FiveThirtyEight
Geoffrey Skelley

All right, we’ve got some results from the GOP primary for Senate in Alabama worth reporting on now. With 13 percent of the expected vote in so far, Britt leads with 44 percent, not that far from the 50 percent threshold a candidate needs to avoid a runoff. And perhaps back from the dead, Brooks is in 2nd with 29 percent, followed by Durant with 24 percent. However, it does look like we have a fair bit of the vote in from Madison County in northern Alabama (home to Huntsville), which is Brooks’s turf in the House, so that might be overselling his strength at this point.

Latest count in Alabama’s GOP primary for Senate

Results of Alabama’s Republican primary for the U.S. Senate, as of 10:03 p.m. Eastern

Candidate Votes Vote %
Katie Britt 62,460 44.3%
Mo Brooks 41,264 29.3
Mike Durant 33,532 23.8
Jake Schafer 1,641 1.2
Karla M. Dupriest 1,139 0.8
Lillie Boddie 1,005 0.7

20% of the expected vote has been reported.

SOURCE: ABC NEWS

Monica Potts

With 35 percent of the vote in, the race is pretty tight in the Democratic primary in Texas’s 15th District. Ruben Ramirez is slightly ahead with 53 percent of the vote. He’s running as more moderate and has been endorsed by Blue Dog PAC. But Michelle Vallejo, who’s been endorsed by Sen. Elizabeth Warren and other progressives, isn’t far behind. Meredith is watching how progressive candidates fare across the country. It’s a battle playing out in red states, too, as Democrats try to figure out what kind of candidates can win in heavily Republican or Republican-leaning districts.

Alex Samuels

George P. Bush has issued a concession statement:


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