Trump's picks win Senate, House Republican primaries in New Hampshire
Send a link to a friend
[September 09, 2020]
By Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald
Trump's preferred candidates for U.S. Senate and House of
Representatives seats won Republican primaries in New Hampshire Tuesday,
but face an uphill battle in the general election in the state where
Democrats have a slight edge.
Attorney Bryant "Corky" Messner, 63, who proudly campaigned on his Trump
endorsement, defeated retired Army general Don Bolduc for the Republican
nomination for Senate, the New York Times said.
Messner got 50.6% of the vote to Bolduc's 42.8% with 71.1% of precincts
reporting, and will face incumbent Democratic Senator Jeanne Shaheen in
November.
In New Hampshire's first congressional district, a 31-year-old
Trump-endorsed candidate, Matt Mowers, beat a crowded Republican field
for the party's nomination to take on freshman Democratic Representative
Chris Pappas on Nov. 3, the New York Times said.
The voting was a test of Trump's influence in the northeastern
battleground state that the president narrowly lost to Hillary Clinton
in 2016 - and that counts a number of anti-Trumpers among its
Republicans. Some prominent current and former New Hampshire Republicans
recently endorsed Biden on the same day Trump arrived for a rally in the
state.
Rhode Island also voted on Tuesday in some of the last U.S.
congressional party primaries this year. The contests produce nominees
for Nov. 3 elections that will determine the balance of power in
Congress. Democrats hope to keep control of the House and end the
Senate's 53-47 Republican majority.
New Hampshire's two-term Senator Shaheen, 73, easily won her Democratic
primary Tuesday. She appears to be in a good position for re-election,
well outpacing both Messner and his Republican opponent in a Granite
State Poll released last week by the University of New Hampshire Survey
Center.
Shaheen said Tuesday she hoped to meet the Republican candidate in three
debates.
[to top of second column]
|
"There are important issues at stake, including confronting the
pandemic and getting people back to work ..." she said.
Messer said he thought New Hampshire residents deserve "a political
outsider".
"I look forward to working with President Trump to keep America
great," he said in a statement.
Both Messner and the Republican candidate he defeated are
conservatives with military experience. Bolduc, a New Hampshire
native, portrayed Messner as a wealthy out-of-stater; Messner built
a law firm in Colorado before moving to New Hampshire. He largely
self-funded his campaign.
Messner also faces questions about the finances of a charitable
foundation he runs. Two former Colorado Supreme Court justices have
alleged the Messner Foundation was deceptive in its conduct of
raffles raising money for scholarships. Messner's lawyer says the
allegations are without merit.
Trump's campaign says only two of 118 candidates the president has
endorsed this year have lost in congressional primaries and special
elections.
In New Hampshire's first House district, Mowers, a Republican party
strategist, won 60.2% of the vote compared to 25.8% for his closest
opponent Matt Mayberry, with 76.3% of precincts reporting, the Times
said.
The district has been traded back and forth between the parties in
recent years, but Democrats have the advantage currently,
non-partisan election analysts say.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Aurora Ellis, Christopher
Cushing and Kim Coghill)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |