Today’s primaries will send a message to Democrats

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    1 min ago

    CNN Projection: Weatherman Mark Ronchetti will win New Mexico Republican nomination for governor

    From CNN’s Rachel Janfaza

    (From Facebook/Mark Ronchetti for Governor)
    (From Facebook/Mark Ronchetti for Governor)

    Republican Mark Ronchetti will win the New Mexico Republican nomination for governor, CNN projects.

    Ronchetti, a former weatherman who was the Republican nominee for a US Senate seat in New Mexico in 2020, beat a field of three other contenders vying for the nomination, following the New Mexico Republican party’s pre-primary convention in February.

    State Rep. Rebecca Dow, US Army veteran and financial advisor Gregory Zanetti and retired USAF reserve member and Sandoval County Commissioner Jay Block also ran for the GOP nomination.

    Ronchetti held a steady fundraising advantage over the other GOP candidates throughout the race, according to local news

    He will face incumbent Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham in the November general election. Republicans view the race as an opportunity to pick up a governor’s seat in a key border state, where immigration is an important issue. 

    Lujan Grisham, for her part, became the first Democratic Latina to be elected governor in the US in 2018 and ran unopposed for the Democratic nomination this year.

    The Republican Governor’s Association has slammed Lujan Grisham over her response to the situation at the US southern border as well as high inflation and Covid-19. Republicans have also attacked Lujan Grisham for controversy during her first term in office. 

    Ronchetti has prioritized border security and crime while running for the GOP nomination.

    During his primary campaign, he criticized Lujan Grisham for her stance on the oil and gas industries as well as her spending practices as governor and response to inflation and crime.

    4 min ago

    CNN Projection: GOP Rep. Chris Smith wins renomination in New Jersey 4th Congressional District

    From CNN’s Rachel Janfaza

    US Rep. Chris Smith speaks during a committee hearing last year in Washington.
    US Rep. Chris Smith speaks during a committee hearing last year in Washington. (Ken Cedeno/UPI/Bloomberg/Getty Images/File)

    New Jersey Rep. Chris Smith, the longest-serving member of the state delegation, will win the GOP nomination in the 4th Congressional district, CNN projects. 

    Smith, who was first elected in 1980, fended off an array of primary challengers, including conservative talk radio host Mike Crispi, who was endorsed by Trump allies such as Roger Stone and Rudy Guiliani, and former FBI agent Steve Gray. Both had sought to cast the veteran incumbent as too moderate

    Smith was one of the few Republicans to vote for President Biden’s infrastructure bill. He is also the co-chair of the Congressional Pro-Life Caucus.

    5 min ago

    Progressives get brushed back in New Jersey

    From CNN’s Gregory Krieg

    Progressives didn’t invest much in the New Jersey House primaries, but that didn’t mean they weren’t paying attention to Tuesday night’s results.

    Results from the 10th Congressional District, where Imani Oakley, the former New Jersey Working Families legislative director, challenged Rep. Donald Payne Jr., were of particular interest. A strong showing from Oakley might have set the stage for another, better-funded and organized effort to oust Payne in two years.

    But Payne, a five-term incumbent who took over the seat from his late father, raced out to an early lead and comfortably clinched the nomination.

    A new PAC, Team Blue, co-chaired by Reps. Hakeem Jeffries of New York, Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey, Terri Sewell of Alabama and Cheri Bustos of Illinois, was also paying close attention. Before polls closed on Tuesday, they put out a statement reiterating their support for Payne – with a jab at the left for good measure.

    “Rep. Payne, a proven progressive, is facing a primary challenge from the extreme left, mirroring the recent, failed effort to take down Rep. Shontel Brown in Ohio,” the co-chairs said.

    Oakley, in a statement, ripped the party establishment in New Jersey’s over what she described as “dirty tricks” and lamented the continued influence of “our state’s corrupt political machine,” but vowed to continue her fight.

    Whether national progressives will be there to back her is another question. The larger local progressive organizations, including the New Jersey WFP, almost unanimously backed Payne.

    Results from the Garden State’s 8th Congressional District, where Rep. Albio Spires retired to make way for Robert Menendez Jr., son of New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez, were also dispiriting for progressives. Menendez Jr. has never held office, but quickly secured key endorsements in a district that might have otherwise invited a competitive contest. 

    Menendez Jr. ultimately faced two other candidates, including progressive David Ocampo Garajales, who looks unlikely to crack 15% of the vote.

    23 min ago

    Signs of low turnout in California and New Jersey primaries present warning for Democrats

    From CNN’s Maeve Reston

    Robert Macias marks his ballot in Sacramento, California, on Tuesday.
    Robert Macias marks his ballot in Sacramento, California, on Tuesday. (Rich Pedroncelli/AP)

    Democrats faced fresh warning signs Tuesday night in two blue states at a moment when they are trying to get their base voters energized and primed for an intensely competitive election year.

    In both California and New Jersey — states with key US House races that could determine control of Congress — early metrics suggest that turnout has been low, reflecting the sour mood of voters about gas prices, rising crime and an uncertain economy.

    Voter disengagement was most evident in California, where nearly 22 million ballots were mailed out to every eligible voter. Only about 18% of ballots had been returned as of Tuesday even though they were mailed to voters weeks ago, according to ballot tracking data from the California-based firm Political Data Intelligence. This comes despite an array of competitive House races — where the top two vote-getters regardless of party will advance to the general election — and several marquee local contests, including the race for mayor in Los Angeles and an attempted recall of San Francisco’s district attorney.

    In New Jersey, few of the state’s voters opted to cast their ballots in the three-day window for in-person early voting, but Secretary of State Tahesha Way noted in an interview with ABC News that the process is new, meaning it could take some time for voters to take advantage of it. Those early indicators, however, stand in sharp contrast with the high turnout during early voting in states like Georgia, where a more restrictive new voting law led activists to redouble their efforts to get voters to cast their ballots ahead of the primary.

    The May calendar was dominated by big US Senate contests where former President Donald Trump’s influence was repeatedly tested. But now the focus shifts to these competitive House races that will offer a window into how much voters intend to blame the party in power for their current unease about the state of the economy and the country.

    Those dynamics are most apparent in California, where Democrats currently hold all the statewide offices and dominate the congressional delegation. The new map that was drawn by the state’s nonpartisan redistricting commission last year yielded as many as ten competitive House races in California, where Democrats were bullish about the potential for pickups.

    But Golden State voters are contending with the highest gas prices in the nation and unnerved by the spike in violent crime, as well as a crushing homelessness crisis that many say seems to be worsening, even though billions of dollars are flowing to build housing for those living on the streets. All those issues have surfaced in the close races in the state, emboldening Republicans who are advancing the notion that things are spiraling out of control.

    Read more here.

    17 min ago

    CNN Projection: Mike Franken will win Iowa Democratic Senate primary

    From CNN’s Ethan Cohen and Melissa Holzberg DePalo

    Mike Franken salutes before speaking at the Iowa Democratic Party's Liberty and Justice Celebration in April.
    Mike Franken salutes before speaking at the Iowa Democratic Party’s Liberty and Justice Celebration in April. (Charlie Neibergall/AP)

    Retired Navy Adm. Mike Franken will win Iowa’s Senate Democratic primary, CNN projects, and is set to take on longtime Iowa GOP Sen. Chuck Grassley in the general election in November.

    He was facing off against former Rep. Abby Finkenauer and Glenn Hurst.

    Finkenauer had been a favorite to win the race. She served one term in Congress after being elected in 2018 and won a district former President Donald Trump carried in 2016. She became the second youngest women ever to be elected to Congress when she won at 29. She lost her reelection campaign to Ashley Hinson in 2020. 

    The Iowa Supreme Court ruled in April that Finkenauer could appear on the 2022 primary ballot after a lower Iowa court said some of the signatures on her nominating petition should be ruled invalid. 

    36 min ago

    The polls are closing in Montana

    From CNN’s Rachel Janfaza, Ethan Cohen and Melissa Holzberg DePalo

    It’s 10 p.m. ET, and the polls are closing in Montana.

    Montana is hosting two US House races for the first time in decades after the state gained a second seat in reapportionment following the 2020 census. The newly drawn district favors Republicans.

    Ryan Zinke, the former interior secretary under former President Donald Trump, is running for that new seat, covering the western part of the state.

    Former state Sen. Al Olszewski is staging the most serious challenge to Zinke’s bid but has raised just a fraction of the campaign cash haul that Zinke’s brought in. 

    57 min ago

    CNN Projection: Kristi Noem will win South Dakota Republican governor primary

    From CNN’s Rachel Janfaza

    South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem speaks in Orlando earlier this year.
    South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem speaks in Orlando earlier this year. (John Raoux/AP/File)

    Incumbent Gov. Kristi Noem will win the South Dakota Republican nomination for governor, CNN projects.

    Noem fended off a primary challenge from state Rep. Steve Haugaard. She is seeking a second term leading a red state that backed former President Donald Trump by 26 points in 2020.

    Noem, a forceful champion of Trump, has been talked about as a potential running mate for the former President if he were to run again in 2024 and is considered a potential 2024 presidential contender herself. She raised more than $800,000 ahead of the primary, according to campaign finance reports

    She has been outspoken on a number of issues, including Covid-19 restrictions and gun rights. Earlier this year, she accused President Joe Biden in a speech of projecting weakness on the world stage, saying he had been “wrong on every major foreign policy decision that he has been part of for almost 50 years” and charging that his leadership style has emboldened leaders such as Russian President Vladimir Putin. 

    Though she has risen to the national spotlight, in South Dakota, Noem’s ambitions have been clouded by the controversy over a July 2020 meeting that she held with members of her staff, her daughter — who was applying to become a state-certified real estate appraiser at the time — and top state officials who oversaw that program.  

    Noem also previously hired her daughter Kennedy Noem in 2018 as a policy analyst as Kennedy was graduating from college.

    39 min ago

    CNN Projection: Sen. Chuck Grassley wins Iowa Republican Senate primary

    From CNN staff

    US Sen. Chuck Grassley speaks during a committee meeting in March.
    US Sen. Chuck Grassley speaks during a committee meeting in March. (Susan Walsh/AP/File)

    Sen. Chuck Grassley will win the Iowa Republican Senate primary, CNN projects.

    Grassley is seeking an eighth term and with Sen. Pat Leahy’s retirement after this year, he will be the senior-most senator in 2023 regardless of whether the GOP takes control in the midterm or not.

    If the GOP does take control in November, then he would likely be in line to once again be Senate president pro tempore. This means he would be third in the presidential line of succession behind the vice president and speaker.

    Right now, Grassley sits on the Senate Judiciary Committee and holds several other influential committee spots. With reelection, Grassley would also become the eighth longest-serving senator of all time.

    Former Iowa Rep. Abby Finkenauer is the highest-profile Democrat aiming to challenge Grassley in the fall. Though Iowa has trended more conservative in recent years and backed former President Donald Trump in both 2016 and 2020. The Iowa Democratic Senate primary has not yet been projected

    19 min ago

    CNN Projection: Iowa makes history with all-female gubernatorial matchup

    From CNN’s Rachel Janfaza

    Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, left, will face Democratic challenger Deidre DeJear in November.
    Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, left, will face Democratic challenger Deidre DeJear in November. (AP/Courtesy DeJear for Governor)

    For the first time in Iowa history, both Democrats and Republicans in the state will have women as their nominees for governor. Incumbent GOP Gov. Kim Reynolds and Democrat Deidre DeJear were unopposed in their primaries Tuesday and advanced to the November general election, CNN projects.

    Reynolds was the state lieutenant governor when she was elevated to the governorship after Gov. Terry Branstad resigned to become US ambassador to China under President Donald Trump. Reynolds was elected to a full term in 2018. She attracted national attention earlier this year when she gave the GOP response to President Biden’s State of the Union address.

    DeJear was the losing Democratic nominee for Iowa secretary of state in 2018.

    Reynolds is the favorite to win in November in a state that has trended red in recent elections.

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