• IN-Gov: The FEC announced last week that it was fining Republican Sen. Mike Braun's federal campaign $159,000 for failing to properly report information about loans and other transactions during his successful 2018 Senate bid, problems his team blamed on his old treasurer. The news comes a little more than a month ahead of the May 7 primary for governor, a race in which Braun is the frontrunner.
• NJ-Gov: Republican state Sen. Jon Bramnick said Friday that he'd raised $800,000 during the first nine weeks of his campaign, a haul that the New Jersey Globe says qualifies him for a 2-to-1 match in public funds. Bramnick and 2021 nominee Jack Ciattarelli so far are the only notable Republicans competing in next year's primary to replace the termed-out incumbent, Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy, while a trio of Democrats have also launched bids.
• VA-Gov: The GOP firm Cygnal shows Lt. Gov. Winsome Sears with a wide 44-16 lead over Attorney General Jason Miyares in a hypothetical 2025 primary matchup for the right to succeed fellow Republican Glenn Youngkin, who is termed out as governor.
Cygnal informs Daily Kos Elections that this survey was conducted for Virginians for Responsible Government, a group run by former House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, and says that its client has no rooting interest in the Republican primary. A late February poll from another GOP group, Differentiators, gave Sears a similar 48-17 advantage.
Neither Sears nor Miyares has announced their plans for next year, but it would be a massive surprise if at least one of them doesn't campaign for governor. It also remains to be seen if the GOP will pick its nominee through a traditional state-run primary, though a relatively new state law makes the latter option more likely.
A law passed in 2021 requires that all absentee voters have the chance to take part in nomination contests, which makes it more difficult for parties to opt for conventions or party-run "firehouse primaries."
• WV-Gov: Political columnist Steven Allen Adams writes that businessman Chris Miller's allies at West Virginia Forward are launching a $1.4 million buy targeting Attorney General Patrick Morrisey ahead of the May 14 GOP primary, an offensive that comes after millions in attacks from pro-Morrisey outside groups lobbed at Miller.
West Virginia Forward is led by Matt Miller, who is the candidate's father and the husband of Rep. Carol Miller. Adams notes that its largest donor is a group associated with the GOP's 2016 gubernatorial nominee Bill Cole who, like Chris Miller, runs several car dealerships. (The person Cole lost to in the general election, termed-out Gov. Jim Justice, left the Democratic Party the following year and is now the GOP's frontrunner for Senate.)
Miller's detractors aren't so fond of his chosen profession, though. The Club for Growth, which supports Morrisey, has spent $1.4 million on ads since early February that have accused Miller's company of selling "dangerous" used cars and taking $3 million in loans through the Paycheck Protection Program—an initiative his mother voted for.
Another pro-Morrisey outfit called Black Bear PAC has deployed $768,000 against Miller, though Adams says that some of that represents payments to the Club. (The Club in turn has provided nearly all of Black Bear's funding.) Black Bear's commercials have accused Miller of previously expressing support for legalizing drugs.
Adams does not mention any comparable spending for or against the other two notable Republican candidates, former Del. Moore Capito and Secretary of State Mac Warner.