to withdraw support, prioritizing retaking the Senate over the allegations.

About this episode

In this episode of the PBD Podcast, host Patrick Bet-David and co-hosts Tom Ellsworth, Vincent Oshana, and Adam Sosnick dissected major political controversies dominating the news cycle, with a particular focus on election integrity and hypocrisy in American politics. The conversation opened with allegations of vote manipulation in the Los Angeles mayoral race, where candidate Spencer Pratt—polling at roughly 30%—allegedly received zero votes from a 24,834-ballot drop overnight, dropping his odds of making the runoff from high probability to 6.8%. President Trump publicly questioned the count. The team then examined the failure of the Save America Voter Eligibility Act, which despite 83-84% public support for voter ID requirements, was defeated 50-48 when four Republican senators—Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, Mitch McConnell, and Tom Tillis—joined Democrats to block it. The most explosive segment covered Democratic Maine Senate candidate Graham Plattner, who wore a Nazi SS concentration camp guard tattoo for 18 years and faces abuse allegations from three women reported by the New York Times. Despite this, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer refused to withdraw his endorsement. The panel also criticized New York legislation replacing 'mother' and 'father' with 'gestating parent' and 'non-gestating parent,' calling it political correctness gone too far. Other topics included AI regulation debates, Bitcoin's 50% drop affecting Michael Saylor's $10 billion position, new FIFA World Cup rules generating backlash, and a heartbreaking story of a YouTuber couple terminating a pregnancy after a Down syndrome diagnosis, sparking emotional discussion about the value of life and the joy special needs children bring to families.

Key takeaways

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