FiveThirtyEight
Nathaniel Rakich

The results aren’t final yet, obviously, but it’s worth noting that the late polls got quite close to the actual results in the GOP primary for Ohio Senate. In the last two polls of the race, from Trafalgar and Emerson College, Vance averaged 25 percent, Mandel averaged 21.5 percent, Dolan averaged 20 percent, Gibbons averaged 13.5 percent and Timken averaged 6.5 percent. The results right now are Vance 31 percent, Mandel 25 percent, Dolan 22 percent, Gibbons 12 percent and Timken 7 percent. Not bad for a race where the early polls were mostly spammy internals!

Jacob Rubashkin

We don’t yet know who will win the GOP Senate primary in Ohio, but one person who won’t win is investment banker Mike Gibbons. And if you went to sleep in March, that might surprise you, because Gibbons used his vast wealth to power himself to a polling lead and frontrunner status at what seemed like the exact right time.

But Trump’s endorsement of J.D. Vance likely derailed whatever momentum he had, and he’s currently sitting at a disappointing 12 percent, good for fourth place. (For comparison, Gibbons won 32 percent of the vote in the 2018 GOP Senate primary in Ohio.)

Monica Potts

I agree, Kaleigh, and I also wonder if we’ll see the issue breaking along geographic lines. Support for abortion access in all, or most cases, varies a lot state to state, and so I wonder if it just further entrenches partisan divisions.


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