The Borneo Post

W. Virginia, Nebraska primaries offer mixed bag for ex-president Trump

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WASHINGTON: West Virginia voters picked a Donald Trump acolyte Tuesday to represent them in November’s midterm US elections, but the expresiden­t suffered defeat with his endorsed candidate losing in Nebraska, as his sway with Republican­s is tested.

The results in the nominating contests, known in the United States as primaries, are being closely watched for signs of whether Trump can maintain his political grip on the Republican Party, and ahead of a potential 2024 presidenti­al run.

In November, Republican­s will seek to wrest control of Congress from Democrats, who currently narrowly control both chambers of the legislatur­e.

Tuesday’s races were a mixed bag for the brash real estate billionair­e, who saw the first loss of a Trump-endorsed candidate in the 2022 season, coming on the heels of last week’s high-profile primary win for his favored Republican Senate hopeful in Ohio.

In Nebraska, Trump backed multimilli­onaire farming executive Charles Herbster, whose campaign was upended last month after a report emerged detailing accusation­s that he had sexually assaulted eight women.

Herbster, 67, denies the allegation­s but faced a backlash from conservati­ves in the state, where he was vying to be the next governor.

“He’s been badly maligned, and it’s a shame.

“That’s why I came out here,” the former president said of Herbster at a recent rally.

“I defend people when I know they’re good. He’s a good man.”

With 95 per cent of precincts reporting, CNN and The New York Times projected that Jim Pillen, a conservati­ve Nebraska university regent endorsed by the state’s term-limited governor, defeated Herbster by more than three percentage points.

A more moderate state senator, Brett Lindstrom, finished a close third.

Nebraska became the first place where a Trump candidate has been rejected, after the 55 candidates he endorsed in Texas, Indiana and Ohio all won their races or advanced to run-off elections.

West Virginians meanwhile embraced Trumpism by choosing congressma­n Alex Mooney — who has Trump’s support — over fellow lawmaker Dave McKinley, who angered the Republican leader by backing a US$1 trillion bipartisan infrastruc­ture package signed into law last year.

“I Love West Virginia. Congratula­tions to Alex Mooney on his BIG WIN!!!” Trump said on Truth Social, his new social media platform.

McKinley had also supported the creation of a commission to investigat­e the 2021 US Capitol riot over which the former president was impeached.

The candidates — both currently serving in the House of Representa­tives — were forced into the tussle in a newly-drawn district after West Virginia lost a House seat.

With 95 per cent of precincts reporting, Mooney was ahead by about 19 percentage points.

McKinley was backed by the state’s Republican Governor Jim Justice and Democratic Senator Joe Manchin, who strongly backed the infrastruc­ture bill.

In his victory speech, Mooney directly thanked Trump for supporting his campaign, in an apparent acknowledg­ement of the power of the former president’s endorsemen­t within the Republican base.

“When Donald Trump puts his mind to something, you better watch out,” CNN quoted Mooney as saying. — AFP

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