In Missouri, Republican Eric Schmitt will be his party’s nominee for US Senate, CNN projects, defeating former Gov. Eric Greitens.
In Michigan, CNN projects Republican Tudor Dixon, an election denier endorsed by former President Donald Trump, will face Democratic incumbent Gretchen Whitmer in November. Incumbent Rep. Peter Meijer, who voted to impeach Trump, will lose the GOP primary for his seat in Michigan’s 3rd District to Trump-backed John Gibbs.
Trump-endorsed election deniers were also on the ballot in high-profile races in Arizona, including in the GOP Senate, governor and secretary of state contests. Meanwhile, two other Republicans who voted to impeach Trump are facing primary challengers in Washington. These races are still too early to call.
Our live coverage has ended. Read more about today’s primaries in the posts below.
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CNN Projection: Mark Finchem will win the GOP nomination for Arizona secretary of state
Mark Finchem will win the GOP nomination for Arizona secretary of state, CNN projects.
Finchem is a Trump-endorsed election denier. Finchem attended the Jan. 6 Stop the Steal rally and has peddled the QAnon conspiracy theory.
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CNN Projection: Blake Masters will win the Arizona Republican Senate primary
Blake Masters will win the Arizona Republican Senate primary race, CNN projects.
He’ll face incumbent Democrat Mark Kelly in November.
Masters is a venture capitalist who former President Donald Trump backed. He also worked closely with billionaire Peter Thiel, who backed Masters’ bid financially.
Masters has spread lies about the results of the 2020 election and accused Democrats of trying to “change the demographics” of the country.
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Here are key takeaways so far from Tuesday's primaries
From CNN's Eric Bradner, Dan Merica and Gregory Krieg
Alie Utley and Joe Moyer react Tuesday night after Kansas voters chose to protect abortion rights in their state.
(Dave Kaup/AFP/Getty Images)
Kansas voters handed abortion-rights advocates a massive victory Tuesday, surging to the polls to defeat a measure that would have allowed the GOP-led legislature to impose new restrictions.
The vote in Kansas was one of the first tests of the potency of abortion rights at the ballot box since the Supreme Court’s decision to reverse Roe v. Wade and end the federal protection of abortion access.
Meanwhile, in Arizona, local elections officials were still counting votes to determine whether a slate of statewide candidates who were endorsed by former President Donald Trump and promoted his lies about election fraud won their Republican primaries.
In Missouri, the political comeback of a former governor was shut down. And in Michigan, one of the 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump was ousted, while the matchup was set for what will be one of the key gubernatorial races this fall.
Here are some key takeaways so far from Tuesday’s primaries:
Kansas maintains constitutional right to abortion: Kansas voters sent a dramatic message on Tuesday, opting to maintain the right to an abortion in their state’s constitution just weeks after the US Supreme Court decided to overturn Roe v. Wade. Polls have long shown that voters overwhelmingly support protecting abortions rights. But the win for the “no” vote in Kansas is proof of that and signals that the Supreme Court decision has further angered voters and possibly shifted the politics of the issue ahead of the November elections. The “no” leaves the state constitution unchanged. While lawmakers in the state can still try to pass restrictive abortion laws, courts in Kansas have recognized a right to abortion under the state constitution. The biggest warning to Republicans, many of whom have trumpeted the overturning of Roe and backed pushes to pass stricter abortions laws, is perhaps the turnout in Kansas. With 78% of the vote in on Tuesday night, nearly 700,000 people have cast ballots in the primary, a figure that already dwarfs the turnout in the 2020 presidential primary election.
Greitens’ attempted comeback falls flat: Republicans in Missouri breathed a sigh of relief after state Attorney General Eric Schmitt won the wide-open Senate primary, according to a CNN projection. Perhaps more significant than who won, though, in the deep-red state, is who lost: disgraced former Gov. Eric Greitens, who was attempting a political comeback. Greitens resigned in 2018 amid a sex scandal and accusation of campaign misconduct, and subsequently faced abuse allegations from his ex-wife, which he has denied. Schmitt, the attorney general, emerged from a crowded field that included two members of Congress, Reps. Vicky Hartzler and Billy Long. Former President Donald Trump stayed out of the race, issuing a tongue-in-cheek statement supporting “Eric” on the eve of the primary — leaving it up to voters’ interpretation whether that meant Schmitt or Greitens.
A member of the “impeachment 10” is defeated: Rep. Peter Meijer became the second of the 10 Republicans who voted to impeach former President Donald Trump to be ousted in a primary Tuesday, losing to Trump-endorsed conservative challenger John Gibbs, CNN projected. Democrats played a role in boosting Gibbs — a calculated decision that has become a flashpoint, angering some Democrats and anti-Trump Republicans. Meijer, a freshman, voted to impeach Trump just days after taking office, after the insurrection of January 6, 2021. Gibbs, meanwhile, backed Trump’s lies about widespread fraud in the 2020 election. Meijer’s loss means the Grand Rapids-based 3rd District seat will be one of the most competitive House contests in November’s midterm elections.
Unknowns in Arizona: Arizona’s race for the Republican nomination for governor could depend on whether former President Donald Trump’s supporters turned out in force on election day in a state that conducts its contests largely by mail. Karrin Taylor Robson, a former member of the Arizona Board of Regents who is backed by former Vice President Mike Pence and outgoing Gov. Doug Ducey, led former television journalist Kari Lake, a Trump-endorsed election denier, in the early returns Wednesday morning. But the early results were largely mail-in ballots. Votes cast on election day were expected to favor Lake — a result of Trump’s years-long effort to undermine faith in mail-in voting. The Arizona gubernatorial primary was the most significant contest in a set of primaries that tested Trump’s influence over the GOP.
Dixon casts Michigan governor’s race as referendum on Covid policies:Tudor Dixon, the conservative commentator endorsed by Trump in the final days of the race and backed by large factions of the Michigan Republican establishment, won the state’s GOP primary to take on Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, CNN projected. The clash in Michigan could be one of the nation’s most competitive governor’s races. Whitmer has cast herself as a bulwark for abortion rights in a state where Republicans have sought to enforce a 1931 law that would impose a near-total ban on abortion. Dixon, meanwhile, framed the race in her victory speech Tuesday night as a referendum on restrictions Whitmer imposed during the Covid-19 pandemic. Dixon, a mother of four who is backed by former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’s family, is also an advocate of school choice — potentially positioning education as a marquee issue in November’s midterm election.
Progressives suffer another defeat in Michigan: Rep. Haley Stevens’ projected Democratic primary victory in Michigan’s newly drawn 11th Congressional District over fellow Rep. Andy Levin marks another blow against progressives in what has been a mostly disappointing primary season. It’s also a resounding victory for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC, and its super PAC, United Democracy Project, which has spent millions backing moderate, more staunchly pro-Israel candidates in Democratic primaries. Stevens and Levin are both supportive of Israel, but Levin — who is Jewish — has been more willing to criticize its government’s treatment of Palestinians and is the lead sponsor of the Two-State Solution Act.
CNN Projection: John Gibbs will win GOP nomination for Michigan’s 3rd District, defeating Rep. Peter Meijer
From CNN staff
John Gibbs is seen in this undated image.
From John Gibbs for Congress/Facebook
Rep. Peter Meijer became the second of the 10 Republicans who voted to impeach former President Donald Trump to be ousted in a primary Tuesday, losing to Trump-endorsed conservative challenger John Gibbs in the GOP primary for his seat in Michigan’s 3rd Congressional District, CNN projects.
Meijer, a freshman, voted to impeach the then-President just days after taking office, after the insurrection at the US Capitol of Jan. 6, 2021. Gibbs, meanwhile, backed Trump’s lies about widespread fraud in the 2020 election.
Republican Rep. Peter Meijer of Michigan's 3rd District answers questions at the West Michigan Hispanic Chamber in Grand Rapids on July 25.
(Joey Cappelletti/AP)
Meijer’s loss means the Grand Rapids-based 3rd District seat will be one of the most competitive House contests in November’s midterm elections.
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, eyeing the seat as a possible pick-up opportunity, spent more than $300,000 on television ads seeking to bolster Gibbs with pro-Trump GOP primary voters by portraying him as a Trump-aligned conservative.
Meijer, at his election night event at a bar in Grand Rapids, said he’d heard from House Democratic colleagues who were angry about the “hypocrisy that that represented.”
“Obviously the DCCC dropping a half-million dollar ad buy to prop up my primary challenger with seven days to go is not something we liked to see,” he said.
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CNN Projection: Washington’s secretary of state will advance to November, as Democrats look to break streak
From CNN's Andrew Menezes
Steve Hobbs speaks after he was sworn in as Washington's secretary of state in November.
(Ted S. Warren/AP/File)
Washington Secretary of State Steve Hobbs will advance to the general election in November for the remaining two years of his predecessor’s term, CNN projects.
Hobbs, a Democrat, was appointed to the position by Gov. Jay Inslee in November to succeed Republican Kim Wyman, who resigned to become the election security lead for the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. Wyman was in her third term when she resigned.
While Washington has become a reliably blue state in recent decades, Democrats haven’t won an election for secretary of state here since 1960.
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CNN Projection: Democrat advances in Washington's 3rd District race as Republicans fight to secure second spot
From CNN staff
(From Marie Gluesenkamp Perez for Congress/Facebook)
Democrat Marie Gluesenkamp Perez will advance to the general election in Washington’s 3rd Congressional District, CNN projects.
Washington state has an open primary system, which sees all candidates run on the same ballot, regardless of party, with the top two vote-getters advancing to November.
Republicans are now fighting to secure the second spot. Incumbent Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler, one of 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach former President Donald Trump last year, is seeking a seventh term representing the 3rd District.
Other Republicans in the race include Joe Kent, who has Trump’s backing and says that the 2020 election was stolen. Kent has made Herrera Beutler’s vote for impeachment a center point of his campaign. Author Heidi St. John and state Rep. Vicki Kraft, both Republicans, are also running.
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Biden praises Kansas vote to maintain right to abortion in state constitution
From CNN's Brian Rokus in Washington, DC
President Biden released a statement on tonight’s vote in Kansas maintaining the right to an abortion in the state’s constitution.
“This vote makes clear what we know: the majority of Americans agree that women should have access to abortion and should have the right to make their own health care decisions. Congress should listen to the will of the American people and restore the protections of Roe as federal law,” Biden said in the statement.
Kansas voters voted “no” on a proposed constitutional amendment, according to a CNN projection.
More background: The vote comes after a 2019 state Supreme Court ruling found the state constitution does protect the right to an abortion. A “yes” vote on the amendment would have removed the right to abortion from the state constitution and allowed GOP lawmakers to pass further restriction or a ban on abortion, while a “no” vote maintains it.
Polls have consistently shown that the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade is broadly unpopular. A CNN poll released in late July found nearly two-thirds of Americans disapprove of the Supreme Court decision, with even 55% of self-identified moderate or liberal Republicans saying they disapproved of the decision. But the results on Tuesday, the first electoral test of abortion rights after the Supreme Court decision, put an even finer point on that sentiment.
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GOP Rep. Meijer slams Democrats for pumping money into primary challenger's campaign
From CNN's Eric Bradner in Grand Rapids, Michigan
US Rep. Peter Meijer attends a news conference outside the US Capitol in May.
(Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc./Getty Images/File)
Republican Rep. Peter Meijer slammed national Democrats for pumping money into his primary challenger John Gibbs’ campaign Tuesday night, saying he’d heard from House Democratic colleagues who were angry about the “hypocrisy that that represented.”
Meijer, one of the 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach former President Donald Trump following the Jan. 6 insurrection, was locked in a tight race with Trump-backed Gibbs.
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee pumped more than $300,000 into an advertising campaign portraying Gibbs as too conservative and too closely aligned with Trump — ads designed to boost Gibbs among Republican primary voters.
Meijer said it “may well be in the early morning” when the final outcome is clear in the Grand Rapids-based 3rd District.
“We’re still feeling incredibly confident and incredibly proud of the support we have so far,” Meijer said.
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CNN Projection: Kris Kobach will win the GOP nomination for Kansas attorney general
From CNN staff
Kris Kobach awaits election results in Topeka, Kansas, on Tuesday.
(Chance Parker/The Topeka Capital-Journal/AP)
Kris Kobach will win the GOP nomination for Kansas attorney general, CNN projects.
Kobach is a former Kansas secretary of state and lost bids for governor and US Senate in recent cycles.
Others running in the GOP primary Tuesday for state attorney general included former federal prosecutor Tony Mattivi and state Sen. Kellie Warren.
A staunch ally of former President Donald Trump, Kobach served on Trump’s voter fraud commission in 2017 and was endorsed by the President during his 2018 run for governor, a race he lost to Democrat Laura Kelly in deep-red Kansas.
Kobach has prioritized issues such as border control and was the general counsel and board member for a private border wall project that was at the center of a fraud investigation in 2020.
On the campaign trail, Kobach, who was endorsed by GOP Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and former US Attorney General John Ashcroft, vowed to take on the Biden administration if elected attorney general.
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CNN Projection: Trudy Busch Valentine will win Democratic nomination in Missouri’s Senate race
From CNN staff
Trudy Busch Valentine speaks with supporters in St. Louis on Monday.
(Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
Trudy Busch Valentine will win the Democratic nomination in Missouri’s Senate race, CNN projects. She defeated several other candidates on the ballot.
Busch Valentine will now face Republican nominee Eric Schmitt in the general election in November to fill retiring Sen. Roy Blunt’s seat.
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CNN Projection: Democrat Patty Murray and Republican Tiffany Smiley advance in Washington Senate race
From CNN staff
US Sen. Patty Murray, left, and Tiffany Smiley
(US Senate, Amber Glanville/Smiley Campaign/AP)
Incumbent Democratic Sen. Patty Murray and Republican Tiffany Smiley will advance to the November election in Washington’s Senate race, CNN projects.
The state uses a “top two” primary system where candidates of all parties appear on the same ballot and the top two finishers advance to the general election.
Murray, the No. 3 Democrat in the Senate who was first elected in 1992, is seeking a sixth term in office.
Smiley was seen as the leading Republican candidate throughout the race and has the support of national Republicans. Washington voters, though, have not elected a Republican to the US Senate since 1994.
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CNN Projection: Incumbent Paul Gosar will win GOP nomination for Arizona's 9th Congressional District
From CNN staff
US Rep. Paul Gosar speaks at the US Capitol in December.
(Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images/File)
Incumbent Rep. Paul Gosar will win the GOP nomination for Arizona’s 9th Congressional District, CNN projects.
Gosar currently represents the 4th Congressional District but due to redistricting he is now running to represent the 9th Congressional District.
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Schmitt accepts victory, as Missouri voters deliver resounding rejection of Greitens in GOP Senate race
From CNN's Jeff Zeleny and Bonney Kapp in St. Louis
Eric Schmitt meets with supporters at his election night party in St. Louis on Tuesday.
(Kyle Rivas/Getty Images)
Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt accepted victory tonight as the Republican Senate nominee, declaring to cheering supporters that “Missouri needs a senator who wakes up every day to fight for them.”
Schmitt easily defeated Rep. Vicky Hartzler and former Gov. Eric Greitens in a contest that bitterly divided many Missouri Republicans. He implored the party to unify, saying “For those who didn’t vote for me, I welcome you to join my campaign.”
In his victory speech, Schmitt did not mention former President Donald Trump, who called to congratulate him shortly before taking stage. He also did not mention Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who he has said he would not support as the party’s Senate leader.
Missouri voters delivered a resounding rejection of Gretein’s attempt at a political comeback. His defeat came as a relief to many Republicans who believed Greitens would endanger the party’s effort to win control of the Senate.
“Here’s the truth. We’re just one election away from turning this country around,” Schmitt said. “This election can change the course of the country and save the republic.”
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CNN Projection: Katie Hobbs will win Democratic nomination for Arizona governor
From CNN staff
Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs speaks to the media before dropping off her primary election ballot in Scottsdale, Arizona, on July 21.
(Ross D. Franklin/AP/File)
Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs will win the Democratic nomination for governor, CNN projects, potentially setting the stage for a November general election focused on the integrity of the state’s largely mail-in election system.
Hobbs is seeking to replace term-limited Republican Gov. Doug Ducey.
She was heavily favored against Marco Lopez, the former mayor of Nogales who worked as the head of former Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano’s commerce department and later, as chief of staff for US Customs and Border Protection during Napolitano’s tenure as Homeland Security secretary.
Hobbs emerged as a national figure as she defended Arizona’s 2020 election results against a raft of unfounded conspiracy theories advanced by former President Donald Trump and his Republican supporters in the state.
Republicans in the Arizona Senate commissioned a partisan review of the 2020 results in Maricopa County, home to Phoenix. That review did not change the reality that now-President Biden won in 2020. Cyber Ninjas, the inexperienced company hired to conduct the review, and its subcontractors cast doubt on the veracity of tens of thousands of votes, though elections experts immediately pointed out Cyber Ninjas’ errors. Still, election deniers seized on the partisan review to advance their false claim that Trump was the victim of widespread fraud in the 2020 election.
Hobbs has signaled she will focus on the issue of election integrity in November. Over the weekend, in an op-ed in The Arizona Republic, the state’s largest newspaper, Hobbs said that lies about election fraud have led to threats against local elections workers and placed a burden on law enforcement officers who she said are now on “high alert.”
“This is not a partisan issue,” Hobbs wrote. “These attacks are happening because radical conspiracy theorists have spotted the gaps in our voting rights and election laws and are using loopholes like the Civil War-era Electoral Count Act to manipulate our democracy to their will.”
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GOP nominee for Michigan governor takes aim at incumbent Whitmer in victory speech
From CNN's Sara Murray and Jeff Simon in Grand Rapids, Michigan
Tudor Dixon appears at her election night party in Grand Rapids, Michigan, on Tuesday.
(Paul Sancya/AP)
Tudor Dixon took the stage to deliver her victory speech as the projected Republican nominee for governor in Michigan, and wasted no time taking aim at her Democratic opponent.
“Now we have the opportunity to truly hold Gretchen Whitmer accountable for the pain she has inflicted upon each and every one of us during the past four years,” Dixon said.
After a prolonged Republican primary, Dixon defeated a crowded field of opponents, including businessman Kevin Rinke, chiropractor Garrett Soldano, real estate broker Ryan Kelley and pastor Ralph Rebrandt. Dixon – who had been panned by opponents as the establishment candidate in the race – picked up an endorsement from former President Donald Trump just days before the primary election and sailed to victory.
She used her speech Tuesday evening to thank supporters and double down on her core campaign planks. She vowed to improve the state’s education system, make Michigan cities safer and boost job creators in the state.
“I have watched as our state, our people, have lost their jobs, their life savings and their promised futures. I’ve talked to countless people who feel less safe in their communities and whose kids were locked out of their classrooms,” Dixon said, “It’s unacceptable. And frankly, Michigan, we deserve better.”
She also tied Whitmer to Democratic President Biden, blaming both of them for the signs of economic weakness plaguing the economy.
As she the first-time politician prepares to take on Whitmer this fall, Dixon aimed to reassure supporters that she’s ready for a tough fight.
“Our work isn’t finished. My friends, we are just getting started and I hear it’s gonna be a rough ride,” Dixon said.
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Polls are closing across Washington
From CNN's Ethan Cohen, Melissa DePalo, Clara Grudberg and Nicholas Anastacio
It’s 11 p.m. ET and polls are closing across Washington state.
The state is holding a Senate primary where Democrat Sen. Patty Murray is seeking another term and is expected to face Republican Tiffany Smiley, but the big races will be in 3rd and 4th Congressional Districts where Republicans who voted to impeach Trump face challengers backed by the former president.
The state uses a “top two” primary system where candidates of all parties appear on the same ballot and the top two finishers advance to the general election.
Additionally, all Washington voters are mailed a ballot ahead of Election Day. Ballots are mailed starting July 15. Ballots can be counted if they’re postmarked by Election Day and received by Aug. 15.
Here are more key things to know about the races we are tracking in the state:
3rd Congressional District: Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler is one of the 10 Republicans in the House who voted for former President Donald Trump’s second impeachment, and Trump endorsed Joe Kent in his challenge against her. Kent, an Army veteran whose wife was killed by a suicide bomber in Syria, says the 2020 election was stolen and has made Herrera Beutler’s vote for impeachment a center point of his campaign. However, due to Washington’s top two primary system, where candidates of all parties appear on the same ballot, Herrera Beutler has made efforts to attract Democratic voters, releasing ads that tout her support for lowering the cost of insulin while not saying she is a Republican. There are several other candidates also on the ballot, including Republican Heidi St. John and Democrat Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, who could sneak through to the general if Republicans split their vote.
4th Congressional District: Like Rep. Herrera Beutler, impeachment voter Rep. Dan Newhouse is facing a Trump-endorsed candidate. Loren Culp, the former president’s pick, is a former police chief who was the GOP nominee for governor in 2020. He joined the race shortly after Newhouse’s vote for impeachment and has used the vote as a common attack. Despite Trump’s backing and name recognition from that bid for governor, Culp has raised less than a quarter of what Newhouse has. Another Republican candidate, Jerrod Sessler, and Democratic contender Doug White have both raised more than Culp.
CNN Projection: Incumbent Rashida Tlaib will win Democratic nomination for Michigan’s 12th District
From CNN staff
US Rep. Rashida Tlaib speaks in Washington, DC, last month.
(Jemal Countess/Getty Images for Take Back the Court Action Fund)
Incumbent Rep. Rashida Tlaib will win the Democratic nomination for Michigan’s 12th Congressional District, CNN projects.
Tlaib, a member of the “squad” of House progressives, faced a number of primary challengers, including Detroit City Clerk Janice Winfrey, Lathrup Village Mayor Kelly Garrett and former state Rep. Shanelle Jackson.
Tlaib was first elected in 2018 and is the first Palestinian American woman to serve in Congress. She and Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar were also the first two Muslim women elected to Congress.
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CNN Projection: Right to abortion maintained in Kansas state constitution
From CNN's Dan Merica and Veronica Stracqualursi
People rally in front of the Statehouse in Topeka, Kansas, in June.
(Evert Nelson/The Topeka Capital-Journal/AP/File)
Kansas voters have decided to maintain the right to an abortion in their state’s constitution by voting “no” on a proposed constitutional amendment, CNN projects.
The vote comes after a 2019 state Supreme Court ruling found the state constitution does protect the right to an abortion. A “yes” vote on the amendment would have removed the right to abortion from the state constitution, while a “no” vote maintains it.
The proposed amendment stated: “Because Kansans value both women and children, the Constitution of the state of Kansas does not require government funding of abortion and does not create or secure a right to abortion.”
Abortion is currently legal up to 22 weeks in Kansas, making the state as haven for women seeking the procedure in nearby states that have rolled back abortion rights. In response, anti-abortion and Republican groups pushed to change the state’s constitution to specify that the state does not guarantee the right to the procedure and open the door to similar strict laws in Kansas.
Pro-choice organizations responded with a widespread get-out-the-vote effort, viewing the fight as a test for abortion politics in a post-Roe era. And the victory on Tuesday represents a significant moment in the ever-changing fight over abortion rights, offering these groups a victory just weeks after they were dealt a crushing defeat by the Supreme Court.
Planned Parenthood in a statement said the “victory is a result of a long campaign to motivate voters to protect bodily autonomy at the ballot box.”
“Kansas is one of the only states in the region that safeguards access to legal abortion and following today’s vote will remain a critical access point,” it said in the statement.
Polls have consistently shown that the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade is broadly unpopular. A CNN poll released in late July found nearly two-thirds of Americans disapprove of the Supreme Court decision, with even 55% of self-identified moderate or liberal Republicans saying they disapproved of the decision. But the results on Tuesday, the first electoral test of abortion rights after the Supreme Court decision, put an even finer point on that sentiment.
“This is further proof of what poll after poll has told us: Americans support abortion rights,” said Christina Reynolds, a top operative for Emily’s List, an organization that looks to elect pro-choice women. “They believe we should be able to make our own health care decisions, and they will vote accordingly, even in the face of misleading campaigns.”
The “no” victory leaves the state constitution unchanged. While lawmakers in the state can still try to pass restrictive abortion laws, courts in Kansas have recognized a right to abortion under the state constitution. Lawmakers had passed a restrictive abortion law in 2015, but it was permanently blocked by the courts.
The “yes” vote would have amended the state’s constitution to say Kansas “does not require government funding of abortion and does not create or secure a right to abortion.” The vote would not have banned abortion outright, but it would have opened the door to the procedure being banned, especially considering Republicans control both chambers of the state’s legislature and almost every top office except for governor, which is held by Democrat Laura Kelly.
Kelly, who planned to vote no on the measure, warned that a “yes” vote would mean “the Legislature would immediately come back with some very severe restrictions on a woman’s ability to control her own fate.”
In addition to the win, Democrats have been enthused by the significant turnout.
The issue was placed on the primary ballot, rather than the general election, which abortion rights advocates believe was intended to limit turnout. Registered Republicans outnumber Democrats in the state by more than 350,000, according to the latest figures from the Kansas Secretary of State’s office.
But the victory — along with the increased turnout — is yet another signal that abortion can be a motivating factor for voters in a red state, a critical question as Democrats heads into what could be a trying midterm election.
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CNN Projection: Rep. Haley Stevens will win Democratic nomination in Michigan’s 11th District
From CNN staff
US Rep. Haley Stevens speaks at an election night party in Birmingham, Michigan, on Tuesday.
(Carlos Osorio/AP)
Rep. Haley Stevens will win the Democratic nomination for Michigan’s 11th Congressional District, CNN projects.
Redistricting led to an incumbent vs. incumbent all-Democratic face-off in the district between Stevens and Rep. Andy Levin. Both lawmakers were first elected in 2018.
Levin was generally considered the more progressive candidate in the race, but the Stevens campaign had tried to downplay the ideological differences between the two.
Still, the race became one of the key battlegrounds in the Democratic Party’s evolving rift over Israel and overlapping debates about Democrats’ broader ideological direction.
Stevens, who is not Jewish, benefited from spending by the United Democracy Project, a super PAC affiliated with the more hawkish American Israel Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC, while Levin, who is Jewish, had the backing of the campaign arm of J-Street, a moderate “pro-Israel, pro-peace” group.
High-profile Democrats weighed in on the race, with former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton endorsing Stevens and Levin securing the support of Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders.
Stevens will be heavily favored in the fall against Republican nominee Mark Ambrose in a district that would have backed Biden by 20 points.
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Democrats are looking to abortion test in Kansas as midterms near, CNN's John King says
Democrats will be watching closely how voters decide on a proposed abortion amendment in Kansas as the party heads into the midterm elections, CNN’s John King said.
Kansas is a historically Republican state — President Biden won five counties in 2020. King said the party is looking for issues that galvanize voters to cast their ballot for them in November. One of those issues could be abortion, he said during CNN’s coverage of the primaries.
A majority vote for “yes” for the measure would result in the state constitution being amended to say that it “does not require government funding of abortion and does not create or secure a right to abortion.” While such a vote would not ban abortion in the state, it would be up to the GOP-controlled state legislature to pass laws regarding the procedure, including bans on abortion at all stages of pregnancy without exceptions for rape and incest.
Kansas is the first state in the nation to let voters weigh in on abortion since the US Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June.
“Democrats believe the abortion issue could be a turnout mechanism and a vote changing mechanism. Kansas is part of that test,” King added.
Read more about Kansas’ vote on the abortion amendment here.