The Daily Kos Elections Morning Digest is compiled by David Nir, Jeff Singer, Stephen Wolf, Daniel Donner, and Cara Zelaya, with additional contributions from David Jarman, Steve Singiser, James Lambert, David Beard, and Arjun Jaikumar.
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Leading Off
● NV-Sen, AZ-Sen: Democrats learned that they’d kept control of the Senate Saturday evening when media organizations called Nevada Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto’s victory over Republican Adam Laxalt, a development that came one day after they made the same projection in Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly’s battle against Republican Blake Masters. The Senate battle isn’t over, though, as both parties are already spending in the Dec. 6 Georgia runoff between Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock and Republican Herschel Walker, a contest that will have major consequences even though the majority isn’t at stake.
Cortez Masto trailed on election night but gradually cut her deficit over the following days as ballots submitted by mail or through drop boxes were tabulated, and outlets called her race seconds after she took the lead on Saturday. Cortez Masto, whose win six years ago made her the nation’s first Latina senator, leads Laxalt 48.8-48.1 with 98% of the Associated Press’ estimated vote in, a tight victory that came after a campaign that attracted massive amounts of money from both sides.
Over in neighboring Arizona, Kelly leads Masters 52-46 with 93% of the estimated vote in. Kelly, like Cortez Masto, spent the 2022 cycle as one of the most vulnerable Democrats in the nation, but Masters proved to be one of the weakest GOP Senate nominees in a cycle full of them. In addition to being a truly bad fundraiser, Masters, as the University of Virginia’s J. Miles Coleman put it last month, “comes across as a 4chan guy.” Among many other things, Masters this year called Ted Kaczynski a "subversive thinker that's underrated" before belatedly acknowledging that it's "probably not great to be talking about the Unabomber while campaigning."
Wins by Cortez Masto and Kelly give Senate Democrats control of 50 seats, while Republicans are guaranteed to hold 49. However, we won’t know if Alaska will continue to be represented by Sen. Lisa Murkowski, who sometimes votes with the Biden administration, or hardliner Kelly Tshibaka until instant-runoff tabulations take place on Nov. 23: Tshibaka holds a narrow 44-43 edge with 80% of the estimated vote in, with Democrat Pat Chesbro and Republican Buzz Kelley clocking in at 10% and 3%, respectively.
The final seat is in Georgia, where Warnock outpaced Walker 49.4-48.5 on Tuesday. Democrats are hoping that, now that control of the Senate isn’t on the line, Republicans will be less motivated to turn out for a scandal-plagued nominee who badly trailed the rest of the GOP ticket. The stakes remain high, though: A Warnock victory would leave Senate Democrats far less reliant on West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin and Kelly’s unreliable colleague, Kyrsten Sinema, and give Team Blue some breathing room ahead of a tough 2024 map.
georgia runoff
● GA-Sen: The first Democratic attack ads of the runoff have launched, hitting Herschel Walker for his many personal failings, including paying a girlfriend to have an abortion. That story earned enormous media attention the instant the Daily Beast broke it last month and led to upheaval inside Walker's campaign, but it wasn't the subject of many ads prior to the first round of voting.
This time around, it's just one part of a new broadside from American Bridge, which Politico says is running a "seven-figure" paid media campaign "targeted to voters outside of the Atlanta media market." The spot features several different women who all paint Walker as a liar and a danger:
"Herschel Walker lies. He lies about his businesses. He lies about the way he's treated his family. His son says he's afraid of him and doesn't respect him. He's dangerous. Herschel Walker allegedly held a gun to his girlfriend's head. He lies about his beliefs about abortion. He paid for an abortion for his girlfriend and then he lied about it. Does he think the people of Georgia are stupid? Too many red flags. There's too much at stake. He does not deserve to represent us."
Republicans waded back into the fray a day earlier, with ads from the NRSC trying to tie Raphael Warnock to Joe Biden.
Election Calls
Quite a few contests still remain uncalled, but we’re tracking all of them on our continually updated cheat-sheet; we’ll cover each of them in the Digest once they’re resolved.
● NV-Gov: Republican Joe Lombardo has unseated Democratic incumbent Steve Sisolak, which makes this the one governor’s office the GOP flipped this year. Lombardo leads 49-47 with 98% of the estimated vote in, a win that gives Republicans back a post they held from the 1998 elections until Sisolak’s 2018 victory against Adam Laxalt.
● AZ-04: Democratic Rep. Greg Stanton has fended off Republican Kelly Cooper, a far right extremist who won the nomination in August despite heavy spending from GOP outside groups that correctly saw him as a disastrous candidate. Stanton leads 57-43 with 94% of the estimated vote in; Biden won this constituency in the Phoenix area 54-44 two years ago.
● CA-15: Assemblyman Kevin Mullin has defeated his fellow Democrat, San Mateo County Supervisor David Canepa, in the contest to succeed retiring Rep. Jackie Speier. Mullin leads 56-44 with 58% of the estimated vote in for a dark blue Bay Area constituency that includes most of San Mateo County and a portion of San Francisco. The winner had the backing of both Speier and Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who sought reelection one seat to the north, and he also benefited from spending by the hawkish pro-Israel group AIPAC.
● CA-26: Democratic Rep. Julia Brownley has turned back Republican Matt Jacobs in a race that attracted some late spending from her allies at EMILY’s List. The incumbent leads 54-46 with 60% of the estimated vote in; Biden took this seat, which is based in Ventura County north of Los Angeles, 59-39.
● MD-06: Democratic Rep. David Trone took the lead Friday as more ballots were counted, and Republican Neil Parrott conceded shortly before media outlets called the race. Trone leads 52-48 with 98% of the estimated vote in for a seat in Western Maryland and the northwestern D.C. exurbs that Biden took 54-44.
● OR-05: Republican Lori Chavez-DeRemer has flipped this seat for her party by defeating Democrat Jamie McLeod-Skinner in a seat that became open in May after McLeod-Skinner denied renomination to Blue Dog Democratic incumbent Kurt Schrader. Chavez-DeRemer leads 51-49 with 94% of the estimated vote in for a 53-44 Biden seat located in the southern Portland suburbs and central Oregon. Chavez-DeRemer will be the first Latina to represent Oregon in Congress, a distinction she’d share with Andrea Salinas should the Democrat keep her lead in the 6th.
● WA-03: Democrat Marie Gluesenkamp Perez scored one of the biggest upsets of the cycle by beating Republican Joe Kent, an election denier who had defeated GOP Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler in the August top-two primary, in a southwestern Washington seat that Trump took 51-47. Gluesenkamp Perez, who will be the second Latino to represent Washington in Congress after Herrera Beutler, leads 51-49 with 95% of the estimated vote in.
Herrera Beutler flipped a previous version of this seat during the 2010 GOP wave, and she fended off a serious Democratic offensive in 2020. The congresswoman, though, put herself in a different kind of political danger months later when she responded to the Jan. 6 attack by voting to impeach Trump. Trump himself went on to back Kent, who defended Putin’s invasion of Ukraine and called anyone arrested for Jan. 6 “political prisoners.” Kent also gave an interview to a Nazi sympathizer, though he insisted he thought his questioner was a local journalist after CNN broke this news in October.
Kent responded to his August win over Herrera Beutler by dubbing the district “deep red MAGA country,” and he seemed intent to do everything he could to test that out. The Seattle Times writes, “He called for all weapons available to the military, including machine guns, to be available to the public. He supported a national abortion ban, with no exceptions, and called for Dr. Anthony Fauci to be charged with murder.”
Gluesenkamp Perez, who had lost a 2016 campaign for the Skamania County Board of Commissioners, in turn pitched herself as a moderate and ran ads where local Republicans condemned Kent as a dangerous extremist who would “defund the FBI” and looks up to Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene; Herrera Beutler, for her part, refused to say who she was backing. House Majority PAC also launched an ad buy against Kent in the final days of the race as major GOP groups remained on the sidelines, a gamble that may have made all the difference.
P.S. Gluesenkamp Perez’s victory puts House Democrats on track to represent every district that touches the Pacific Ocean, a feat they haven’t accomplished since before Washington became a state in 1889. Two Democratic incumbents on the California coast, 47th District Rep. Katie Porter and 49th District Rep. Mike Levin, have held the lead since election night, though their races haven’t been called yet.
Alaska Rep. Mary Peltola won’t know her fate until the state conducts instant-runoff tabulations on Nov. 23, but she also looks well positioned: Peltola is taking 47% of the vote with an estimated 80% in, so she’d only need to win a small number of second-choice votes to pull ahead.
● NV Ballot: Question 3, which would establish the first top-five primary system in the nation, has passed 53-47, but it needs to win at the ballot box again in November of 2024 in order to go into effect two years later. That’s because Nevada requires voter-initiated constitutional initiatives to be approved in two successive general elections; amendments placed on the ballot by the legislature, by contrast, only need to be passed by voters once.
● AZ-SoS, NV-SoS: Democrats Adrian Fontes and Cisco Aguilar have won their secretary of state races by beating a pair of QAnon allies who each denied that Donald Trump lost their respective swing states.
Fontes leads Mark Finchem 53-47 in Arizona with 93% of the estimated vote in, while Nevada’s Aguilar is outpacing Jim Marchant 49-47 with 98% of the estimated tally reporting. Fontes will succeed Katie Hobbs, a fellow Democrat who is running for governor, while Aguilar will replace termed-out Republican incumbent Barbara Cegavske.
Marchant, who among many other things claimed that anyone who won an election in Nevada since 2006 was “installed by the deep-state cabal,” assembled an “America First” slate of conspiracy theorist candidates running to control their state’s elections. Its roster included Finchem, who led the failed effort to overturn Joe Biden's 2020 victory in Arizona, as well as Michigan's Kristina Karamo and New Mexico's Audrey Trujillo. Marchant, Karamo, and Finchem all participated in the same QAnon organized conference last year, with Finchem later holding a fundraiser in September featuring several QAnon notables.
All four members of this quartet, as well as Minnesota’s Kim Crockett, went down after an election cycle where the Democratic secretary of state candidates and their allies outspent Republicans by a 57 to 1 margin from July through late October. It wasn’t a complete shutout for the conspiracy theorists, though, as one member of Marchant’s slate, Diego Morales, prevailed in heavily Republican Indiana.
● NV Treasurer: The Nevada Independent on Friday called this contest for Democratic incumbent Zach Conine over Republican Michele Fiore, an extremist who was too much even for some prominent members of her own party. With 98% of the estimated vote in, Conine leads 48-46.
● State Legislatures: While Kansas Republicans failed to unseat Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly, they preserved the two-thirds supermajority in the state House they need to override her vetoes; the GOP has long enjoyed this edge in the state Senate, which is only up in presidential years. Democrats appear to have netted one seat, but Republicans maintains a 85-40 edge.
Over in Vermont, though, Democrats and the left-wing Progressive Party together won 109 of the 150 state House seats, which once again gives them the ability to override GOP Gov. Phil Scott's vetoes, which they narrowly lost in 2020. WCAX says that Democrats, who on their own will have 104 representatives, will have more seats than ever even though there were 246 members until 1964. The two parties also appear to have finished the election with 23 of the 30 state Senate seats, which is the number they entered Tuesday with.
● King County, WA Prosecutor: Leesa Manion will become both the first woman and person of color to serve as King County prosecutor now that her opponent, Federal Way Mayor Jim Ferrell, has conceded. Manion leads 57-43 with about 658,000 votes counted.
Manion works as chief of staff to retiring incumbent Dan Satterberg, a former Republican who joined the Democratic Party in 2018, and Bolts wrote before the election that she "cast herself as a cautious reformer." Ferrell, who was backed by several police associations and police unions, ran to her right, though, and argued he was more tough on crime.
Governors
● IN-Gov: Democrat Jennifer McCormick, a former Republican who was Indiana's last elected schools chief, says she's created an exploratory committee ahead of a possible bid to succeed termed-out Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb in 2024.
McCormick was elected state superintendent as a Republican in 2016 by unseating Democrat Glenda Ritz, who was the last Democrat to win a state-level office, but she immediately began feuding with the rest of her party over her desire to increase scrutiny over charter schools. Things only got worse as McCormick's tenure continued, and she decided in 2018 not to seek re-election two years down the line. (Republicans initially passed a law to make her post an appointed office starting in 2024, but they moved up the timeline after her retirement announcement.)
McCormick burned what few bridges remained with GOP leaders in 2020 when she endorsed several Democratic contenders, including Holcomb foe Woody Myers. Myers even announced that he'd keep her on as superintendent, something McCormick said she'd accept because of her "outrage" over the state's "woefully underfunded" education system, but Holcomb's landslide win made the point moot. McCormick went on to join the Democratic Party the next year.
● LA-Gov: The state GOP's executive committee provided a very early endorsement to Attorney General Jeff Landry on Nov. 6, but while his allies hoped this stamp of approval would help the party avoid the intra-party strife that damaged it in 2019, it doesn't appear to have worked as intended.
Lt. Gov. Billy Nungesser, a likely Landry opponent in next October's all-party primary to succeed termed-out Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards, tweeted, "This endorsement process looks more like communist China than the Louisiana we know and love." State Sen. Sharon Hewitt, who recently confirmed her own interest in running, piled on, "the citizens of Louisiana do not need backroom deals and political insiders telling them who should be our next governor."
Conservative megadonor Eddie Rispone, who lost the 2019 campaign to Edwards after a costly battle against then-Rep. Ralph Abraham, successfully pushed for party leaders to support Landry in order to avoid a repeat of what happened to him. Abraham, who retired the next year, is also for Landry.
Several members of the Republican State Central Committee, though, took the smaller executive committee to task for ramming through the endorsement without a vote of the full body, and one even publicly declared, "For a party that's been harping for two years about election integrity and honoring the will of all legitimate voters, tonight's action by the state GOP executive committee stinks like yesterday's diapers." State GOP chair Louis Gurvich responded Thursday that, while he'd wanted this news to be announced after the midterms, "the media reported the endorsement as the result of a leak."
Landry is the only prominent Republican who has announced a campaign, but plenty of others are considering. Sen. John Kennedy didn't dismiss the idea earlier this year, and he also wouldn't shoot the prospect down Tuesday right after winning a new six-year term. He instead merely responded to questions about the gubernatorial race by saying, "I am so happy to be re-elected to the Senate and tonight that is the only thing I have on my mind."
Kennedy's colleague, Bill Cassidy, also said in March he'd decide by the end of this year, and LaPolitics' Jeremy Alford relays that Cassidy "is said to be leaning toward a run." Another GOP member of Congress, Rep. Garret Graves, also promised a decision after the midterms, while state Treasurer John Schroder is considering as well. Plenty of other Republicans may also take a look at running to succeed Edwards in this conservative state.
Mayors
● Indianapolis, IN Mayor: State Rep. Robin Shackleford announced Thursday that she would challenge Mayor Joe Hogsett in next year's Democratic primary, and her election would make her both the first woman and African American to lead Indianapolis. We're still waiting to learn, though, whether Hogsett will be seeking a third term.
The incumbent said Wednesday, "I intend to be making decisions and announcements probably by the end of the month … It's probably 50/50 proposition right now." The Indianapolis Star's James Briggs, however, writes that Hogsett's campaign will hold an event Tuesday that he believes will be the mayor's re-election launch. Hogsett began 2022 with $2.4 million on hand, while Shackleford will largely be starting from scratch.
Shackleford, who has been an intra-party critic of the local Democratic establishment, herself argued that, while she supports Hogsett's efforts to improve downtown Indianapolis, he has ignored other neighborhoods badly in need. Briggs also writes that the mayor "was pushed into outlining a Black agenda after having argued that his policies would benefit people of all races" during his 2019 race. He adds, "The events of Hogsett's second term, including racial justice protests that devolved into riots and persistent concerns over police misconduct, likely will put a brighter spotlight on race next year."
It remains to be seen if Republicans will try to make a serious effort to flip the mayor's office in what's become a heavily Democratic community, but IndyPolitics.org publisher Abdul-Hakim Shabazz says he's thinking about running for Team Red.
● Philadelphia, PA Mayor: City Councilmember Helen Gym has been talked about for years as a potential candidate to succeed termed-out Mayor Jim Kenney next year, and she hinted at her interest by telling the Philadelphia Inquirer that "the right woman" would win the May Democratic primary. Gym, who is one of the more high profile progressives in Pennsylvania politics, became the first Asian American elected to the City Council when she won a citywide seat in 2015.
Former state Sen. Vince Fumo also name-dropped state Rep. Amen Brown as a possible contender, but Brown himself doesn't appear to have shown any public interest yet. Former City Councilmember Allan Domb, whom the paper calls "one of Philadelphia's most notable real estate barons," for his part resigned from office in August to focus on a possible bid, but he has yet to jump in.
Domb quit the City Council because Philadelphia requires local elected officials to step down in order to run for mayor, and four Democrats have done just that so far: former City Controller Rebecca Rhynhart and former City Council members Cherelle Parker, Derek Green, and Maria Quiñones-Sánchez. Gym, Rhynhart, Parker, and Quiñones-Sánchez would each be the first woman to lead the city. It only takes a simple plurality to win the Democratic nod.
General elections are almost always afterthoughts in this dark blue city, but a few non-Democrats are making noises about getting in. The Inquirer says that David Oh, who is the only Republican member of the City Council, is mulling the idea.
Former Lt. Gov. Mike Stack also told the paper that he could campaign as an independent, modestly saying, "If Mike Stack's in it, I'd bet on Mike Stack." Stack is a former Democratic office holder who developed a truly awful relationship with his boss, Gov. Tom Wolf, after they were elected in 2014 after winning separate primaries: Wolf even pulled the lieutenant governor's security detail in 2017 over allegations that Stack and his wife verbally abused his protectors and other state employees.
Wolf, though, didn't need to deal with him for too much longer. Four candidates, including John Fetterman, challenged Stack for renomination in 2018, and the result did not go well for the incumbent: Fetterman took first with 37%, while Stack lagged in fourth with just 17%. The Inquirer wrote in 2020 that Stack had "moved to California to try his hand at stand-up comedy and screenwriting," and you can probably guess how well that went.