FiveThirtyEight
Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux

Still waiting on results from Maryland, but in addition to the races we’re watching there, we’ll also be paying attention to where voters land on whether to legalize marijuana for recreational use. Maryland is one of five states with marijuana on the ballot this year. So far, 19 states have legalized marijuana for adult recreational use. It could be a higher number after tonight.

Dan Hopkins

Zoha just mentioned Mooney of West Virginia, whose career is a prime example of how nationalized our politics have become: He used to be a state senator … across the border in Maryland.

Monica Potts

Polls have closed in Arkansas. The state is electing a new governor, and Republican Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the former spokesperson for President Trump and daughter of former Gov. Mike Huckabee, is heavily favored to beat her Democratic opponent, Chris Jones. If she does so, she’ll become the state’s first woman governor.

Sen. John Boozman, the incumbent Republican, is also heavily favored to beat his Democratic challenger, Natalie James. Interestingly, Boozman’s colleague Sen. Tom Cotton did not even face a Democratic challenger in 2020.

In the 2nd District, which includes Little Rock, the capital and largest city, Republican Rep. French Hill is also facing a challenge from Democrat Quintessa Hathaway that he’s expected to win. Hill faced a credible challenge from Joyce Elliott in 2020, a Democratic leader in the state, but he still won that race 54 percent to 45 percent. Any Democratic candidate needs to turn out the vote in Little Rock to have a chance, which may be hurt by the most recent round of redistricting that carved up the city. Little Rock, which has a large Black voting population, was split up among three districts, and the map is now facing a court challenge.

There are also four ballot initiatives voters will decide in the state. I mentioned the possibility of marijuana legalization earlier in the night, but voters are also deciding on whether to require a 60 percent super-majority for future ballot measures to pass — an initiative put on the ballot by the state legislature — whether to pass a freedom-of-religion law and whether to allow the legislature to call an extraordinary session of the legislature, a power currently held only by the governor. This is largely seen as a reaction against Gov. Asa Hutchinson’s COVID-19 restrictions, which he enacted with executive action.


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