Florida, Wyoming, Alaska hold primaries for U.S. Congress Tuesday
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[August 18, 2020]
By Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republicans choose a
standard-bearer in their effort to snatch back a south Florida
congressional district on Tuesday, as three states hold primaries that
will help set the stage for elections in November to determine the
balance of power in Washington.
Republicans want to reclaim Florida's 26th district from Debbie Mucarsel-Powell,
an immigrant from Ecuador who ousted a Republican to win the House of
Representatives seat in a close race two years ago.
The frontrunner in the Republican primary that will pick her challenger
is Carlos Gimenez, the Cuban-born mayor of Miami-Dade county. He
announced his bid for the party's nomination in January with an
endorsement from President Donald Trump, even though Gimenez had said in
2016 that he would vote for Democrat Hillary Clinton. Gimenez is
considered the favorite over former firefighters' union chief Omar
Blanco.
Two of the main U.S. nonpartisan election ratings services say Mucarsel-Powell
has a small edge on Nov. 3, but a third, the Cook Political Report,
calls the race a "toss-up."
Alaska and Wyoming also hold primary elections on Tuesday.
Whoever wins Wyoming's Republican primary is likely to become the next
U.S. senator from the solidly Republican western state, where Senator
Mike Enzi is retiring this year.
Former Representative Cynthia Lummis, who belonged to the conservative
House Freedom Caucus, is thought to have the edge over a crowded field.
Back in Florida, freshman Republican Representative Ross Spano is
fighting to keep his seat in the 15th congressional district amid
investigations into campaign finance violations related to his 2018
campaign. He has denied wrongdoing, but faces a strong primary challenge
from Lakeland city commissioner Scott Franklin.
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Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, D-Fla., votes to approve the
first article of impeachment against President Donald Trump
during a House Judiciary Committee meeting on Capitol Hill,
in Washington, U.S., December 13, 2019. Patrick
Semansky/Pool via REUTERS
The seat is likely to remain in Republican hands.
Another incumbent, Democratic Representative Debbie Wasserman
Schultz, is being challenged in the 23rd district by community
activist Jen Perelman.
Although it has been a generally good year for progressive
challengers, Perelman lags far behind Wasserman Schultz in campaign
cash, and the incumbent has seen off primary challengers in the last
two elections.
In the 21st district, home to Trump's Mar-a-Lago club, far-right
activist Laura Loomer is one of six Republicans vying for the House
seat. She has been kicked off social media platforms for anti-Muslim
comments and endorsed by former Trump adviser Roger Stone.
Non-partisan analysts consider it a safely Democratic district, so
Tuesday's Republican winner will have an uphill fight against
Democratic Representative Lois Frankel in November.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Scott Malone and Sonya
Hepinstall)
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