A well-funded Senate primary, a primary challenge targeting a âSquadâ member, and Joe Kentâs second chanceâall are worth tracking on Aug. 6.
Election day polls closed in Missouri and Michigan at 8 p.m. ET on Aug. 6 for primary elections which feature several closely watched races.
From the Upper Midwest to the Pacific Northwest, itâs another primary day. While not every race on Aug. 6 will capture Americansâ attention, more than a few could have major ramifications.
In Michigan, Democrats and Republicans are stepping up to replace Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.), who has held her seat for almost a quarter century. Other races in competitive districts will help drive events ahead of Novemberâs general election when many eyes will be on the battleground state.
Voters across Missouri will cast their ballots in crucial statewide elections. Those in St. Louis will decide the fate of Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.), who risks a Rep. Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.)-style primary loss triggered by her criticism of Israel.
Washington State is host to many competitive races, including a few that test the power of an endorsement, or co-endorsement, from former President Donald Trump.
Michigan
US Senate
Stabenowâs retirement announcement in January opened up another seat Republicans will contest as the party attempts to take the Senate this cycle. The race also adds to the attention Michigan will already get as a critical presidential battleground state.
In the Aug. 6 Democratic primary, Slotkin will face actor Hill Harper, who has raised over $2.8 million.
Another hopeful, Nasser Beydoun, was disqualified from appearing on the ballot. His challenge to that decision was shot down by the Michigan Court of Appeals in June.
The Republican field is a little more crowded.
Rogers, who has raised more than $5.3 million to date, will compete against physician Sherry OâDonnell and another former congressman, Justin Amash. Elected as a Republican, Amash briefly served as a Libertarian after changing parties in 2020. Sandy Pensler, another candidate, dropped out in late July and threw his support behind Rogers.
8th District
In central Michigan, the stateâs Eighth District is rated a âDemocrat toss-upâ by the Cook Political Report and Larry Sabatoâs Crystal Ball. Its current representative, Rep. Dan Kildee (R-Mich.), is not seeking reelection.
The Democratic primary for territory that includes Saginaw, Bay City, and Flint will feature Matt Collier, the former mayor of Flint, Michigan; Pamela Pugh, the president of the Michigan Board of Education; and state Sen. Kristen McDonald Rivet.
On the Republican side, retired Dow Chemical executive Mary Draves will compete against truck driver Anthony Hudson and Paul Junge, a past hopeful in the district who served in the Trump administration.
7th District
The district that Slotkin is vacating is also competitive between the two parties. It is rated a âtoss-upâ by Sabato and a âDemocrat toss-upâ by Cook.
3rd District
Freshman Rep. Hillary Scholten (D-Mich.) is defending her seat in a primary in the 3rd, rated âlikely Democratâ by Cook. Entrepreneur Salim Al-Shatel is challenging her in that contest.
The Republican primary in the 3rd District, a chunk of western Michigan that includes Grand Rapids and Grand Haven, is also a two-person race. Lawyer Paul Hudson is running against entrepreneur Michael Markey Jr.
10th District
The district, which is made up of suburban territory north of Detroit, is also helmed by a freshman, Rep. John James (R-Mich.). Heâs running unopposed in his partyâs primary. Cook labels the district âlean Republicanâ this cycle.
Four DemocratsâCarl Marlinga, Emily Busch, Tiffany Tilley, and Diane Youngâare competing in that primary. Marlinga, a retired judge, lost to James in the 2022 general election. Busch is a gun safety advocate. Tilley serves on the Michigan Board of Education. Young is a financial planner.
Missouri
1st District
While much of the Show Me State leans Republican, in St. Louis, the 1st Congressional District will judge whether Bush will serve a third term in the House. The districtâs heavily Democratic skew means the primary winner is virtually guaranteed an easy win in the general.
Bush, who unseated longtime Democrat congressman Lacy Clay in the largely black and urban district covering most of St. Louis and its northern suburbs in 2020, is facing a stiff primary challenge from Wesley Bell, the prosecuting attorney for St. Louis County.
If Bell prevails, Bush will be the second member of the so-called âSquadâ of left-wing Democrats to lose an intraparty primary contest this election cycle.
Statewide Races
Republicans and Democrats are positioning themselves to run for five of the six positions in Missouriâs executive branch up for grabs in the fall. No Democrat has held a statewide office since Nicole Galloway was elected state auditor in 2018. She left office in 2023.
Missouri will also winnow the field for the positions of Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, State Treasurer, and Attorney General. The only incumbents are Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey and Missouri State Treasurer Vivek Malek.
The down-ballot race attracting the most national attention is the intra-Republican contest between incumbent Bailey and his lone challenger, Will Scharf.
Scharf, who worked on the legal team for former President Donald Trump, is backed by conservative activist Leonard Leo, wealthy GOP megadonor Paul Singer and the influential Club for Growth. Bailey, who was appointed by Parson and looking for his first full term as the stateâs top law enforcement official, is backed by local power players, including Missouri megadonor Rex Sinquefield.
Washington
While Michigan and Missouri have partisan primaries, in Washington, all candidates, regardless of party, will be on the same ballot. The top two finishers, regardless of party, will advance to the general election on Nov. 5.
3rd District
First-term Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (D-Wash.) is running for reelection in a Republican-leaning district in the stateâs southwest. Cook rates the district a âDemocrat toss-up.â
Gluesenkamp Perez succeeded former Rep. Jamie Herrera Beutler (R-Wash.), a six-term member who voted for the second impeachment of then-President Trump in 2021. Beutler was subsequently denounced by Trump and defeated in the 2022 primary by former U.S. Army officer Joe Kentâthe widower of an American soldier who was killed in Syria. Kent, who was endorsed by Trump, lost to Gluesenkamp Perez by 0.8 percent in 2022.
Kent is running again, and with Trumpâs backing. Leslie Lewallen, a Camas City Councillor, is also running as a Republican. John Saulie-Rohman is running as an independent.
4th District
Rep. Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.), a five-term incumbent, is running for reelection in a heavily Republican seat. Yet, he is facing a primary challenge from Republican candidates Jerrold Sessler and Tiffany Smiley. Both were co-endorsed by Trump, part of a trend in split endorsements by the partyâs presidential nominee. Like Beutler, Newhouse voted in favor of the second impeachment of Trump in 2021, following the events of Jan. 6, 2021, at the U.S. Capitol building.
In 2022, no Trump-endorsed candidate advanced from the primary to the general election. Newhouse won the latter with 66.5 percent of the vote.
5th District
Washingtonâs Fifth District has an open primary after 10-term Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.)âa former House Republican Conference chair who leads the powerful Energy and Commerce Committeeâannounced in February that she would not seek reelection. The seat, which covers eastern Washington, leans solidly Republican, according to Cook.
Polling on the race has not been published, though Republican candidate and Spokane County Treasurer Michael Baumgartner is ahead in fundraising with $790,000 in receipts. Baumgartner is a former state senator and, in 2012, lost to U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) as the Republican nominee for Senate.
Other notable Republicans running are state Rep. Jacquelin Maycumber and former state Sen. Brian Dansel.
Sixth District
Six-term Rep. Derek Kilmer (D-Wash.) is retiring, creating an open primary. The race has attracted prominent Democratic challengersâthe stateâs Public Lands Commissioner Hilary Franz and state Sen. Emily Randall.
While the district has elected Democrats since 1965, one Republican challenger, state Sen. Drew MacEwen, previously flipped a Democratic-held seat to enter the state Senate in 2022. Non-profit founder Janis Clark is another Republican contending for the seat.
Franz and Randall have raised over $1 million each, while MacEwen has raised over $153,000. The district leans Democratic by six points according to Cook, meaning thatâif MacEwen makes it to the second roundâthe sole Democratic candidate is favored to win the general election. Should Franz and Randall advance, however, it would set up a Democrat v. Democrat election campaign.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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