The Voters Have Spoken: Abortion Backlash in Kansas, Greitens Senate Bid Fails in Missouri
Tuesday was one of the biggest days of this year’s primary campaign season.
WASHINGTON — In one of the biggest days of this year’s primary campaign season, voters rejected a measure that would have made it easier to restrict abortion rights in red-state Kansas and repudiated a scandal-tarred former governor seeking a U.S. Senate seat in Missouri.
Meanwhile, a Republican congressman who voted to impeach former President Trump after the January 6 riots lost to a Trump-backed opponent early Wednesday, while two other impeachment-supporting House Republicans awaited results in their primaries in Washington state.
In Michigan, a political newcomer emerged from the state’s messy Republican gubernatorial primary, setting up a rare woman-vs.-woman general election matchup between conservative commentator Tudor Dixon and the incumbent Democrat, Governor Whitmer.
Takeaways from election results Tuesday night:
RED-STATE KANSAS REJECTS ANTI-ABORTION AMENDMENT
Kansas may seem like an unlikely place for abortion rights supporters to notch a major victory.
But on Tuesday, voters in the conservative state resoundingly rejected a constitutional amendment that would have allowed the Legislature to ban abortion. It was the first major test of voter sentiment since the Supreme Court ruling in June to rescind the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision.
The amendment would have allowed the Legislature to overturn a 2019 state Supreme Court decision declaring access to abortion a “fundamental” right under the state constitution.
Its failure at the ballot in a state Mr. Trump won by nearly 15 points issues a stark warning to Republicans, who have downplayed the political impact of the high court’s ruling. It also hands a considerable win to Democrats, who are feeling newly energized heading into what was expected to be a tough midterm election season for them.
Kansas currently allows abortion until the 22nd week of pregnancy. After that, abortion is allowed only to save a patient’s life or to prevent “a substantial and irreversible physical impairment of a major bodily function.”
Governor Kelly, a Democrat who supports abortion rights, has warned that the Republican-led Legislature’s efforts to ban abortion would hurt the state. On Tuesday it became clear that many voters agree with her.
TRUMP’S REVENGE
A first-term Michigan congressman, Peter Meijer, was one of 10 Republicans who joined Democrats to vote in favor of impeaching Mr. Trump after the January 6, 2021, Capitol attack. On Tuesday, he became the latest victim of the former president’s revenge campaign.
Meijer, an heir to a Midwestern grocery store empire and a former Army reserve officer who served in Iraq, lost the GOP contest to former Trump administration official John Gibbs.
“I’m proud to have remained true to my principles, even when doing so came at a significant political cost,” Mr. Meijer said in a statement.
In addition to having Mr. Trump’s endorsement, Mr. Gibbs also shared Mr. Trump’s penchant for conspiracy theories: He parroted Mr. Trump’s claims about a stolen 2020 election and once spread false claims that Secretary Clinton’s 2016 campaign chairman participated in a satanic ritual that involved bodily fluids.
Mr. Meijer is the second of the 10 impeachment-supporting Republicans to lose his primary, joining Representative Tom Rice of South Carolina. Mr. Rice was defeated by a Trump-backed challenger in June. Four others opted to retire rather than face voters’ wrath. And so far, only a California representative, David Valadao has survived — just barely.
Also on the ballot Tuesday were two Washington state representatives, Jaime Herrera Beutler and Dan Newhouse, who both faced Trump-backed challengers over their impeachment votes. But those contests were too early to call because Washington state conducts elections by mail, delaying the reporting of results.
Ms. Herrera Beutler’s challengers include a former Green Beret, Joe Kent, who has cultivated links to right-wing extremist groups and employs a campaign aide who was a member of the Proud Boys. Mr. Newhouse’s opponents include a former GOP gubernatorial nominee, Loren Culp, who falsely claimed that his 13-point loss to the Democratic governor, Jay Inslee, in 2020 was the result of voter fraud.
TRUMP’S SLATE
Most of the candidates on Mr. Trump’s Arizona slate had a successful primary night.
Senate candidate Blake Masters, whose campaign was bankrolled by tech investor Peter Thiel, won his Republican primary after echoing Trump’s claims of a stolen election and playing up cultural grievances that animate the right, including critical race theory and allegations of big tech censorship.
In the secretary of state race, Mark Finchem, an Arizona state lawmaker who worked to overturn Trump’s 2020 loss in the state, won his primary.
In Arizona’s state Legislature, House Speaker Rusty Bowers, who testified at a January 6 hearing about Mr. Trump’s pressure to overturn the 2020 election, lost his Republican primary for a state Senate seat to a Trump-backed former lawmaker, David Farnsworth.
The possible exception to Mr. Trump’s streak of wins was Republican gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake. She was trailing the establishment-backed Karrin Taylor Robson, who was endorsed by Vice President Pence. That could still change. Election-day and late-arriving mail ballots that would likely favor Ms. Lake are still being counted.
Arizona has emerged as a key swing state. But it also carries significance to Mr. Trump after President Biden became the first Democratic candidate in decades to carry what was once a reliably Republican state.
GREITENS’ COMEBACK COLLAPSES
Democratic hopes of picking up a Senate seat in deep-red Missouri faltered Tuesday after Republican voters selected Attorney General Eric Schmitt as their nominee over the former governor, Eric Greitens, who resigned in disgrace in 2018.
Mr. Greitens, they predicted, would be toxic in a general election. Democrats landed a strong recruit in beer heir Trudy Busch Valentine, who won her primary Tuesday. And the state’s Republican establishment prepared to put millions of dollars behind an independent candidate in the general election, potentially fracturing the GOP vote.
But Mr. Greitens came up short Tuesday, finishing a distant third behind Mr. Schmitt and Congresswoman Vicky Hartzler. His campaign’s tailspin can likely be traced back to March, when his ex-wife submitted a bombshell legal filing in the former couple’s child custody case.
Sheena Greitens said in a sworn statement that Eric Greitens had abused her and one of their young sons. She also said he displayed such “unstable and coercive behavior” in the lead-up to his 2018 resignation that others took steps to limit his access to firearms.
At the time, Mr. Greitens faced potential impeachment after his former hairdresser testified that he blindfolded and restrained her in his basement, assaulted her and appeared to take a compromising photo to pressure her to keep quiet about an affair.
He resigned from office — and avoided testifying under oath about the affair.
He launched his comeback campaign for Senate last year, marketing himself as an unabashedly pro-Trump conservative. And while many in Missouri wrote him off, one important political figure didn’t: Mr. Trump, who mused publicly about Greitens’ attributes.
But in the end, Mr. Trump stopped short of issuing an endorsement, instead issuing a vague statement this week throwing his support behind “ERIC.”
And on Tuesday, the other “ERIC” in the race — Mr. Schmitt — won.
MESSY RACE IN MICHIGAN
At its essence, Michigan’s raucous Republican gubernatorial primary was a contest of which candidate’s personal baggage was the least disqualifying. On Tuesday, conservative media personality Tudor Dixon was the victor, setting up a November general election against Governor Whitmer in the battleground state.
Ms. Dixon’s past as an actor in a series of vulgar and low-budget horror movies became a campaign issue. But her career moonlighting in titles such as “Buddy BeBop Vs. the Living Dead” and a vampire TV series called “Transitions” paled in comparison to her rivals’ problems.
One rival, Ryan Kelley, faces federal misdemeanor charges after he was recorded on video in Washington during the January 6 riots directing a mob of Trump supporters toward a set of stairs leading to the Capitol. Mr. Kelley has pleaded not guilty.
Another, Kevin Rinke, is a former car dealer who settled a series of lawsuits in the 1990s after he was alleged to have made racist and sexist comments, which included calling women “ignorant and stupid” and stating that they “should not be allowed to work in public.”
A third, Garrett Soldano, is a chiropractor and self-help guru who has sold supplements he falsely claimed were a therapeutic treatment for the coronavirus.
Many in the state’s Republican establishment, including former Trump education secretary Betsy DeVos, view Ms. Dixon as their best shot at defeating Ms. Whitmer. Mr. Trump endorsed Ms. Dixon in the race Friday, just a few days before the primary.
Yet her primary victory is an outcome few would have predicted months ago. In addition to the shortcomings of her rivals, her path was cleared when the two best-known candidates in the race were kicked off the ballot in May for submitting false petition signatures.