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Politics

Paralympic gold medalist Josh Turek wins Iowa Senate primary with establishment support

Iowa state Rep. Josh Turek won his Senate primary Tuesday, a victory for national Democrats who helped boost him as they seek to flip the critical seat.

He will face Rep. Ashley Hinson, the GOP nominee, to compete in what has become one of the nation’s most closely watched Senate races, as both parties battle for control of the upper chamber.

Turek, a wheelchair basketball player who was on teams that won two Paralympic gold medals, defeated state Sen. Zach Wahls in a chaotic primary election that turned into a proxy war between the Democratic Party’s leaders and its anti-establishment wing. Wahls frequently accused Turek of being beholden to Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer — who didn’t formally endorse in the race but whose leadership PAC maxed out to Turek’s campaign — and outside groups like VoteVets, which spent more than $10 million on advertising for Turek. That figure is more than three times the combined spending from Turek’s and Wahls’ campaigns.

In the end, that money — in cohort with Turek’s “prairie populism” pitch focused on building up the working class — helped him prevail.

Turek also boasted significant backing from Democrats in the state, including former Sen. Tom Harkin, the last Democrat to represent Iowa in the U.S. Senate. He enters the general election in a deadlock with Hinson, with preprimary polling showing the two in a statistical tie.

Democrats have not elected a senator to Washington since 2008, when Harkin was elected to his final term. But they view this cycle as a golden opportunity, thanks to a sagging economy and growing frustration with the Trump administration’s tariffs, which spiraled Iowa’s agriculture sector into chaos.

And Turek, who was elected to the Iowa House of Representatives in 2022, has been through tough races before: In that first election, he defeated a Republican opponent by just six votes.

​Politics

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Alaska News

In bid for re-election, Alaska U.S. Rep. Nick Begich defends against 14 challengers

Republican U.S. House candidate Nick Begich and his supporters wave campaign signs at the corner of the Seward Highway and Northern Lights Boulevard on Nov. 4, 2024, the day before Election Day. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

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Two years ago, Republican Nick Begich III defeated incumbent Democratic Rep. Mary Peltola and became Alaska’s lone member of the U.S. House of Representatives.

Now, 14 people are hoping to imitate Begich’s performance. 

Monday was the filing deadline for candidates interested in running in this year’s elections, and in addition to the incumbent Begich, there are two other Republicans, six independents, two Libertarians and four Democrats.

That tally could change by June 27, the deadline for candidates to drop out of the race. 

In the state’s primary election on Aug. 18, Alaska voters will each pick one of the 15 candidates. The top four vote-getters advance to the November general election. At that election, voters will rank the final four in order of preference, using ranked choice voting to pick the winner.

Begich’s two leading challengers are expected to be Democratic candidate Matt Schultz and independent candidate Bill Hill.

Schultz is a pastor in Anchorage who was one of the first people to officially challenge Begich, and he has the endorsement of many of the state’s Democratic officials. Among his endorsements is Tom Begich, a Democratic candidate for governor and Begich III’s uncle.

Hill, a commercial fisherman and former public-school superintendent, has raised significantly more money than Schultz, campaign finance records show, but much of that money has come from outside the state. Hill has also hired Ship Creek Group, an experienced campaign consulting firm in Anchorage.

Of the 15 candidates, five do not live in Alaska: nonpartisan Melanie Salazar, Democratic candidate Yaquelin Reynoso, Democratic candidate Eric Hafner, Republican candidate Eddie Goldfarb and Libertarian John Foddrill.

Under the U.S. Constitution and current interpretations of that document, someone can run for U.S. House in any state as long as they live within that state at the time they take office.

In Alaska, it is common for out-of-state Americans to run for federal office; most receive less than 1% of the vote.

Hafner is a convicted felon and serving time at a federal prison in New York. Two years ago, he finished in the final four of the 2024 U.S. House race after several higher-finishing candidates withdrew.

The Alaska Democratic Party sued, arguing that he was ineligible to serve if elected. The Alaska Supreme Court ultimately ruled against the party, and Hafner remained on the ballot, finishing fourth in the general election. 

Candidates for U.S. House

  • David Ambrose (nonpartisan)
  • Nick Begich III (Republican) (incumbent)
  • Lady Donna Dutchess (nonpartisan)
  • John Foddrill (Libertarian)
  • Eddie Goldfarb (Republican)
  • Eric Hafner (Democratic)
  • Bill Hill (Nonpartisan)
  • James McDermott (Libertarian)
  • Yaquelin Reynoso (Democratic)
  • Melanie Salazar (Nonpartisan)
  • Matt Schultz (Democratic)
  • Clay Strickland (Republican)
  • John Williams (Democratic)
  • Matthew Williams (Undeclared)
  • David Richey (Nonpartisan)
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Alaska News

In Alaska’s U.S. Senate race, it’s Mary Peltola, two Dan Sullivans and 12 others

An early voting station is set up in the atrium of the State Office Building in Juneau, Alaska, on Aug. 5, 2024, the first day of early voting for the 2024 Alaska primary election. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

An early voting station is set up in the atrium of the State Office Building in Juneau, Alaska, on Aug. 5, 2024, the first day of early voting for the 2024 Alaska primary election. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

As national Democrats seek to win control of the U.S. Senate, they’ve named Alaska one of their top targets. They’ve already donated millions of dollars to boost the candidacy of Democratic candidate, and former U.S. House Representative, Mary Peltola.

Meanwhile, Republicans are doing the same with incumbent U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan. Both will be competing against 14 other candidates in the upcoming Aug. 18 primary election.

In that election, each voter picks one candidate and the top four-vote getters advance to the Nov. 3 general election. In that election, voters will sort the candidates in order of preference using ranked choice voting to select the eventual winner.

Monday was the deadline to file as a candidate for the U.S. Senate race, and the field includes seven Republicans, three Democrats, three independents, a Green Party member and a Libertarian candidate. 

In addition to the incumbent Sen. Dan Sullivan, one of the challengers is also named Dan Sullivan, and he’s also running as a Republican, albeit from Petersburg instead of Anchorage.

Among the other candidates are frequent participants in past Alaska elections — Republican Gerald Heikes, Republican Dustin Darden, and Libertarian Scott Kohlhaas.

Carol Hafner, running as a Democrat, is the mother of Eric Hafner — currently serving a felony sentence in a New York prison —  who finished in the final four for Alaska’s 2024 U.S. House race and is running in this year’s contest, too.

The deadline for any candidate to withdraw from the primary election is June 27.

Candidates for U.S. Senate

  • Dustin Darden (Republican)
  • Fred Grauberger (Republican)
  • Richard Grayson (Green)
  • Carol Hafner (Democratic)
  • Gerald Heikes (Republican)
  • Sidney Hill (Undeclared)
  • Richard Mayers (Republican)
  • Mary Peltola (Democratic)
  • Scott Kohlhaas (Libertarian)
  • David Leslie (Democratic)
  • Heather McElwain (Republican)
  • Reece Roberts (Nonpartisan)
  • Shirley Saucerman (Nonpartisan)
  • Earl Southworth (Alaskan)
  • Dan S. Sullivan (Republican) (incumbent)
  • Dan J. Sullivan (Republican)
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