Voters in several states nationwide head to the polls in primaries and in a special general congressional election in Texas on Tuesday, further testing former President Donald Trump’s endorsement strength and perhaps foreshadowing a looming red wave in November. Primaries in South Carolina, Nevada, Maine, and North Dakota take center stage on Tuesday night, as does a special congressional general election in Texas.
In South Carolina, two hotly contested congressional primaries have Trump facing off against incumbent Republicans. In the first district, Trump has endorsed Katie Arrington against Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC). Mace, who has the support of former governor and United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley, has sharply criticized Trump in routine television appearances and has voted for a number of controversial things, such as January 6 committee contempt proceedings against former Trump officials. For Arrington, a win would put her back on track to win a seat she was the nominee for in 2018, but lost to now former Democrat Rep. Joe Cunningham (D-SC). Arrington’s loss came not just amid that year’s blue wave, but also after she had shocked the world and defeated then-Rep. Mark Sanford (R-SC)–the former governor who resigned that office amid a sex scandal then orchestrated his own comeback years earlier–to only days after the primary survive a deadly car accident that immobilized her for most of that year’s general election.
Elsewhere in South Carolina, Rep. Tom Rice (R-SC)–one of the 10 Republicans who voted to impeach Trump the second time after the events of Jan. 6, 2021–is in grave danger of losing to state Rep. Russell Fry in the primary. Trump, who backed Fry, could take out the first of these ten impeachment Republicans at the ballot box with a candidate he endorsed here. Several other impeachment Republicans–Reps. Anthony Gonzalez (R-OH), Adam Kinzinger (R-IL), Fred Upton (R-MI), and John Katko (R-NY)–called it quits without even facing voters. Only Rep. David Valadao (R-CA)–who did not face a Trump-backed primary challenger, even though he had a weak challenger–has survived a primary among the impeachment Republicans, and Valadao seems to get a pass from many Republicans given the competitiveness of his district. If Rice goes down, that would make him the first impeachment Republican to go down by the hands of voters, and would also mean 50 percent of the ten have already gone down about 18 months after the vote, with several others in serious trouble–most notably Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY).
Out in the Silver State, Nevada GOP primary voters will select their nominees in two banner top-of-the-ticket races–for governor and for U.S. Senate. Trump has weighed in here in both races, backing Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo for governor and former Nevada attorney general Adam Laxalt for U.S. Senate. GOP primaries in the First, Third, and Fourth Congressional Districts could also set the stage for a red tsunami in November, as all three of these U.S. House seats held by Democrats are viewed by analysts as probably competitive in November, especially with close statewide races.
In Maine, former GOP Gov. Paul LePage is formally seeking the GOP nomination for governor again and former Rep. Bruce Poliquin (R-ME) seeks to return to Congress to represent the all-important Second Congressional District. This is a district Republicans view as particularly competitive, as Rep. Jared Golden (D-ME) has made clear with his voting record–which breaks with national Democrat leaders more than any other Democrat currently in Congress–and as evidenced by the fact Trump won it in both 2016 and 2020. Maine splits its electoral votes by congressional district in presidential elections–the only other state that does that is Nebraska–so Trump actually won one vote from Maine both times thanks to the Second Congressional District voters. North Dakotans will also vote on Tuesday, and while there are no major national races there, the state could provide some signs of intensity going into November.
Perhaps most importantly on Tuesday, voters in Texas’s 34th Congressional District will vote in a special congressional election. The district was represented by Democrat Rep. Filemon Vela (D-TX), who bailed on national Democrats early to go work for lobbyist firm Akin Gump, a move that set up this special election. Republicans are hopeful they can flip this seat on Tuesday, with Hispanic candidate Mayra Flores leading the charge in recent polling that has her close to winning it outright. If she gets more than 50 percent of the vote, she will avoid a runoff–but she does appear per polling to be in the lead regardless. If she wins without a runoff, this would be the first seat Republicans have flipped back from Democrats into GOP hands since the November 2020 elections–and could foreshadow things to come in November. What’s more, Flores would enter the general election with the power of incumbency in a district that will be decidedly more Democrat-friendly in November, thanks to redistricting–this special election is under the old lines–as she faces off there against Rep. Vicente Gonzalez (D-TX) who switched districts, abandoning his old one to run here instead in November. This could also set the tone for GOP gains with Hispanic voters along the border, and comes just weeks after the tragic shooting at an elementary school in nearby Uvalde, Texas.
The polls close in South Carolina at 7:00 p.m. ET, Maine and Texas at 8:00 p.m. ET, Nevada at 10:00 p.m. ET, and the hours vary in North Dakota by county.
Follow along here for live updates as the results pour in from across the country.
UPDATE 1:06 a.m. ET:
It’s official–the Associated Press called it: Adam Laxalt is the GOP nominee for U.S. Senate in Nevada:
UPDATE 1:04 a.m. ET:
And another:
UPDATE 1:03 a.m. ET:
Another call for Trump-backed Lombardo in the governor primary in Nevada:
UPDATE 12:53 a.m. ET:
In Nevada’s first and third congressional district GOP primaries, Dave Wasserman from the Cook Political Report says that Mark Robertson and April Becker have won the respective races–and that these are rated per that organization’s ratings system as toss-ups in November:
If Republicans win either of these, they would be huge pickups for the GOP in the party’s quest to regain the U.S. House majority.
UPDATE 12:50 a.m. ET:
The New York Times now has Nevada results on its site, and says 37 percent of the state has reported so far in both statewide primaries. In the governor race in the Times numbers, Lombardo leads by nearly 30 percent–and in the Senate race Laxalt leads by more than 22 percent. Both Trump-backed candidates appear to be cruising to victory. Not official yet, but assuming they stick it’s a big night for Trump everywhere.
UPDATE 12:47 a.m. ET:
It’s also unofficial, but Laxalt leads big in Clark County–and Ralston predicts that Laxalt will win the GOP nomination for U.S. Senate, another Trump win assuming it holds:
UPDATE 12:44 a.m. ET:
Finally, results are coming in in Nevada:
Nevada reporter Jon Ralston says that Sheriff Joe Lombardo’s huge early lead means Lombardo is easily going to win the GOP governor’s nomination:
Assuming that holds and he is right–a safe assumption–this is a big win for Trump, who endorsed Lombardo several weeks ago before he really took off in the polls.
UPDATE 12:41 a.m. ET:
Nevada results are supposedly coming “soon”:
UPDATE 12:12 a.m. ET:
Trump congratulated Mace on her victory, a seeming extension of a rare olive branch from the former president, after her victory over Arrington:
UPDATE 12:09 a.m. ET:
It’s more than two hours after the polls closed in Nevada and there are still no results yet. Some sources familiar told Breitbart News the delay is because officials are waiting until everyone finishes voting–people who were in line before the polls closed could stay and finish voting–before results are announced.
UPDATE 11:33 p.m. ET:
Democrat Sanchez has conceded in Texas’s 34th district–and notably he is attacking national Democrats, blaming the party for not helping him and further dividing Democrats ahead of November’s all-important midterm election:
Serious question: How many other Democrats, incumbent or not, feel the very same way? Something makes one think it’s a number much higher than any of them would admit. November is coming.
UPDATE 11:24 p.m. ET:
The AP has now formally called it for Mayra Flores in Texas:
And here is the AP’s call in South Carolina’s first for Mace:
UPDATE 11:18 p.m. ET:
The AP has called it now for Mace in South Carolina too, but again she is up by less than 8 percent with 89 percent reporting–far less than her double digit victory predictions she was making to television hosts–but nonetheless this is a setback for Trump on a night and in a state where he also had a huge win in wiping out Tom Rice with Russell Fry.
Meanwhile, no results have come in yet in Nevada and local reporters are discussing it as normal for the state:
UPDATE 11:12 p.m. ET:
Former Rep. Bruce Poliquin (R-ME) wins the GOP nomination in Maine’s second congressional district:
And the Associated Press called it for Fry making it official in South Carolina:
But, Mace seems to have hung on in South Carolina’s first district–in a far worse performance than she was telling people privately on Tuesday she would reach:
UPDATE 10:57 p.m. ET:
It’s over in South Carolina’s 7th congressional district: Rep. Tom Rice (R-SC), the first impeachment-backing Republican facing a Trump-backed primary challenger, has lost his primary to Trump-backed state Rep. Russell Fry:
Fry’s victory on Tuesday night means at least 50 percent of the impeachment Republicans are already not coming back next year, and several of the other remaining five face primaries later this year.
UPDATE 10:41 p.m. ET:
With 71 percent reporting in South Carolina’s first district, Arrington trails Mace by a little more than 4,000 votes according to the New York Times. The big outstanding county is still Beaufort, which has the reporting issues still awaiting resolution. The Times has revised its estimate of ballots outstanding there up to 19,000 approximately, and Arrington is going to need some huge margins to try to win outright tonight. She could force Mace into a runoff though.
Mace, per sources directly familiar with the conversation, was running around telling people earlier on Tuesday that she would win by double digits. That ego is why she drew this primary challenge to begin with and maybe her poor performance will humble her somewhat.
UPDATE 10:37 p.m. ET:
Still nothing in yet from Nevada. But up in Maine’s second district, Poliquin has a comfortable lead of more than 20 percent with 50 percent reporting. He seems to be cruising to victory there but not yet official.
UPDATE 10:27 p.m. ET:
It’s over: Republican Mayra Flores has made history and won the special election in Texas’s 34th congressional district, flipping this seat into GOP hands away from Democrats as Democrat Dan Sanchez loses substantially:
This is the first U.S. House district to fall in the 2022 elections from Democrats to Republicans, and cuts the margin for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s majority down from five to just a four-seat majority. November is coming.
UPDATE 10:24 p.m. ET:
In Texas, according to the New York Times, the GOP’s Flores has well more than crossed the 50 percent threshold now and is now standing strong at 50.9 percent. Democrat Sanchez is stuck down at 43.5 percent. This is a monumental sea change in American politics playing out right now in South Texas.
UPDATE 10:22 p.m. ET:
Here is the issue in Beaufort County, South Carolina, which is the major holdup in the first congressional district GOP primary:
The margin right now, as Mace has pulled a bit more ahead, is a little more than 3,000 votes. But the New York Times estimates as many as 16,000 or more votes according to its site on this to be counted and reported in Beaufort County, which if Arrington does as well there as she did in 2018 could be more than enough to make up the difference–or drag Mace under 50 percent and force a runoff.
UPDATE 10:04 p.m. ET:
Mayra Flores is almost there:
By this Texas reporter’s count, she only has to net 19–NINETEEN–votes out of the remaining to-be-counted votes to win outright tonight:
UPDATE 10:01 p.m. ET:
The polls are closed now in Nevada, where two statewide GOP primaries are pivotal for the party in both the governor and senate races as well as several down-ticket races. Results are expected imminently.
UPDATE 9:59 p.m. ET:
Russell Fry, the Trump-backed pick in South Carolina’s 7th district, has now crossed the 50 percent threshold and is on the verge of defeating incumbent Rep. Tom Rice (R-SC)–the first impeachment-backing Republican to face a Trump-backed primary challenger this year–without a runoff. This would be monumental if he holds on and wins this. Fry’s 50 percent exactly is more than double better than Rice’s 24.8 percent, and 81 percent is reporting so far from the district according to the New York Times.
UPDATE 9:56 p.m. ET:
With 59 percent in in South Carolina’s first district, Mace’s lead has dropped below 6 percent. Mace is at just 51.9 percent now as Arrington has been chipping away all night at her strong early numbers, and Arrington is at 46.2 percent. Just over two thousand votes separate them. Still nothing in from Beaufort either.
UPDATE 9:54 p.m. ET:
With 64 percent in according to the New York Times, Republican Mayra Flores has pulled up to 49.8 percent–within two tenths of a percent of winning outright–in the Texas 34th congressional district special election. She appears on track to get there.
UPDATE 9:50 p.m. ET:
In South Carolina’s 7th district GOP primary, Trump-backed Russell Fry is at 49.7 percent–a few tenths of a percent away from avoiding a runoff and winning the nomination outright tonight–with 68 percent reporting, according to the New York Times. If he pulls it off, it will be a total and complete embarrassment for pro-impeachment Republicans–and a total and complete victory for Trump.
UPDATE 9:47 p.m. ET:
In Texas, Mayra Flores has pulled within a half a percent of outright victory with now 49.5 percent. Experts are beginning to expect she wins barring a miracle for the Democrat:
UPDATE 9:45 p.m. ET:
In South Carolina’s first district, Mace’s lead is down to just over 7 percent with 53 percent reporting. There is still nothing in yet in Beaufort County either, which is very bad for Mace:
UPDATE 9:22 p.m. ET:
With 50 percent reporting in the 34th congressional district special election in Texas, the GOP’s Mayra Flores has pulled two full percent ahead of Democrat Sanchez. Flores’s 47.9 percent is better than Sanchez’s 45.9 percent, and Flores seems like she very well could pull above 50 percent tonight and win this outright flipping the first seat of the 2022 midterm elections from Democrat into GOP hands.
Flores, one of three conservative South Texas Hispanic women aiming to flip Democrat seats into GOP hands this year, would instantly become a national political star if she pulls this off tonight.
This could also signal a massive shift in Hispanic votes towards Republicans, something even Flores herself has talked about. In a March appearance on Breitbart News Saturday, Flores said of Hispanic voters that “we are waking them up, and we’ve been doing this for many, many years, prior to 2020.”
“We were out there. You know, when no one believed in South Texas, I was out there, block walking, phone banking,” Flores said. “We were doing events educating the Hispanic community. … We need to be out there investing in this community. We need to be knocking on doors, doing events, just educating the Hispanic community on the platform. If we do that, they will vote Republican. They are already Republicans. They just don’t know it.”
Sean Trende at Real Clear Politics compared these seismic shifts in the Hispanic vote to what happened in Appalachia over the past decade plus:
And this MSNBC columnist says it is a “political earthquake”:
UPDATE 9:13 p.m. ET:
With 24 percent reporting now in South Carolina’s first district, Arrington has cut Mace’s lead to less than 8 percent now. Mace, at 52.8 percent, is less than 8 percent–and less than two thousand votes–higher than Arrington’s 45.2 percent. And, as we’ve been noting all night, still no Beaufort County yet.
UPDATE 9:11 p.m. ET:
Sen. John Hoeven (R-ND) won his primary, which was unsurprising since he did not face a credible or serious challenge:
Hoever is one of just a handful of GOP senators who voted for the 2013 “Gang of Eight” amnesty plan for illegal aliens left in the U.S. Senate. There were 14 GOP votes for that bill, and in the nine years since nine of those 14 have one by one either passed away or lost their elections or stepped aside. That’s a pretty devastating rate, but Hoeven holds on for now–and it remains to be seen if he will ever face a real challenge from the right.
UPDATE 9:07 p.m. ET:
Still nothing from Beaufort, but Arrington with the latest batch of votes just sliced Mace’s lead down to just 9 percent–or about two thousand votes–with just 23 percent reporting. This one could get super close.
UPDATE 9:04 p.m. ET:
In South Carolina’s first district, with 20 percent reporting, Mace is hanging tough with her lead–but still nothing in yet from Arrington country Beaufort County.
UPDATE 9:02 p.m. ET:
In South Carolina’s 7th district, with 30 percent reporting, Trump’s pick Fry is inching ever closer to that 50 percent threshold to avoid the runoff with Rice–he’s now at 47.2 percent.
UPDATE 9:01 p.m. ET:
Polls are closed now in North Dakota, at least part of the state, and some results are trickling in. There really are not many major competitive races here, but Trump does have some endorsements on the line.
UPDATE 8:59 p.m. ET:
With 41 percent reporting now in Texas’s 34th district special election, the GOP’s Flores has expanded her lead to a full percent. She’s at 47.2 percent while Democrat Sanchez has slipped to 46.2 percent.
UPDATE 8:57 p.m. ET:
Others are picking up on the Texas situation:
This would be a serious rebuke of Democrats and a monster pickup for Republicans if Flores pulls this off.
UPDATE 8:55 p.m. ET:
A substantial batch of votes just came in in Maine’s second district, and now Poliquin leads by almost 20 percent with about 3 percent reporting.
UPDATE 8:42 p.m. ET:
Republicans are privately very confident about the chances of Flores to win outright tonight in Texas, which would be a disaster for Democrats heading into the midterm season:
The early vote numbers are very bad for the Democrats, and Flores is actually leading those right now with still no in-person votes reported. Flores could be headed for a historic night here in Texas.
UPDATE 8:39 p.m. ET:
Even if impeachment backer Rice survives tonight to live to see a runoff, he still looks like dead man walking there and would need a miracle to come out of that victorious:
Fry, meanwhile, has a clear path to completely avoiding a runoff altogether tonight.
UPDATE 8:37 p.m. ET:
With 16 percent reporting now in South Carolina’s first district, Mace’s lead is back to less than 10 percent. Mace, at 53.7 percent, has about a 1,600 vote lead over Arrington’s 44 percent. Still nothing from Arrington-heavy Beaufort County, either which might be problematic for the congresswoman.
UPDATE 8:33 p.m. ET:
There are still just over 100 votes reported in total so far in Maine’s second district GOP primary but Poliquin has pulled ahead of Caruso there.
UPDATE 8:32 p.m. ET:
Mace just got a bump in South Carolina’s first with the latest batch of votes, scooting back up to a 15 percent lead. She has 56.4 percent as compared with Arrington’s 41.2 percent.
UPDATE 8:31 p.m. ET:
With 18 percent reporting now in South Carolina’s 7th district, Fry has increased his lead and now has 45.8 percent as compared with Rice’s 28 percent. Still a long way to go but looks bad for the impeachment crowd tonight.
UPDATE 8:29 p.m. ET:
In Texas, the GOP’s Flores has pulled ahead of Democrat Sanchez by about a half of a percent with 36 percent reporting now.
UPDATE 8:27 p.m. ET:
Don’t look now, but Mace’s lead in South Carolina’s first has been cut dramatically down to just over a thousand votes–and still nothing reporting from Arrington’s stronghold of Beaufort County. With 9 percent reporting according to the New York Times, Mace has just 54.3 percent and Arrington is quickly gaining on her with now 43 percent. It is clearly very early there, and this could come down to the wire.
UPDATE 8:24 p.m. ET:
The first votes are coming in in Maine’s second district GOP primary, where Liz Caruso leads former Rep. Bruce Poliquin (R-ME) by just 7 votes. It’s very early here. Elsewhere in Maine, because they ran unopposed, former GOP Gov. Paul LePage and Democrat Gov. Janet Mills are now officially the nominees for governor of their respective parties.
The first votes are also coming in in Texas’s 34th congressional district special election, with 34 percent reporting. Republican Mayra Flores and Democrat Dan Sanchez are in a dead heat here, with Sanchez leading for now with 47.8 percent to Flores’s 45.2 percent.
UPDATE 8:20 p.m. ET:
In South Carolina’s 7th district, Fry’s lead is maintaining at around 15 percent above Rice. Fry, at 44.7 percent, leads Rice’s 29.7 percent by just under two thousand votes.
UPDATE 8:17 p.m. ET:
Rep. Jim Clyburn (D-SC), the House Majority Whip, has easily fended off a primary challenge in South Carolina’s sixth district–with more than 93 percent of the vote with just over 4 percent reporting according to the New York Times:
UPDATE 8:14 p.m. ET:
The New York Times now has those same vote totals and percentages in South Carolina’s first district as Decision Desk HQ does in the tweet below, but the Times says that it is just with 6 percent reporting not 16 percent. That means this race is getting tighter fast.
UPDATE 8:10 p.m. ET:
Arrington’s position is not improving much but is slightly as more votes roll in–Decision Desk HQ has 16 percent reporting and Mace still at 60 percent:
UPDATE 8:05 p.m. ET:
The polls are closed now in Maine and in Texas’s 34th congressional district special election.
Meanwhile, in South Carolina’s 7th district with 4 percent reporting. Russell Fry has expanded his lead. He has 42.5 percent of the vote so far, compared with just 22 percent for Rice.
UPDATE 7:46 p.m. ET:
That was fast:
South Carolina GOP Gov. Henry McMaster is officially the GOP nominee again for another term.
UPDATE 7:45 p.m. ET:
Mace has a huge lead to start the night in South Carolina’s first congressional district, with 68.4 percent of the votes counted so far compared to Arrington’s 30.1 percent with just 2 percent reporting. A lot can change and fast here, though, as it’s still very early with just a couple thousand votes counted so far.
UPDATE 7:42 p.m. ET:
More are coming in in both competitive South Carolina GOP congressional primaries and it’s a mixed bag to start the night for Trump:
UPDATE 7:40 p.m. ET:
The very first results are in now in the 7th congressional district of South Carolina and Trump-backed Russell Fry has a sizable early lead over impeachment backer incumbent Rep. Tom Rice (R-SC). With just 1 percent reporting according to the New York Times, Fry has 32.4 percent to Rice’s 26 percent. Still very early here but decent start for Trump and Fry.
UPDATE 7:33 p.m. ET:
It is also worth noting that Nikki Haley went all in against former President Donald Trump here. Here is an image and video of her campaigning in person with Mace long after Trump endorsed Arrington:
UPDATE 7:26 p.m. ET:
Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC), it is worth noting, is already officially the GOP nominee for U.S. Senate this year as he seeks another term in office. He ran unopposed in the primary, and is the odds-on favorite to win the general election. His national star continues to rise inside the GOP, too, and he is widely viewed as a potential presidential or vice presidential candidate down the road.
UPDATE 7:24 p.m. ET:
The first votes are now coming in on the GOP side, and Gov. McMaster is way out in front as expected. These votes are outside the primetime congressional primary battles so still waiting.
UPDATE 7:21 p.m. ET:
We’re still awaiting GOP primary results but the very first South Carolina results–from the Democrat primary–are trickling. In the biggest race on the Democrat side, former Rep. Joe Cunningham (D-SC) is facing Mia McLeod–the first black woman to run for governor–in the gubernatorial primary. Only a couple hundred votes are in here. The winner of that primary is very likely to face Gov. Henry McMaster, who is very likely to fend off a primary challenge tonight.
UPDATE 7:07 p.m. ET:
From President Trump’s team, here are the former commander-in-chief’s endorsements on the line tonight nationwide:
Nevada-Senate: Laxalt, Adam
Nevada-Governor: Lombardo, Joe
–
North Dakota-Senate: Hoeven, John
North Dakota-AL: Armstrong, Kelly
–
South Carolina-Senate: Scott, Tim
South Carolina-Governor: McMaster, Henry
South Carolina-Attorney General: Wilson, Alan
South Carolina-01: Arrington, Katie
South Carolina-02 : Wilson, Joe
South Carolina-03 : Duncan, Jeff
South Carolina-04 : Timmons, William
South Carolina-05 : Norman, Ralph
South Carolina-07: Fry, Russell
UPDATE 7:05 p.m. ET:
Polls have closed in South Carolina, and results are expected imminently. Stay tuned for those and as soon as they start trickling in we should start having a picture of what will happen in those two important congressional primaries.