Check out these political snippets on primary results, congressional and gubernatorial races from around the country.
Primary Results
Alaska
As expected, at-large US Rep. Mary Peltola (D-Bethel) finished first in the top four Alaska jungle primary, but the unanswered question was whether businessman Nick Begich, III or Lt. Gov. Nancy Dahlstrom, the choice of the Republican establishment and former President Donald Trump, would become her prime competitor. While Rep. Peltola is knocking on the door of the majority support threshold as ballots continue to be counted, it was Mr. Begich who secured second place while Ms. Dahlstrom finished almost seven points behind him and 30 points behind the Congresswoman.
The next few days of jockeying will be interesting. The Republicans will have their best chance of unseating Rep. Peltola if they unite behind one candidate, and it appears their only choice will be Mr. Begich. If they remain divided among two major GOP contenders, then the outcome will be the same as we’ve seen before, that is Rep. Peltola will continue representing the most Republican congressional district in the country that elects a Democrat to the House.
Florida
The Florida primary unfolded as expected. Sen. Rick Scott (R) and former US Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell (D) were easy winners in their respective primaries. Sen. Scott posted over 84% in the Republican primary, while Ms. Mucarsel-Powell captured just over 2/3 of the Democratic vote. Sen. Scott and Ms. Mucarsel-Powell will now advance to the general election where the incumbent is favored in a state where the Republican registered voter factor exceeds its Democratic counterparts by more than 1 million individuals.
In the Sunshine State’s 1st Congressional District, Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Niceville/Pensacola) was again an easy winner, exceeding 72% of the vote over Navy veteran Aaron Dimmock who moved into the district to challenge the Congressman. Mr. Gaetz will now advance into the general election where he becomes a prohibitive favorite in a seat that the FiveThirtyEight data organization rates as R+38.
In the Atlantic coastal 8th District, as expected, former state Senate President Mike Haridopolos topped 72% of the vote to claim the Republican nomination. He will replace retiring Congressman Bill Posey (R-Rockledge) who announced that he would not seek re-election just before the candidate filing deadline expired. Mr. Haridopolos now becomes a sure winner in the general election.
Turning to the St. Petersburg anchored congressional district that can become competitive, marketing consultant Whitney Fox, as expected, easily won the Democratic primary and advances into the general election to oppose freshman Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-St. Petersburg). The Congresswoman is favored, but the district electorate is relatively close. The Republican general election vote is likely to land in the low to mid-50s.
Rep. Laurel Lee* (R-Tampa), who former President Trump targeted for defeat before he decided to endorse her when no major GOP competition emerged, also topped 72% in last night’s GOP primary. Hillsborough County Commissioner Patricia Kemp, who was unopposed in the Democratic primary, will now become Rep. Lee’s November opponent. Since Ms. Kemp has underperformed on the fundraising circuit, Rep. Lee is viewed as a clear November favorite in central Florida’s most competitive seat.
Veteran Rep. Vern Buchanan* (R-Sarasota) faced a credible Republican primary opponent, but the Congressman easily prevailed with 61% voter preference. The primary should prove to be Rep. Buchanan’s most formidable challenge in a 16th District that the FiveThirtyEight data organization rates as R+13.
In South Florida, we saw a minor upset as Miami-Dade County School Board member Lucia Baez-Geller defeated former Key Biscayne Mayor Mike Davey with a 54% vote total. She now will oppose two-term Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar* (R-Miami) in what appears to be a dead even district on paper demographically, but with an electorate that tends to vote more conservatively.
Wyoming
As predicted, Wyoming Sen. John Barrasso* (R) and at-large US Rep. Harriet Hageman (R-Cheyenne) were easily renominated with landslide Republican primary victories on Tuesday night. Sen. Barrasso’s 68% victory at this writing and Rep. Hageman scoring 81% of the primary vote will send both office holders to the general election in what promises to be Donald Trump’s strongest state in the country.
U.S. Senate
Arizona
The Arizona open Senate research data has been both consistent and inconsistent. The consistency lies in all pollsters finding US Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Phoenix) leading former news anchor and 2022 gubernatorial nominee Kari Lake (R), but the margin spread has been inconsistent. The latest release, from WPA Intelligence (for the Club for Growth; 8/11-13; 600 AZ likely voters) sees the Gallego edge only at 48-46%. Another four polls released in August, from four different pollsters, record the Gallego lead at 11, 9, 8, and 6 percentage points.
Montana
After falling behind in polling since the end of June, the latest RMG Research poll, conducted for the Napolitan News Service, finds Sen. Jon Tester (D) pulling back into the lead. According to the RMG results, (8/6-14; 540 MT registered voters), Sen. Tester posts a 49-44% advantage over Republican nominee Tim Sheehy, a retired Navy SEAL and CEO for a Montana based aerospace company.
The poll has a basic flaw in that the sampling period is long (8 days), which leads to a higher error factor. It did provide several interesting data bits, however. As other polls have shown, former President Donald Trump enjoys a wide lead over Vice President Kamala Harris – 53-35%, according to the RMG Research results. The results also see 16% of Trump voters peeling off to support Sen. Tester. Conversely, 17% of Tester’s voters say they would prefer Republicans gaining control of the Senate. Asked how they would vote if they knew the Montana race would determine the next Senate majority, 55% said they would vote for the Republican candidate as compared to 37% who vowed to support the Democratic nominee.
Pennsylvania
Seriously conflicting polls are coming from Pennsylvania regarding the state’s competitive US Senate race. The two most recent polls, released yesterday, from Rasmussen Reports, Emerson College, and Quinnipiac University show challenger David McCormick (R) closing to within single digits of Sen. Bob Casey, Jr. (D). Only days earlier, however, both the New York Times/Siena College and Pennsylvania based Franklin & Marshall College posted Sen. Casey to double digit leads.
The Rasmussen, Emerson, and Quinnipiac polls were all conducted during the August 8-17 period and interviewed a cumulative 4,050 Pennsylvania voters. All of the results find Sen. Casey leading, but his margin is 3, 4, and 5 points, respectively, among the three pollsters. The NYT/Siena and F&M surveys were conducted during the July 31st through August 8th period and interviewed a combined 1,613 Keystone State registered voters. Sen. Casey’s margin in the NYT/Siena survey is 14 points and 12 in the F&M study. The progression suggests the race is tightening since the more recent results are consistently closer than the wider range found during the earlier period.
U.S. House of Representatives
AZ-1
On the heels of former state Representative and physician Amish Shah’s (D) surprising win in the July 30th crowded Democratic primary, Impact Research, polling for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (8/1-4; 500 AZ-1 likely general election voters; 100 oversample of Hispanics; live interview and text) conducted a district-wide survey. The findings suggest the race is a tie, with both Rep. David Schweikert* (R-Fountain Hills) and Dr. Shah deadlocked with 48% of the vote.
AZ-3
In another of the 2024 close primary races in which the counting has dragged on for weeks, former Phoenix City Councilwoman Yassamin Ansari this week was declared the official winner of the open 3rd Congressional District Democratic primary by a 39 vote margin over former state Senate Minority Leader Raquel Teran. Ms. Ansari had led since the first count on July 30th, but what originally appeared to be a substantial lead dwindled in every subsequent count until the leakage finally stopped with only 39 votes to spare. The total turnout was a low 38,135 votes. AZ-3 is a safe Democratic seat.
CA-45
One of the keys to determining the next US House majority is how well the Republicans do in retaining the four Democratic seats their members hold in the Golden State. One of those is the Orange County district of two-term Rep. Michelle Steel*. The FiveThirtyEight data organization rates the 45th as D+5, but Rep. Steel was able to secure a 52-48% post-redistricting re-election victory in 2022.
While initially favored to claim a third term, a just-released late July Normington Petts survey (for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee; 7/29-31; 500 likely CA-45 voters; live interview & text) finds Rep. Steel and Democrat Derek Tran tied at 47% apiece. In a heavily Asian district (41.4% of the Voting Age Population), Mr. Tran has a strong advantage within the large Vietnamese population (62-30%) over the Korean-born Republican incumbent. We can expect another close finish in a highly competitive Orange County congressional district.
MD-6
In a surprising survey result, Public Opinion Strategies released a research study of Maryland’s 6th Congressional District for the Neil Parrott for Congress campaign and the National Republican Congressional Committee (8/6-11; 400 MD-6 likely general election voters; live interview). The results find Democratic nominee April Delaney leading Mr. Parrott, a two-time congressional nominee and ex-state Delegate, by only a 42-40% margin.
MI-8
Soon after both state Sen. Kristen McDonald Rivet (D-Bay City) and two-time former congressional nominee Paul Junge (R) scored landslide primary wins on August 6th, the Rivet campaign released the results of their Global Strategy Group survey. The poll (7/29-8/1; 500 MI-8 likely general election voters; live interview and text), though taken just before the general election officially began here on August 7th, finds Mr. Junge posting a one point lead over Sen. Rivet, 45-44%. Though some recent polls have given Mr. Junge a slight edge, the campaign strategies and voter history favor a Democratic victory in November.
NJ-9
A few days after being readmitted to the hospital, 87-year old veteran US Representative Bill Pascrell (D-NJ) sadly passed away. His family issued the announcement on Wednesday. Mr. Pascrell is the fourth House member to die in this Congress, the second since the July 4th holiday, and the second from New Jersey. His death follows those of Reps. Donald McEachin (D-VA), Donald Payne, Jr. (D-NJ), and Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX).
The open seat count headed into the election now grows to 55 with the Pascrell passing. Of these, 29 are in Democratic held districts with 25 from the Republican side, and one newly created seat within the new Alabama redistricting configuration. Another seven seats have been filled in special elections, and all but the CO-4 campaign feature new incumbents running for their first full term.
PA-10
Another battleground US House contest is unfolding in the Harrisburg-York area of Pennsylvania. Though the FiveThirtyEight data organization rates the seat as R+9, a new poll suggests the race between six-term Rep. Scott Perry (R-Dillsburg) and former television news anchor Janelle Stelson is already a toss-up. An Upswing Research survey (polling for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee; 7/30-8/2; 600 likely PA-10 voters; live interview & text) finds the challenger leading Rep. Perry with a slight 48-47% margin. Typically, this district has polled better for Democrats than it has actually voted, but there is little doubt that the race in this central Pennsylvania CD will be one to watch.
Governor
New Hampshire
As we approach the late September 10th primary election, St. Anselm’s College released the results of their latest statewide survey. In each gubernatorial primary, the data results suggest that former Manchester Mayor Joyce Craig and ex-US Senator Kelly Ayotte lead the respective Democratic and Republican open races. Gov. Chris Sununu (R) is not seeking a fifth term.
The St. Anselm’s poll (8/13-14; 1,327 NH registered voters; 670 likely Democratic primary voters; 657 likely Republican primary voters; online) finds former Mayor Craig leading Executive Councilor Cinde Warmington, 38-27%. For the Republicans, Ms. Ayotte’s margin is much larger over former state Senate President and 2022 US Senate candidate Chuck Morse. The ballot test here yields Ms. Ayotte a 59-25% advantage. St. Anselm’s did not release general election results.
Do you like this page?
Showing 1 reaction
Sign in with
Facebook