Updated |
What Went Down During The June 28 Primary Elections
With 84 percent of the expected vote in, ABC News is reporting that Erik Aadland is projected to win the Republican primary in Colorado’s 7th District. He will face state Sen. Brittany Pettersen in the fall.
As I wrote earlier tonight, female candidates arguably get a small boost in political environments where “women’s issues” are top of mind, largely because they are seen as more competent on those issues than men. Of course, whether renewed attention to abortion rights is helping women tonight is difficult to know, but it’s something to keep an eye on throughout this primary season and in November.
Thus far in primaries, the GOP continues to lag behind Democrats when it comes to nominating women, but that’s typical. Perhaps more interesting is that the GOP is lagging behind their 2020 numbers — according to the Center for American Women in Politics, Republican women are 18 percent of their party’s House nominees compared with 23 percent in 2020, and 7 percent of their Senate nominees compared with 26 percent in 2020.
Tonight, although their overall win record is low, in at least one key race a Republican woman did well. As Maggie covered, Esther Joy King is the projected winner in Illinois’s 17th District, where she will get to run against a Democrat in an open primary, thanks to a retirement. And Republicans will nominate Heidi Ganahl for Colorado governor, to face favored incumbent Jared Polis. In Illinois’s 11th District, Catalina Lauf is leading, as is Regan Deering in Illinois’s 13th District, however, according to Cook Political Report, both of these districts favor Democrats.
How Republican women are doing tonight
Women running for Senate, House and governor and their results in Republican primaries and runoffs in Colorado, Illinois, Mississippi, New York, Oklahoma and Utah, as of 10:43 p.m. Eastern
| Candidate | Office | % Reporting | Vote Share | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heidi Ganahl | CO Gov. | 80% | 53.1% | ✓ Won |
| Jennifer Qualteri | CO-01 | 40 | 100.0 | ✓ Won |
| Lauren Boebert* | CO-03 | 95 | 64.1 | ✓ Won |
| Rebecca Keltie | CO-05 | 83 | 12.6 | ✗ Lost |
| Laurel Imer | CO-07 | 84 | 15.6 | Trailing |
| Barbara Kirkmeyer | CO-08 | 53 | 40.9 | Leading |
| Jan Kulmann | CO-08 | 53 | 22.8 | Trailing |
| Lori A. Saine | CO-08 | 53 | 19.6 | Trailing |
| Kathy Salvi | IL Sen. | 60 | 30.8 | Leading |
| Peggy Hubbard | IL Sen. | 60 | 23.7 | Trailing |
| Philanise White | IL-01 | 67 | 5.7 | Trailing |
| Ashley Ramos | IL-02 | 46 | 28.8 | Trailing |
| Malgorzata McGonigal | IL-05 | 59 | 44.7 | Trailing |
| Niki Conforti | IL-06 | 67 | 10.8 | Trailing |
| Catherine A. O’Shea | IL-06 | 67 | 9.9 | Trailing |
| Karen Kolodziej | IL-08 | 54 | 17.7 | Trailing |
| Catalina Lauf | IL-11 | 49 | 28.7 | Leading |
| Susan L. Hathaway-Altman | IL-11 | 49 | 12.3 | Trailing |
| Cassandra Tanner Miller | IL-11 | 49 | 7.2 | Trailing |
| Andrea Heeg | IL-11 | 49 | 7.0 | Trailing |
| Regan Deering | IL-13 | 55 | 35.3 | Leading |
| Jaime Milton | IL-14 | 64 | 10.3 | Trailing |
| Mary Miller* | IL-15 | 95 | 57.1 | ✓ Won |
| JoAnne Guillemette | IL-16 | 59 | 13.1 | ✗ Lost |
| Esther Joy King | IL-17 | 53 | 71.2 | ✓ Won |
| Joan Farr | OK Sen. | 61 | 5.8 | ✗ Lost |
| Laura Moreno | OK Sen. (special) | 61 | 1.8 | Trailing |
| Jessica Jean Garrison | OK Sen. (special) | 61 | 1.7 | Trailing |
| Moira McCabe | OK Gov. | 61 | 3.3 | ✗ Lost |
| Pamela Gordon | OK-02 | 87 | 3.0 | Trailing |
| Rhonda Hopkins | OK-02 | 87 | 1.7 | Trailing |
| Stephanie Bice* | OK-05 | 49 | 67.8 | ✓ Won |
| Subrina Banks | OK-05 | 49 | 32.2 | ✗ Lost |
| Becky Edwards | UT Sen. | 61 | 32.9 | ✗ Lost |
| Ally Isom | UT Sen. | 61 | 8.4 | ✗ Lost |
| Tina Cannon | UT-01 | 54 | 14.9 | ✗ Lost |
| Erin Rider | UT-02 | 56 | 32.8 | ✗ Lost |
ABC News is reporting that Rep. Lee Zeldin is the projected winner of the GOP nomination for governor of New York. Andrew Giuliani didn’t do all that well in the end.
Latest count in New York’s GOP primary for governor
Results of New York’s Republican primary for governor, as of 10:41 p.m. Eastern
| Candidate | Votes | Vote % |
|---|---|---|
| Lee Zeldin | 133,467 | 42.6% |
| Andrew Giuliani | 74,269 | 23.7 |
| Rob Astorino | 59,625 | 19.0 |
| Harry Wilson | 45,834 | 14.6 |
