Chattanooga Times Free Press

Blood wins Nebraska’s Democratic governor nod

- BY GRANT SCHULTE

OMAHA, Neb. — Nebraska state Sen. Carol Blood won the Democratic nomination for governor on Tuesday as Republican­s worked through a crowded field of candidates, including one running with former President Donald Trump’s endorsemen­t.

Blood defeated Roy Harris, a littleknow­n primary candidate who didn’t actively campaign. She was first elected to the Legislatur­e in 2016 after serving on the City Council in Bellevue, an Omaha suburb.

She will be the underdog in November against the winner of Tuesday’s nine-way Republican primary, a race that was upended in recent weeks after a leading candidate endorsed by Trump was accused of groping at least eight women over the last few years.

Charles Herbster, a businessma­n and cattle breeder who has denied the allegation­s, is in a nine-way GOP primary to replace Republican Gov. Pete Ricketts, who’s prevented by term limit laws from running again. Other leading candidates include Jim Pillen, a veterinari­an and hog farm owner endorsed by Ricketts, and state Sen. Brett Lindstrom, an Omaha financial adviser who gained traction recently with a surge of money and support from the city’s Republican mayor.

The state hasn’t elected a Democrat to be governor since 1994, when thenGov. Ben Nelson won a second term in office. Blood is the only Democrat running for statewide office this year.

Both Nebraska and West Virginia held primary elections Tuesday, with select races providing some measure of the former president’s enduring sway with GOP voters. Trump’s candidate prevailed in a West Virginia congressio­nal primary between two Republican incumbents, with Rep. Alex Mooney defeating Rep. David McKinley, who had angered Trump by voting for President Joe Biden’s bipartisan infrastruc­ture package and the creation of the House committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

Trump is facing some of the biggest tests of his influence in Republican primary elections later this month. In Pennsylvan­ia, his endorsed Senate candidate, TV’s Dr. Mehmet Oz, is locked in a competitiv­e race against former hedge fund CEO David McCormick and five others, while his candidate in North Carolina, U.S. Rep. Ted Budd, is competing in a field that includes a dozen other Republican­s. In Georgia, Trump has endorsed primary challenger­s to Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, both of whom defied him by rejecting his false claims of voter fraud in the 2020 election.

In Nebraska, the allegation­s against Herbster, a longtime supporter of Trump’s, didn’t stop the former president from holding a rally with him earlier this month.

“I really think he’s going to do just a fantastic job, and if I didn’t feel that, I wouldn’t be here,” Trump said at the rally at a racetrack outside Omaha.

In a story last month, the Nebraska Examiner interviewe­d six women who claimed Herbster had groped their buttocks, outside of their clothes, during political events or beauty pageants. A seventh woman said Herbster once cornered her privately and kissed her forcibly.

One of the accusers, Republican state Sen. Julie Slama, said Herbster reached up her skirt and touched her inappropri­ately at the Douglas County Republican Party’s annual Elephant Remembers dinner in 2019. The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they choose to come forward publicly, as Slama has done.

Herbster filed a defamation lawsuit against Slama, saying she falsely accused him in an effort to derail his campaign. Slama responded with a countersui­t against Herbster, alleging sexual battery.

Herbster has suggested in television ads that Pillen and Ricketts conspired with Slama to falsely accuse him of sexual assault — allegation­s the three deny.

Some voters said the allegation­s didn’t dissuade them from backing Herbster.

As she voted at an elementary school in northwest Omaha on Tuesday, Joann Kotan said she was “upset by the stories, but I don’t know if I believe them.” Ultimately, the 74-year-old said she voted for Herbster “because President Trump recommende­d him.”

Lindstrom has faced a barrage of attacks as well, with third-party television ads funded by Ricketts that portray him as too liberal for the conservati­ve state. One digitally altered ad shows Lindstrom standing in front of a rainbow flag with a coronaviru­s mask superimpos­ed over his face. A mail ad notes that Lindstrom was endorsed by U.S. Rep. Brad Ashford, a moderate Republican­turned-Democrat who died last month of brain cancer.

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