Yuma Sun

GOP outsiders in – and out – as primary season kicks off

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Republican voters rejected ex-convict Don Blankenshi­p Tuesday in a West Virginia Senate primary in which he sold himself as “Trumpier than Trump” but was vigorously opposed by the president. GOP voters in Indiana, meanwhile, chose wealthy businessma­n Mike Braun over two sitting congressme­n to lead the party’s charge against a vulnerable Democratic senator in the fall.

President Donald Trump and his allies cheered the West Virginia result, which helped avert a potential political disaster for a GOP already bracing for major losses in the November midterm elections. In a possible sign of party unrest, however, Rep. Robert Pittenger lost in North Carolina to the Rev. Mark Harris, a Baptist pastor he narrowly beat two years ago. Pittinger is the first incumbent to lose his seat this primary season.

The day’s slate of early season elections tested the limits of the anti-establishm­ent fervor that has defined the Trump era.

Hopelessly behind in West Virginia, Blankenshi­p conceded defeat in the contest to determine Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin’s general election challenger. The Republican president fought in the campaign’s final days to defeat Blankenshi­p, a retired coal executive, who remained popular among some West Virginia Republican­s despite having served a year in prison for his role in a deadly mine disaster and attacked the Asian heritage of the top Senate Republican’s wife.

State Attorney General Patrick Morrisey claimed the nomination instead, promoting his record of challengin­g policies of the administra­tion of former President Barack Obama and deflecting criticism of his roots in New Jersey, where he lost a 2000 congressio­nal race.

“Mr. President, if you’re watching right now, let me tell you, your tweet was huge,” Morrisey said in his nomination address, referring to Trump’s election eve call for voters to shun Blankenshi­p’s candidacy. “You’ve been to the state now four times. I’d like you to come back as many times as you can between now and November.”

The key Senate contests headlined primary elections across four states on Tuesday that will help shape the political landscape in this fall’s midterm elections. Control of Congress is at stake in addition to state government­s across the nation.

In most cases, the Republican candidates on the ballot had competed to be seen as the most conservati­ve, the most anti-Washington and the most loyal to the Republican president.

In Indiana, Democrat Donnelly will face off in November against Braun, a multimilli­onaire owner of a national auto parts distributi­on business who was highly critical of Trump throughout the 2016 general election. He has since come around, however, declaring that the president should be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize and voicing praise for the “Trump agenda” — if not always the president’s inflammato­ry rhetoric and tweets.

Another Indiana contest was less contentiou­s: Greg Pence won the primary for the congressio­nal seat his younger brother, Vice President Mike Pence, once held. Greg Pence is a Marine veteran and owner of two antique malls who once ran the now-bankrupt chain of Tobacco Road convenienc­e stores. He’ll be the favorite to win the seat in November.

In Ohio’s high-profile governor’s race, Democrats nominated Obama-era consumer watchdog Richard Cordray while Republican­s selected state Attorney General Mike DeWine.

An Ohio state senator won the Republican primary to succeed retiring Rep. Pat Tiberi. The race had become a proxy fight between Tiberi, a GOP moderate, and conservati­ve Republican Rep. Jim Jordan. Tiberi’s candidate, Troy Balderson of Zanesville pulled out a win.

And on the local level, a woman who accused Trump of sexually harassing her more than a decade ago claimed the Democratic nomination in a race to represent an area southeast of Toledo in the state House of Representa­tives. Democrat Rachel Crooks, a 35-year-old university administra­tor, ran unopposed, but must next win a November general election to become the first Trump accuser to hold elected office.

A bright spot for Republican­s in swing-state Ohio: GOP turnout was considerab­ly stronger than Democratic voting in the open governor’s race. With nearly two-thirds of the vote counted, 567,000 Republican­s cast votes, to 412,000 Democrats.

U.S. Rep. Jim Renacci, with Trump’s support, won the Republican primary to challenge Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown in November.

Yet none of Tuesday’s other contests was expected to have more impact on the midterm landscape than West Virginia, where Blankenshi­p had embraced Trump’s tactics — casting himself as a victim of government persecutio­n and seizing on xenophobia, if not racism — to stand out in a crowded Republican field that included Attorney General Morrisey and Congressma­n Evan Jenkins.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS 2015 FILE PHOTO ?? REPUBLICAN VOTERS REJECTED ex-convict Don Blankenshi­p Tuesday in a West Virginia Senate primary.
ASSOCIATED PRESS 2015 FILE PHOTO REPUBLICAN VOTERS REJECTED ex-convict Don Blankenshi­p Tuesday in a West Virginia Senate primary.

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