FiveThirtyEight
Nathaniel Rakich

... for real

It increasingly looks like it could take days to project a winner in most of Tuesday’s outstanding primaries, so we are going to officially close up shop here on the live blog. Most notably, the Republican primary for Pennsylvania Senate is too close to call between Oz and McCormick; Oz currently leads by 0.2 percentage points, or 2,565 votes. According to NBC and MSNBC national political correspondent Steve Kornacki, there are about 32,000 mail ballots left to count, but considering how close the race was all night long, it’s unlikely that those ballots will break disproportionately for one candidate. Therefore, this race is very likely going to a recount, which is automatically triggered anytime a statewide race in Pennsylvania is within 0.5 points. Several other key races we are watching are also still unresolved:

  • First, in the Democratic primary for Oregon’s 5th District, the big question is whether Schrader will become the third incumbent to lose renomination this year. Progressive challenger McLeod-Skinner currently leads him 61 percent to 39 percent, but ballot problems in Schrader’s home county have delayed results there. As Geoffrey wrote earlier this morning, there could be thousands of ballots left to count there, but Schrader would need to win them by a hefty margin in order to close the gap.
  • Meanwhile in the GOP primary for Oregon governor, Drazan holds a 24 percent to 19 percent lead over Tiernan with many days of mail-ballot dumps still to come. The winner will have a decent shot at winning the general election given the unpopularity of the outgoing governor and the presence of a strong independent candidate.
  • Back in Pennsylvania, the Democratic primary for Pennsylvania’s 12th District is also unresolved, but progressives appear on the verge of victory as Lee leads Irwin 41.7 percent to 41.3 percent. It’s unclear how many votes remain to be counted, however.
  • In the GOP primary for Pennsylvania’s 7th District, Scheller looks like she’ll probably advance to the general election, but her current margin of 51 percent to 49 percent is weaker than expected for a candidate who had the full backing of House Republican leadership. It remains to be seen if this means Scheller would be a weak candidate in this swing seat in the fall, though.
  • In the GOP primary for Oregon’s 5th District, Chavez-DeRemer leads Crumpacker 42 percent to 31 percent, but again, Oregon’s vote-by-mail system means there are still several days of counting ahead. And if McLeod-Skinner wins the Democratic primary, the GOP nominee has a real shot at flipping an Oregon congressional seat for the first time since 1994.
  • In the GOP primary for Oregon’s 6th District, Erickson leads Noble 35 percent to 20 percent, but again, Oregon. This district should be safer for Democrats in the fall than the 5th, but it’s not out of the question that either Erickson or Noble could win here.
  • Finally, in the GOP primary for Idaho secretary of state, McGrane currently leads Moon just 43 percent to 41 percent. If this result holds, it would be a notable victory for the Republican establishment, especially after its loss in the attorney general race. McGrane has accepted the results of the 2020 election, but Moon has embraced conspiracy theories about voter fraud.

When these races are resolved, it will make it a little clearer what our takeaways from Tuesday’s primaries should be. For instance, progressives came up short in several primaries yesterday, such as North Carolina’s 1st and 4th districts, but wins in Oregon’s 5th and Pennsylvania’s 12th would salvage the night for them. Trump’s endorsement record is still coming into focus, too. On one hand, two of Trump’s endorsed candidates for Senate, House or governor lost their primaries yesterday — as many as lost in the entire 2020 cycle! But on the other hand, his candidates still prevailed in major races such as North Carolina’s Senate and 13th District primaries. And if Oz pulls out a win, it will be a pretty convincing demonstration of his power within the GOP considering the massive amount of money spent by McCormick and the grassroots appeal of Barnette. As we’ve written, while Trump is still endorsing plenty of Republicans in safe primaries, he is also making some riskier endorsements — some of which have panned out, and some of which haven’t. So far this cycle, 62 of the 65 candidates Trump has endorsed for Senate, House or governor (and whose races have been called) have won. Keep in mind, though, that 95 percent win rate is only slightly lower than his 98 percent win rate in 2020. Even if the cycle goes south for Trump personally, though, his illiberal vision is clearly winning out within the Republican Party. According to our research, at least 28 candidates who reject or question the results of the 2020 election won Republican primaries last night — most notably for Pennsylvania governor, an office that could have the power to overturn the 2024 presidential election.

How Big Lie supporters are doing tonight

Senate, House and gubernatorial candidates who have either denied or questioned the legitimacy of the 2020 election, and their results in Republican primaries in Idaho, Kentucky, North Carolina, Oregon and Pennsylvania, as of 11:27 a.m. Eastern

CANDIDATE OFFICE Big Lie Position % REPORTING VOTE SHARE STATUS
Brenda Bourn ID Sen. ❓Raised doubts 97% 8.2% ✗ Lost
Brad Little* ID Gov. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 52.8 ✓ Won
Janice McGeachin ID Gov. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 32.3 ✗ Lost
Edward R. Humphreys ID Gov. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 11.0 ✗ Lost
Lisa Marie ID Gov. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 0.4 ✗ Lost
Cody Usabel ID Gov. ❓Raised doubts 99 0.2 ✗ Lost
Russ Fulcher* ID-01 🚫 Denied legitimacy 97 100.0 ✓ Won
Bryan Smith ID-02 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 32.7 ✗ Lost
Daniel Algiers Lucas Levy ID-02 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 1.8 ✗ Lost
Valerie “Dr Val” Fredrick KY Sen. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 3.6 ✗ Lost
Tami L. Stainfield KY Sen. ❓Raised doubts 99 2.5 ✗ Lost
John Schiess KY Sen. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 1.5 ✗ Lost
E. Lee Watts KY-02 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 17.9 ✗ Lost
Daniel Cobble KY-03 🚫 Denied legitimacy 68 4.7 Trailing
Claire Wirth KY-04 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 15.7 ✗ Lost
Alyssa Dara McDowell KY-04 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 5.2 ✗ Lost
Harold “Hal” Rogers* KY-05 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 82.6 ✓ Won
Jeannette Andrews KY-05 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 4.5 ✗ Lost
Derek Petteys KY-06 🚫 Denied legitimacy 74 12.2 ✗ Lost
David Flaherty NC Sen. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 98 0.9 ✗ Lost
Kenneth Harper, Jr. NC Sen. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 98 0.9 ✗ Lost
Leonard L. Bryant NC Sen. ❓Raised doubts 98 0.4 ✗ Lost
Benjamin E. Griffiths NC Sen. ❓Raised doubts 98 0.4 ✗ Lost
Drew Bulecza NC Sen. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 98 0.3 ✗ Lost
Sandy Smith NC-01 🚫 Denied legitimacy 98 31.4 ✓ Won
Sandy Roberson NC-01 ❓Raised doubts 98 26.8 ✗ Lost
Billy Strickland NC-01 ❓Raised doubts 98 13.9 ✗ Lost
Brent Roberson NC-01 🚫 Denied legitimacy 98 13.8 ✗ Lost
Ernest Reeves NC-01 ❓Raised doubts 98 1.2 ✗ Lost
Christine E. Villaverde NC-02 ❓Raised doubts 74 55.2 ✓ Won
Mahesh “Max” Ganorkar NC-02 ❓Raised doubts 74 25.6 ✗ Lost
Greg Murphy* NC-03 🚫 Denied legitimacy 69 75.7 ✓ Won
Tony Cowden NC-03 🚫 Denied legitimacy 69 14.1 ✗ Lost
Eric Earhart NC-03 🚫 Denied legitimacy 69 5.0 ✗ Lost
Brian Michael Friend NC-03 🚫 Denied legitimacy 69 2.6 ✗ Lost
Courtney Geels NC-04 ❓Raised doubts 74 64.6 ✓ Won
Robert Thomas NC-04 ❓Raised doubts 74 35.4 ✗ Lost
Virginia Foxx* NC-05 🚫 Denied legitimacy 78 76.6 ✓ Won
Michael Ackerman NC-05 ❓Raised doubts 78 23.4 ✗ Lost
Christian Castelli NC-06 ❓Raised doubts 99 36.2 ✓ Won
Gerry Austin NC-06 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 6.0 ✗ Lost
Marvin Boguslawski NC-06 ❓Raised doubts 99 4.0 ✗ Lost
David Rouzer* NC-07 🚫 Denied legitimacy 68 79.2 ✓ Won
Max Southworth-Beckwith NC-07 🚫 Denied legitimacy 68 20.8 ✗ Lost
Richard Hudson* NC-09 🚫 Denied legitimacy 69 79.2 ✓ Won
Jen Bucardo NC-09 ❓Raised doubts 69 8.7 ✗ Lost
Michael Magnotta NC-10 🚫 Denied legitimacy 70 6.4 ✗ Lost
Jeff Gregory NC-10 ❓Raised doubts 70 5.0 ✗ Lost
Chuck Edwards NC-11 ❓Raised doubts 95 33.4 ✓ Won
Madison Cawthorn* NC-11 🚫 Denied legitimacy 95 31.9 ✗ Lost
Matthew Burril NC-11 🚫 Denied legitimacy 95 9.4 ✗ Lost
Michele V. Woodhouse NC-11 🚫 Denied legitimacy 95 5.3 ✗ Lost
Kristie Sluder NC-11 🚫 Denied legitimacy 95 1.5 ✗ Lost
Tyler Lee NC-12 ❓Raised doubts 97 42.9 ✓ Won
Nalini Joseph NC-12 ❓Raised doubts 97 22.8 ✗ Lost
Bo Hines NC-13 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 32.1 ✓ Won
Renee Ellmers NC-13 ❓Raised doubts 99 9.4 ✗ Lost
Chad Slotta NC-13 ❓Raised doubts 99 5.6 ✗ Lost
Pat Harrigan NC-14 ❓Raised doubts 83 75.7 ✓ Won
Jo Rae Perkins OR Sen. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 57 32.5 Leading
Jason Beebe OR Sen. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 57 11.9 Trailing
Ibra A. Taher OR Sen. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 57 1.9 Trailing
Stan Pulliam OR Gov. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 57 10.1 Trailing
Marc Thielman OR Gov. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 57 7.4 Trailing
Bill Sizemore OR Gov. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 57 3.8 Trailing
Court Boice OR Gov. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 57 1.2 Trailing
Brandon C. Merritt OR Gov. ❓Raised doubts 57 1.0 Trailing
Reed Christensen OR Gov. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 57 0.9 Trailing
Amber R. Richardson OR Gov. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 57 0.6 Trailing
Christopher A. Mann OR-01 🚫 Denied legitimacy 43 68.8 ✓ Won
Armidia “Army” Murray OR-01 ❓Raised doubts 43 31.2 ✗ Lost
Mark Cavener OR-02 🚫 Denied legitimacy 67 18.7 ✗ Lost
Katherine M. Gallant OR-02 🚫 Denied legitimacy 67 5.1 ✗ Lost
Lori Chavez-DeRemer OR-05 ❓Raised doubts 45 42.2 Leading
John Di Paola OR-05 ❓Raised doubts 45 15.8 Trailing
Laurel L. Roses OR-05 🚫 Denied legitimacy 45 8.7 Trailing
Amy L. Ryan Courser OR-06 ❓Raised doubts 46 14.6 Trailing
David Russ OR-06 🚫 Denied legitimacy 46 4.0 Trailing
Mehmet Oz PA Sen. ❓Raised doubts 98 31.3 Leading
Kathy Barnette PA Sen. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 98 24.8 Trailing
Carla Sands PA Sen. ❓Raised doubts 98 5.4 Trailing
Sean Gale PA Sen. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 98 1.5 Trailing
Douglas V. Mastriano PA Gov. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 96 44.3 ✓ Won
Lou Barletta PA Gov. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 96 20.2 ✗ Lost
Bill McSwain PA Gov. ❓Raised doubts 96 15.6 ✗ Lost
Dave White PA Gov. ❓Raised doubts 96 9.5 ✗ Lost
Joe Gale PA Gov. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 96 2.1 ✗ Lost
Charlie Gerow PA Gov. 🚫 Denied legitimacy 96 1.4 ✗ Lost
Alex Entin PA-01 ❓Raised doubts 99 34.5 ✗ Lost
Aaron Bashir PA-02 🚫 Denied legitimacy 55 100.0 ✓ Won
Guy Ciarrocchi PA-06 ❓Raised doubts 99 33.1 Leading
Regina Mauro PA-06 🚫 Denied legitimacy 99 14.8 Trailing
Lisa Scheller PA-07 ❓Raised doubts 95 51.3 Leading
Kevin Dellicker PA-07 ❓Raised doubts 95 48.7 Trailing
Jim Bognet PA-08 🚫 Denied legitimacy 90 68.8 ✓ Won
Mike Marsicano PA-08 ❓Raised doubts 90 31.2 ✗ Lost
Dan Meuser* PA-09 🚫 Denied legitimacy 86 100.0 ✓ Won
Scott Perry* PA-10 🚫 Denied legitimacy 71 100.0 ✓ Won
Lloyd K. Smucker* PA-11 🚫 Denied legitimacy 81 100.0 ✓ Won
John Joyce* PA-13 🚫 Denied legitimacy 80 100.0 ✓ Won
Guy Reschenthaler* PA-14 🚫 Denied legitimacy 85 100.0 ✓ Won
Glenn “GT” Thompson* PA-15 🚫 Denied legitimacy 87 100.0 ✓ Won
Mike Kelly* PA-16 🚫 Denied legitimacy 92 100.0 ✓ Won
Jeremy Shaffer PA-17 ❓Raised doubts 94 58.7 ✓ Won
Jason Killmeyer PA-17 ❓Raised doubts 94 24.3 ✗ Lost
Kathy Coder PA-17 ❓Raised doubts 94 17.0 ✗ Lost

*Incumbent.

Rep. Dan Bishop, who has denied the legitimacy of the 2020 election and is seeking reelection in North Carolina’s 8th Congressional District, is running uncontested so his primary has been canceled.

Candidates marked as having “denied legitimacy” of the 2020 election either explicitly said Donald Trump’s loss or the 2020 election itself was illegitimate or, if an elected official, took legal measures to try and overturn the election. Candidates marked as “raised doubts” have questioned the fairness of the 2020 election or made references to “election integrity” but have not explicitly said the election or Trump’s loss was illegitimate.

Sources: News reports, campaigns, ABC News


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