Daily Southtown

Once again, Trump a big winner — for now

- By Amber Phillips

Primaries in four states Tuesday — Connecticu­t, Minnesota, Vermont and Wisconsin — set up competitiv­e governors, Senate and House races across the country in November.

But even before then, these primaries identified some clear winners and losers that reinforced trends we’ve been seeing all year. Here they are:

Winners Trump:

In Minnesota’s governor’s race, GOP voters nominated a relative outsider, Jeff Johnson, over a former governor, Tim Pawlenty, as Pawlenty struggled to get out from under the fact he called Trump “unhinged and unfit” during the campaign. (Johnson has his own past problems with Trump, which we’ll get to in the loser section.)

“The Republican Party has shifted,” Pawlenty said as he lost. “It is the era of Trump, and I’m just not a Trump-like politician.”

Trump’s riskiest endorsemen­t yet, in last week’s GOP Kansas governor’s primary, paid off Tuesday, too. Kansas Gov. Jeff Colyer conceded an ultraclose race to Secretary of State Kris Kobach, who helped lead Trump’s voter fraud commission.

For the first time, voters of a major party nominated an openly transgende­r woman for governor. Christine Hallquist won the Democratic nomination for governor in Vermont (though she’ll have to work hard to make that race against GOP Gov. Phil Scott competitiv­e).

In Connecticu­t, Democrat Jahana Hayes won her primary for Congress and is set to become the first black woman to represent New England in the House.

In Minnesota, Democrat Ilhan Omar is one of two candidates who won primaries in the past two weeks vying to become the first Muslim woman elected to Congress.

Diversity: Arrest records and alleged #MeToo perpetrato­rs:

2018 is proving that politician­s can be accused of — or admit — behaving badly and win elections. The felon on the ballot Tuesday, a Connecticu­t mayor running for governor, didn’t win.

But in Wisconsin, a drunken driver did. Democrat Randy Bryce, an iron worker who trying to take the seat of retiring GOP House Speaker Paul Ryan, won his primary. In Minnesota, Rep. Keith Ellison won his Democratic nomination for attorney general while denying accusation­s that he abused a former girlfriend.

Connecticu­t Republican­s:

It sounds counterint­uitive to say a governor’s race in Connecticu­t would be among the most competitiv­e races in the country this November.

But that is what appears to be shaping up after Tuesday.

Both Democrats and Republican­s nominated the candidates they wanted for this open seat (Democrat Ned Lamont and Republican Bob Stefanowsk­i, both wealthy businessme­n). Outgoing Democratic Gov. Dan Malloy is one of the most unpopular politician­s in America, so Republican­s feel like they have a shot to seize the governor’s mansion.

Losers GOP consistenc­y on Trump:

Any Republican on the ballot Tuesday who didn’t particular­ly like Trump in 2016 needed to pivot quickly. In Wisconsin, state Sen. Leah Vukmir did just that as she won her primary to challenge Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis. She called him “offensive to everyone” during the campaign but endorsed him after he won the primary.

And the night’s big winner, Johnson in Minnesota’s GOP governor’s primary, had attacked Trump as a “jackass” during the campaign. But he successful­ly argued that he came around to supporting the president.

GOP Gov. Scott Walker,who didn’t have a competitiv­e primary Tuesday but will have a competitiv­e reelection in November, has twisted himself into a pretzel on whether he supports Trump’s tariff policy, which has ensnared Wisconsin’s Harley-Davidson.

GOP chances in governor’s races in Minnesota and Kansas:

The Trumpier candidate won in each of these races, but that’s not necessaril­y a good thing for Republican­s.

In Kansas, Washington Republican­s aren’t happy that Kobach won. They feel that his inflammato­ry politics gives Democrats a leg up to take that governor’s mansion. They’re even less thrilled with Minnesota’s results. The Republican Governors Associatio­n had reserved $3 million to $4 million in ads for the general election, but that could be in jeopardy now that a lesser-known candidate, Johnson, is the nominee.

In Wisconsin’s Republican Senate primary, both candidates were boosted by billionair­es willing to throw millions at the race.

In the end, someone had to win (Vukmir). The loser was Kevin Nicholson, a former Democrat who paradoxica­lly was boosted by one of the most conservati­ve billionair­es active in U.S. politics, Richard Uihlein. Some $8 million in spending for Nicholson’s failed election can be tied back Uihlein.

Billionair­es:

 ?? ALEX KORMANN/STAR TRIBUNE ??
ALEX KORMANN/STAR TRIBUNE

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