The Guardian (USA)

Election denier triumphs as primaries test Trump’s grip on Republican party

- Lauren Gambino in Washington

Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s on Tuesday nominated Donald Trump’s choice for governor, an election denier who was outside the Capitol on 6 January, but were divided over his candidate for Senate in a consequent­ial round of primary contests that also saw the ousting of Madison Cawthorn, the scandal-plagued first-term congressma­n, in North Carolina.

Voters in five states went to the polls on Tuesday to pick the candidates at the center of some of this year’s most contentiou­s battles for control of Congress, statehouse­s and governor’s offices. From Oregon to North Carolina, Idaho to Kentucky and the perennial swing state of Pennsylvan­ia, the array of nominating contests tested both Trump’s grip on the Republican party and Joe Biden’s leadership of the Democratic party.

In Pennsylvan­ia, the Associated Press declared Mastriano, a retired army colonel, the winner in a crowded field of Republican candidates. Shapiro ran unopposed. Despite his Maga bona fides, Trump only endorsed Mastriano in the final days of the campaign after he had consistent­ly led in the polls. But his candidacy has worried Republican party leaders concerned that he is too extreme to win statewide.

For the same reason, Democrats embraced – even encouraged – Mastriano’s campaign, a risky strategy for a party warning about the persistent threats to democracy posed by election deniers. If Mastriano prevails in November, he would have enormous power over the administra­tion of the next presidenti­al election in one of the fiercest electoral battlegrou­nds.

In North Carolina, Cawthorn failed to win re-election amid multiple scandals, losing his seat to Chuck Edwards, a three-term state senator and business owner. It was a stunning fall for the 26year-old congressma­n, once seen as a rising star in the Republican party.

But his rabble-rousing antics angered many of his colleagues, some of whom turned sharply against him in the race after he claimed without evidence that Washington figures he “looked up to” had invited him to orgies and used cocaine. House minority leader Kevin McCarthy rebuked Cawthorn publicly over the remark.

John Fetterman, Pennsylvan­ia’s lieutenant governor, easily won the state’s Democratic primary for Senate that was complicate­d when a stroke took Fetterman off the campaign trail in the final weekend before the election. His victory sets the stage for one of the fiercest Senate races of the cycle – and one of the best opportunit­ies for Democrats to pick up a seat in a year when the political headwinds are blowing against them.

Fetterman, a plain-spoken Harvard graduate known for wearing gym shorts and championin­g marijuana legalizati­on, beat congressma­n Conor Lamb, a moderate who aligned himself closely with Biden and state representa­tive Malcolm Kenyatta, a leftwing state legislator. Fetterman is expected to make a full recovery from his stroke, but was not able to attend his election night party because he was still in the hospital.

In a statement, Joe Biden said electing Fetterman, a liberal Democrat, would be a “big step forward for Pennsylvan­ia’s working people”. Calling him a “strong nominee” who could unite Democrats and win a general election, the president lashed out at his prospectiv­e Republican opponent, warning that whoever emerged as the nominee was guaranteed to be “too dangerous, too craven, and too extreme” for the US Senate.

As of late Tuesday, Fetterman’s opponent was not yet known. Mehmet Oz, the celebrity physician known as Dr Oz, was trailing Dave McCormick, a former hedge fund boss, but the race remained too close to call. Conservati­ve commentato­r Kathy Barnette, who enjoyed an 11th hour surge as Oz and McCormick lobbed brutal attacks on one another, finished in a distant third.

“Unfortunat­ely we’re not going to have a resolution tonight,” McCormick said during a speech at his election night party on Tuesday, citing “tens of thousands” of outstandin­g ballots left to count.

On the Republican side, Oz struggled to unite the conservati­ve base behind him. Hounded as a “Hollywood liberal”, Oz embraced Trump’s false claim of voter fraud and was rewarded with the former president’s seal of approval. But when they appeared together at a rally, boos could be heard whenever Trump mentioned Oz.

Conservati­ves in the state also appeared tepid about McCormick, the husband of former Trump administra­tion official Dina Powell. During the campaign, he and Oz unloaded their personal war chests, leveling such a ferocious campaign against one another that exasperate­d voters said they began looking at Barnette.

In Pennsylvan­ia and Oregon, progressiv­es appeared on the verge of key victories. Summer Lee was narrowly leading the field in her bid to capture the party’s nomination in the solidly Democratic Pennsylvan­ia district represente­d by retiring congressma­n Mike Doyle.

Lee had been heavily targeted by a group affiliated with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), the pro-Israel lobby group,which poured money into primary races with the goal of countering the rise of progressiv­e Democrats sympatheti­c to the Palestinia­n cause.

If elected, she would be the first Black woman to represent the state in Congress.

And in Oregon, congressma­n Kurt Schrader, a Blue Dog Democrat known for breaking with his party, badly trailed his progressiv­e challenger Jamie McLeod-Skinner, in a race seen as a test of the president’s appeal among the party’s base.

McLeod-Skinner assailed the seventerm incumbent for his votes against key pieces of the Democrats’ policy agenda, including Biden’s $1.9tn pandemic relief package. Neverthele­ss, Schrader was the first candidate Biden endorsed this cycle.

On the opposite coast, in North Carolina, the Trump-backed congressma­n Ted Budd bested ex-governor Pat McCrory and a dozen other candidates to clinch the Republican nomination for Senate.

Budd, who was one of the 139

House Republican­s who objected to certifying the election, will face Democrat Cheri Beasley, a former chief justice for the North Carolina state supreme court, who easily won her party’s 10way primary to replace retiring Republican senator Richard Burr.If victorious, the trailblazi­ng former public defender would make history as the southern state’s first Black senator.

State senator Valerie Foushee defeated Nida Allam, the first Muslim woman ever elected to public office in North Carolina, in the hotly contested primary to replace retiring congressma­n David Price in North Carolina’s 4th congressio­nal District, a safe Democratic seat.

Her victory was a disappoint­ment for progressiv­es, as was one of the more moderate Democratic candidates who benefited from the support of a Super Pac affiliated with AIPAC.

In deeply conservati­ve Idaho, the sitting governor, Brad Little, defeated his far-right lieutenant governor, Janice McGeachin, a Trump-endorsed candidate who twice attempted a power grab to ban coronaviru­s mask and vaccine mandates when Little was out of state on business. Little overturned the orders when he returned.

And in an expensive fight for Oregon’s newly created sixth congressio­nal district, Democratic state representa­tive Andrea Salinas was leading a sprawling primary that included a polit

ical novice backed by a cryptocurr­ency billionair­e. If elected, Salinas will be the state’s first Latina in Congress.

In Kentucky, the state’s highest ranking Democrat, Morgan McGarvey, won the party primary for an open congressio­nal seat to replace the retiring congressma­n John Yarmuth, who endorsed him. He beat state representa­tive Attica Scott, who drew national attention when she sued Louisville police officers after being arrested during the racial justice protests in the summer of 2020, a disappoint­ment for movement activists hoping to translate the grassroots energy into political gains.

Charles Booker, a Black former state lawmaker who emerged as a powerful voice against racial injustice in the aftermath of the fatal police shooting of Breonna Taylor in 2020, won the Democratic

Senate primary in the state. The progressiv­e faces long odds in his bid to unseat Republican senator Rand Paul in November.

 ?? Carolyn Kaster/AP ?? Doug Mastriano, who won the battle to run for governor in Pennsylvan­ia. Photograph:
Carolyn Kaster/AP Doug Mastriano, who won the battle to run for governor in Pennsylvan­ia. Photograph:
 ?? Hannah Beier/Reuters ?? Celebrity physician Mehmet Oz was trailing Dave McCormick Tuesday night in Pennsylvan­ia’s GOP Senate race. Photograph:
Hannah Beier/Reuters Celebrity physician Mehmet Oz was trailing Dave McCormick Tuesday night in Pennsylvan­ia’s GOP Senate race. Photograph:

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States