USA TODAY International Edition

Far left loses ground in Mich.

2020 election still being fought in Arizona contests

- Phillip M. Bailey and Ella Lee

The August primaries kicked off Tuesday in some of the most consequent­ial battlegrou­nd states and included the first referendum on abortion since the Supreme Court dismantled Roe v. Wade this summer.

Kansas stole the headlines and got President Joe Biden’s attention as voters flocked to the polls to pick sides on an abortion amendment to the state constituti­on.

Voters in Michigan chose between Democratic House incumbents representi­ng the moderate and far- left wings of the party, while former President Donald Trump was on the ballot by proxy across Arizona.

Kansas voters were the first to express how their state constituti­on should address abortion rights in the wake of the Supreme Court’s monumental ruling in June, which overturned Roe v. Wade.

It was a drubbing against anti- abortion forces.

By roughly 20 percentage points, the Sunflower State rejected the Value

Them Both amendment, which would have allowed the Republican- controlled state Legislatur­e to put new restrictio­ns on the procedure or prohibit it entirely.

Trump’s influence in Arizona

Arizona’s Republican primaries continued the proxy wars Trump has engaged in with GOP officials, including former Vice President Mike Pence.

At the gubernator­ial level, former TV journalist Kari Lake, who’s backed by Trump, and Karrin Taylor Robson, a former member of the Arizona Board of Regents, who was endorsed by Pence and incumbent Gov. Doug Ducey, are in a tight race to be the state’s Republican nominee.

Secretary of State Katie Hobbs, who battled false assertions about fraud in the 2020 presidenti­al election, easily grabbed the Democratic nomination for governor.

Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly’s GOP opponent in the fall will be Trumpbacke­d Blake Masters, who outpaced businessma­n Jim Lamon and Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich.

Masters also has the backing of tech billionair­e Peter Thiel.

Kelly, a prolific fundraiser, has raked in $ 52 million, but Republican­s are determined to make his reelection one of the more competitiv­e contests in November. The Arizona Senate race is one of a handful of toss- up elections that will determine who controls the upper chamber in 2023.

Election denier prevails

This midterm season, many candidates who argued the 2020 presidenti­al race was stolen seek to oversee the next round of elections in bids for secretarie­s of state nationwide.

Mark Finchem, an Arizona legislator, has long promoted Trump’s false claims about the election. He won his GOP primary to be the chief election officer against multiple rivals.

Finchem is part of a Trump- backed coalition of secretary of state candidates running in swing states.

In Georgia, Rep. Jody Hice lost his bid in May to kick out incumbent Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, who defied Trump’s demands to find more votes in the 2020 election. In Nevada, another swing state, Jim Marchant, who said the election was “stolen” from Trump, easily won a seven- way GOP primary for secretary of state in June.

Arizona speaker goes down

Arizona House Speaker Rusty Bowers is among the Republican­s who rejected Trump’s attempts to overturn the 2020 election.

Bowers testified publicly this summer at one of the hearings by the House committee investigat­ing the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, telling lawmakers he refused to say the election was rigged.

The GOP speaker lost to Trumpbacke­d David Farnsworth, a former state legislator, according to early results.

Schmitt wins ‘ Eric’ showdown

Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt won the state’s contest to replace retiring Sen. Roy Blunt.

From the start, it was a crowded field, but it had a lightning rod candidate in former Gov. Eric Greitens, who resigned in 2018 amid allegation­s of sexual assault and campaign fundraisin­g violations. Greitens denied wrongdoing.

Greitens dipped in the polls after his ex- wife detailed domestic abuse claims, which he denied. Establishm­ent Republican­s bolted, worrying the seat could be more vulnerable if the former governor prevailed.

In a final twist before Election Day, Trump issued a statement Monday evening to make his endorsemen­t in the race.

The former president said he supported “ERIC” but left out whether that meant Schmitt or Greitens.

Michigan GOP nomination

Trump- backed Tudor Dixon, a businesswo­man and former conservati­ve TV commentato­r, won the GOP primary for Michigan’s governor.

After her win, Dixon said her race this fall against Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer will be an “epic battle” and vowed to work “to make sure the next four years are filled with opportunit­ies and not locked classrooms and massive grocery bills.”

Dixon bested businessma­n Kevin Rinke and chiropract­or Garrett Soldano. Whitmer faced no primary opponent and holds the advantage of incumbency.

Remember anti- Trump 10?

In the aftermath of Jan. 6, 10 House Republican­s supported removing Trump from office on charges of inciting the riot.

The former president sought revenge, and three of those GOP lawmakers – Reps. Jaime Herrera Beutler and Dan Newhouse of Washington and Peter Meijer of Michigan – were opposed by pro- Trump challenger­s Tuesday.

Meijer lost his primary bid to candidate John Gibbs. Herrera Beutler and Newhouse led their Trump- endorsed challenger­s in Washington’s open primary, making it likely they’ll secure a spot on the general election ballot this fall.

Liberal Dems lose

Michigan saw two House incumbents pitted against each other.

Rep. Haley Stevens defeated fellow Rep. Andy Levin in the newly drawn 11th Congressio­nal District outside Detroit.

It was the latest House race this primary season in which moderate Democrats bested representa­tives of the more liberal wing of the party. Rep. Henry Cuellar of Texas, an anti- abortion Democrat, won his primary in June, and Rep. Shontel Brown of Ohio defeated left- leaning Nina Turner in May.

Levin criticized Israel’s human rights record and brought in Sen. Bernie Sanders to campaign for him. Stevens was backed by party leaders and boosted by more than $ 4 million spent on her behalf by a new group launched by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

Pengate in Arizona?

A conspiracy theory that the pens passed out by poll workers in Arizona make it possible for voters’ choices to be changed came to a head Tuesday when the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office ordered a Republican candidate to stop spreading the story.

In a cease- and- desist letter to county Board of Supervisor­s candidate Gail Golec, she was told to stop urging voters to replace government­issued pens at polling stations.

“As you well know, theft of any sort is unlawful,” Deputy County Attorney Joseph La Rue said in the letter. “Moreover encouragin­g theft of the fast- drying ink pens specifically recommende­d for election day voting is a deliberate attempt to interfere with election administra­tion.”

The Maricopa County Elections Department says on its website that ballpoint pens have slow- drying ink that can smear inside the ballot counting machine, causing the tabulator to shut down and slow election results.

Golec shot back on Twitter, writing that her intention was to “Protect Our Vote, not encourage you to steal pens.”

 ?? MARK HENLE/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Enough with the pens, Joseph La Rue warned.
MARK HENLE/ USA TODAY NETWORK Enough with the pens, Joseph La Rue warned.
 ?? ?? Moderate Haley Stevens won. DAVID RODRIGUEZ MUNOZ/ USA TODAY NETWORK
Moderate Haley Stevens won. DAVID RODRIGUEZ MUNOZ/ USA TODAY NETWORK
 ?? ?? David Farnsworth won in Arizona. ALBERTO MARIANI/ USA TODAY NETWORK
David Farnsworth won in Arizona. ALBERTO MARIANI/ USA TODAY NETWORK

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