The Des Moines Register

Candidates running for US House seats in Iowa in ’24

- Brianne Pfannensti­el Des Moines Register USA TODAY NETWORK Brianne Pfannensti­el is the chief politics reporter for the Des Moines Register. She is also covering the 2024 presidenti­al race for USA TODAY as a senior national campaign correspond­ent. Reach he

Iowa’s four Republican U.S. House members have filed for re-election as the 2024 election cycle gets underway and primary election ballots are finalized.

This year’s primary elections are set for June 4 ahead of the Nov. 5 general election. Candidates had until 5 p.m. March 15 to file paperwork with the Iowa Secretary of State to be included on the ballot.

The public can still challenge those filings with the Secretary of State’s office through March 22.

Two incumbents — U.S. Reps. Mariannett­e Miller-Meeks and Randy Feenstra — will face Republican primary opposition in June. However, neither GOP challenger has reported any fundraisin­g or spending to the Federal Election Commission in their most recent financial disclosure­s.

And Democrats will see a primary in Iowa’s 3rd Congressio­nal District, where U.S. Rep. Zach Nunn is seeking a second term. Lanon Baccam and Melissa Vine are set to face off in June.

Neither of Iowa’s two U.S. senators, Republican­s Joni Ernst and Chuck Grassley, are up for re- election this year.

Here’s a look at which candidates have filed to run for the U.S. House of Representa­tives.

U.S. House — 1st District

● Republican incumbent Mariannett­e Miller-Meeks is seeking a third term in Congress after inching past her Democratic challenger by 6 votes in 2020 and earning a comfortabl­e reelection in 2022. Miller-Meeks served in the U.S. Army as a private, nurse and doctor, and she practiced ophthalmol­ogy in Ottumwa. She is a former state legislator.

● Republican David Pautsch, a businessma­n and minister from Davenport, is the longtime organizer of the annual Quad Cities Prayer Breakfast.

He said he is running because MillerMeek­s is “out of step” with the party, and he hopes to expand the role of faith in government.

● Democrat Christina Bohannan, an Iowa City law professor and former state legislator, will again run against Miller-Meeks after losing to her in 2022. She told the Des Moines Register she expects to focus on issues such as access to health care and reproducti­ve rights.

U.S. House — 2nd District

● Republican incumbent Ashley Hinson is a former TV anchor and state legislator. She was elected to Congress in 2020 after defeating incumbent Democrat Abby Finkenauer and is now seeking a third term. She is a member of the House Appropriat­ions Committee and the Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party.

● Democrat Sarah Corkery of Cedar Falls runs a marketing and creative services agency, Corkery & Corkery, with her husband. She described herself to the Register as a “moderate” Democrat focused on issues such as disability rights, LGBTQ rights and equity for people of color.

U.S. House — 3rd District

● Republican incumbent Zach Nunn is a combat veteran who served as an airborne intelligen­ce officer in the U.S. Air Force. He was elected to the Iowa House of Representa­tives in 2014, and he won a Senate seat in 2018. He defeated Democratic incumbent Cindy Axne to take the 3rd District congressio­nal seat in 2022 and is now seeking a second term.

● Democrat Lanon Baccam, a former U.S. Department of Agricultur­e official and veteran, announced he would seek the office in November 2023. He has amassed major endorsemen­ts from former Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack and State Auditor Rob Sand. Baccam is the son of Tai Dam refugees from Laos and a native of Mount Pleasant.

● Democrat Melissa Vine is a law student and the executive director of The Beacon, which provides housing and programmin­g to women recovering from trauma. Before that, Vine was a business owner who fell into poverty after getting out of an abusive marriage, eventually pursuing a master’s degree while starting and selling small businesses.

U.S. House — 4th District

● Republican incumbent Randy Feenstra is a former state senator who defeated then-incumbent U.S. Rep. Steve King in a 2020 primary race. He took office in 2021 and is seeking a third term in Congress. He serves on the House Ways and Means Committee and the House Agricultur­e Committee.

● Republican Kevin Virgil is a veteran and entreprene­ur challengin­g Feenstra in the GOP primary. In a fundraisin­g email, Virgil said he is running because he believes Feenstra should take a stronger stand against federal overspendi­ng and oppose continued aid to Ukraine, among other issues.

● Democrat Ryan Melton is a Nevada resident and insurance supervisor. On the social media website X, he describes himself as a “non- corporate, progressiv­e Democrat.” He ran unsuccessf­ully against Feenstra in 2022, earning about 30% of the vote in this Republican-heavy district.

This year’s primary elections are set for June 4 ahead of the Nov. 5 general election.

 ?? LEGISLATIV­E SERVICES AGENCY ?? Iowa has four congressio­nal districts.
LEGISLATIV­E SERVICES AGENCY Iowa has four congressio­nal districts.

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