Factbox: Power of Trump's endorsements faces test in 12 U.S. midterm
primaries
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[June 06, 2022]
(Reuters) - Former U.S. President Donald
Trump is seeking to demonstrate his power over the Republican Party with
more than 190 endorsements of candidates ahead of the Nov. 8 midterm
elections that will determine control of Congress for 2023 and 2024.
Twelve picks in primary elections taking place stand out among the many.
Some are Republicans opposing incumbent members of his party.
WINNERS IN PRIMARIES
Mehmet Oz
* Seeks U.S. Senate seat for Pennsylvania vacated by retiring Republican
Senator Pat Toomey
Oz, a celebrity doctor whose endorsement by Trump divided Republican
leaders in Pennsylvania, beat former hedge fund executive David
McCormick by a margin of 916 votes, a victory called on Friday following
a recount, according to Edison Research.
Oz will face Democratic Lieutenant Governor John Fetterman in what is
expected to be among the tightest races of the November election.
Fetterman acknowledged on Friday that he "almost died" from a stroke in
the days before the May 17 primary.
Herschel Walker
* Will face incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Raphael Warnock of Georgia
A retired football star, Walker easily won the Republican nomination
contest and opinion polls point to a close race in November against
Warnock, a pastor. But Trump-endorsed Walker, who has never held elected
office, has vulnerabilities including past allegations of domestic
abuse.
Ted Budd
* Seeks U.S. Senate seat for North Carolina vacated by retiring
Republican Senator Richard Burr
A rank-and-file member of the House of Representatives, Budd had little
statewide name recognition before he sought the Republican nomination
for what is expected to be a tight race in November. But following
Trump's endorsement, he surged in opinion polls and easily defeated
former North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory in the May 17 primary.
In November, Budd will face Democrat Cheri Beasley, a Black woman who
formerly served as the state's chief justice.
J.D. Vance
* Seeks U.S. Senate seat for Ohio vacated by retiring Republican Senator
Rob Portman
Trump-backed Vance triumphed in a crowded May 3 Republican primary and
is favored to win in November against Democrat Tim Ryan, currently a
U.S. Representative for Ohio, although some political observers expect a
stiff challenge from Ryan.
Vance is best known as the author of best-seller "Hillbilly Elegy" which
documented the descent of factory towns in states like Ohio into poverty
and drug abuse. He has styled himself as an angry populist in the Trump
mold, seeking to shed his prior reputation as a Trump critic.
LOSERS IN PRIMARIES
David Perdue
* Went up against Georgia's incumbent Republican Governor Brian Kemp
Former U.S. Senator Perdue, despite getting Trump's endorsement, didn't
come close to upsetting Georgia's incumbent Republican Governor Brian
Kemp. Perdue, who has repeated Trump's falsehoods about losing Georgia
in the 2020 presidential election due to widespread voter fraud,
conceded to Kemp shortly after polls closed in the May 24 Republican
primary. Kemp had angered Trump by dismissing the former president's
false statements about election fraud.
UPCOMING RACES
Katie Arrington
* Seeks to defeat incumbent U.S. Republican Representative Nancy Mace
* June 14 Republican primary for South Carolina's 1st congressional
district
The South Carolina state representative is challenging a sitting
Republican lawmaker who voted against Trump's impeachment. Mace irked
the former president in 2021 when she said Congress should consider
censuring Trump for his role in his supporters' assault on the U.S.
Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Arrington has trailed Mace in public opinion
polls.
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After a night of nail-biting, there’s still no decisive winner in
one of the most contentious primary races in the United States.
Russell Fry
* Seeks to defeat incumbent U.S. Republican Representative Tom Rice
* June 14 Republican primary for South Carolina's 7th congressional
district
Trump's pick to unseat Rice, one of a handful of Republicans who
voted to impeach the former leader, is a state representative whose
campaign had nearly a half million dollars in the bank on March 31,
pointing to a potentially competitive race with Rice.
Loren Culp
* Seeks to defeat incumbent U.S. Republican Representative Dan
Newhouse
* Aug. 2 Republican primary for Washington's 4th congressional
district
Trump's pick to challenge Newhouse is former small-town police chief
Loren Culp, who in March called for the execution of a Black man
accused of badly injuring a woman by throwing her down the stairs of
a train station. Trump had endorsed Culp in February, angered by
Newhouse's 2021 impeachment vote.
John Gibbs
* Seeks to defeat incumbent U.S. Republican Representative Peter
Meijer
* Aug. 2 Republican primary for Michigan's 3rd congressional
district
A former housing official under Trump, Gibbs' nomination to head the
U.S. Office of Personnel Management floundered after lawmakers from
both parties questioned his history of inflammatory tweets,
including references to baseless conspiracy theories about Democrats
and Satanism. His opponent Meijer, who voted to impeach Trump, is
far ahead in fundraising. The winner of the nomination contest will
face a Democrat in what is expected to be among the tightest House
races in November.
Joe Kent
* Seeks to defeat incumbent U.S. Republican Representative Jaime
Herrera Beutler
* Aug. 2 Republican primary for Washington's 3rd congressional
district
Former special forces officer Kent has campaigned with far right
U.S. representative Matt Gaetz of Florida and told Oregon Public
Broadcasting he held a social media strategy call with white
nationalist Nicholas Fuentes, though he said he disagreed with
Fuentes' "ethno-nationalism."
Kelly Tshibaka
* Seeks to defeat incumbent U.S. Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski
of Alaska
* Aug. 16 open primary contest
Trump is backing Tshibaka, a former Alaska state administration
commissioner, to unseat Murkowski, who was one of seven Republican
senators who voted to convict Trump in 2021 on impeachment charges
that he incited insurrection. The Alaska contest has taken on the
shade of a proxy war between Trump and Republican Senate leader
Mitch McConnell, who vowed to do everything possible to help the
campaign of Murkowski, one of the Senate's few Republican moderates.
Harriet Hageman
* Seeks to defeat incumbent U.S. Republican Representative Liz
Cheney
* Aug. 16 Wyoming at-large-district Republican primary
Trump threw his backing behind Hageman, a land-use lawyer, in
September 2021, looking to punish Cheney, who was stripped of her
role as the No. 3 House Republican for voting to impeach the former
president on a charge of inciting insurrection. Hageman led Cheney
by 20 percentage points in a December poll.
(Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Scott Malone, Alistair Bell
and Nick Zieminski)
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