Dayton Daily News

Primary takeaways: Win for Trump

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WASHINGTON — Donald Trump notched a significan­t victory in South Carolina, where his preferred candidate, state Rep. Russell Fry, easily ousted five-term Rep. Tom Rice, the first Republican to be booted from office after voting to impeach the former president last year. But another high-profile GOP target of Trump in the state, Rep. Nancy Mace, held back a challenger. Meanwhile, in Nevada on Tuesday, two election deniers who have tirelessly promoted the former president’s allegation­s about voter fraud won their primaries for key positions of power in the state. Takeaways from the latest round of primary elections:

Split decision in South Carolina

Rice and Mace have been objects of Trump’s anger ever since his supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol to stop the certificat­ion of Joe Biden’s presidenti­al election win.

Their transgress­ions? Mace stated on national TV that Trump’s “entire legacy was wiped out” by the attack, while Rice became an apostate for joining a small group of Republican­s who voted with Democrats in favor of Trump’s second impeachmen­t.

Voters ultimately rendered different judgments on the duo, reflecting a split within the GOP about how to move forward from the Trump era. Rice’s largely rural district is representa­tive of Trump’s America, where crossing the former president carries a steep cost. Even as Trump railed against both lawmakers, he chose to hold a rally in Rice’s district earlier this year.

That’s because Mace’s district, which centers on Charleston, is full of the type of moderate suburban voters who fled the GOP under Trump. It is one of the few districts in an overall red state where Democrats have been even moderately competitiv­e in congressio­nal races.

The results demonstrat­e that the Trump factor can’t be underestim­ated in solidly Republican territory, a potential warning sign for other Republican­s, including Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, who also voted to impeach Trump and has helped lead the House panel investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack. She’s facing a competitiv­e primary in August from a Trump-backed challenger.

Election deniers advance in Nevada

Two Republican candidates who ardently pushed Trump’s allegation­s about voter fraud costing him the 2020 presidenti­al election won nomination­s to top offices in Nevada on Tuesday.

Jim Marchant, a former state lawmaker, won the GOP nomination for secretary of state, the office that oversees elections in the perennial presidenti­al battlegrou­nd that Trump narrowly lost in both 2016 and 2020.

Marchant has made appearance­s around the country with other Trump allies, including MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, to cast doubt on the election results.

Marchant will face Democrat Cisco Aguilar in November. Aguilar is a lawyer and former chair of the Nevada Athletic Commission who was unopposed in the Democratic primary.

Adam Laxalt, the state’s former attorney general, won the GOP nomination for U.S. Senate in Nevada on Tuesday after promoting Trump’s allegation­s about fraud in the state in the 2020 election, including spearheadi­ng legal challenges to the vote-counting process.

Laxalt, who was backed by the former president, weaved Trump’s claims of voter fraud throughout his campaign. He has already begun raising fears of voter fraud in this year’s midterm elections and has talked about preemptive­ly mounting legal challenges “to try to tighten up the election.”

He had insisted in 2020 that ineligible and dead voters cast ballots in the presidenti­al election in Nevada, despite the state’s Republican secretary of state, Barbara Cegavske, insisting that the results showing Biden’s victory were accurate and reliable. Cegavske was prevented by term limit laws from running again.

Laxalt will face Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto in November in what Republican­s see as one of their best chances to flip a seat and to win back control of the chamber.

Texas House seat flips

A once solidly Democratic district in South Texas will now be represente­d by a Republican after Mayra Flores won a special primary election to finish the term of former Democratic Rep. Filemon Vela, who resigned this year to become a lobbyist.

Flores, a GOP organizer who is the daughter of migrant workers, will only hold the seat for several months before the district is redrawn to be more favorable to Democrats. But her victory in the heavily Hispanic Rio Grande Valley is an ominous sign for Democrats.

They are not only losing ground in a region they long dominated, but Flores’ success as a candidate also demonstrat­es that Republican­s are making inroads with Hispanic voters.

Her win also has implicatio­ns for Democrats’ ambitions in Congress, denying House Speaker Nancy Pelosi an opportunit­y to add to her slim two-vote margin to pass legislatio­n.

From South Carolina to the White House?

Also in South Carolina, Republican Tim Scott coasted to an easy and unopposed primary win Tuesday for what he says will be his last term in the Senate. But another state is also on his mind — the presidenti­al proving ground of Iowa.

It’s become an article of faith that there are no “accidental” trips to Iowa by ambitious politician­s. And Scott, the Senate’s sole Black Republican, has made several visits, including one last week.

He certainly has the money to contend. As he campaigned for reelection to the Senate, Scott amassed a jaw-dropping $42 million. That’s more than double the $15.7 million average cost of a winning Senate campaign in the 2018 midterms. It’s also more than enough to launch a Republican presidenti­al campaign in 2024.

 ?? TOM R. SMEDES / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Nevada Republican U.S. Senate candidate Adam Laxalt celebrates his victory with family, friends and supporters at the Tamarack Casino in Reno on Tuesday.
TOM R. SMEDES / ASSOCIATED PRESS Nevada Republican U.S. Senate candidate Adam Laxalt celebrates his victory with family, friends and supporters at the Tamarack Casino in Reno on Tuesday.

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