الوسم: district

  • AP Race Call: Democrat Shomari Figures elected to US House in Alabama’s 2nd Congressional District

    AP Race Call: Democrat Shomari Figures elected to US House in Alabama’s 2nd Congressional District

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrat Shomari Figures won election to a U.S. House seat representing Alabama on Thursday. Republican Rep. Barry Moore, who currently represents the district, is running in the neighboring 1st District after a federal court ordered Alabama to draw a new congressional district that ensured Black residents’ voting power. That decision also brought more voters who previously supported Democrat Joe Biden into the 2nd District, making it a top target for his party. Figures, a native of Mobile, previously worked for the Obama administration.

  • AP Race Call: Kamala Harris wins the District of Columbia

    AP Race Call: Kamala Harris wins the District of Columbia

    Vice President Kamala Harris won the District of Columbia on Tuesday, securing the capital’s three electoral votes.
  • AP Race Call: Republican Rep. Dale Strong wins election to U.S. House in Alabama's 5th District

    AP Race Call: Republican Rep. Dale Strong wins election to U.S. House in Alabama's 5th District

    Republican Rep. Dale Strong won reelection to a U.S. House seat representing Alabama on Tuesday. Strong ran unopposed in the general election.
  • AP Race Call: Republican Aaron Bean wins reelection to U.S. House in Florida's 4th Congressional District

    AP Race Call: Republican Aaron Bean wins reelection to U.S. House in Florida's 4th Congressional District

    Republican Rep. Aaron Bean won reelection to a U.S. House seat representing Florida on Tuesday. Bean won a second term representing the 4th District in northeastern Florida, which includes Nassau and Clay counties as well as downtown Jacksonville.
  • AP Race Call: Republican Mike Haridopolos wins election to U.S. House in Florida's 8th Congressional District

    AP Race Call: Republican Mike Haridopolos wins election to U.S. House in Florida's 8th Congressional District

    Republican Mike Haridopolos won election to a U.S. House seat representing Florida on Tuesday. The 8th District, which is east of Orlando and covers Florida’s Space Coast, is the state’s only open seat this cycle.
  • First-term Democrat tries to hold on in Washington state district won by Trump in 2020

    First-term Democrat tries to hold on in Washington state district won by Trump in 2020

    SEATTLE (AP) — Among the nation’s most closely watched races is a rematch in southwestern Washington’s 3rd Congressional District, where first-term Democratic Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez is defending her seat against Republican Joe Kent, a former Green Beret who has called for the impeachment of President Joe Biden.

    Other campaigns of note in the state include the 8th Congressional District, where Democratic Rep. Kim Schrier is seeking a fourth term, and the 4th Congressional District in central Washington. There’s no danger of that seat flipping parties, but the incumbent there is Rep. Dan Newhouse, one of two remaining House Republicans who voted to impeach former President Donald Trump. He faces a challenge from the right in Jerrod Sessler, a Navy veteran.

    Here’s a look at Washington’s liveliest congressional races:

    3rd Congressional District

    Gluesenkamp Perez, who owns an auto-repair shop with her husband, came out of nowhere two years ago to win a seat that hadn’t been in Democratic hands for over a decade. She beat the Trump-endorsed Kent by fewer than 3,000 votes out of nearly 320,000 cast.

    Her predecessor, moderate Republican Jaime Herrera Beutler, held office for six terms but failed to survive the 2022 primary after voting to impeach Trump over the Jan. 6 insurrection. The district narrowly went for Trump in 2020, making it a crucial target for both parties this year.

    The race gained additional attention last week when an arson attack struck a ballot box in Vancouver — the district’s biggest city — scorching hundreds of ballots. Another ballot box was hit across the Columbia River in Portland, Oregon. People who cast their votes in the targeted Vancouver drop box were urged to contact the county auditor’s office to receive replacement ballots.

    During her tenure Gluesenkamp Perez has balanced progressive policies with some measures popular with Republicans, including securing the U.S.-Mexico border — something she criticizes Biden for failing to do — and introducing a constitutional amendment to force presidents to balance the budget.

    She supports abortion access and has hammered Kent, who previously has said he supported a national abortion ban, for changing his position after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Kent now says abortion laws should be left up to the states.

    Gluesenkamp Perez supports policies to counter climate change, but also speaks openly about being a gun owner. A top priority is pushing a “right to repair” bill that would help people get equipment fixed without having to pay exorbitant prices to the original manufacturer.

    Kent is a former Green Beret who served 11 combat deployments before joining the CIA. His wife, Shannon, a Navy cryptologist, was killed by a suicide bomber in 2019 while fighting the Islamic State group in Syria, leaving him to raise their two young sons alone. Kent remarried last year.

    His last campaign raised questions about his ties to white nationalists after he hired a Proud Boy as a consultant and, during a fundraiser, lavished praise on Joey Gibson, the founder of the Christian nationalist group Patriot Prayer. Kent said he disavows white nationalism.

    He has cited inflation and illegal immigration as top concerns.

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    Kent and Gluesenkamp Perez disagree on a major local issue: the replacement of a major bridge across the Columbia River between Portland, Oregon, and Vancouver, Washington. Gluesenkamp Perez supports plans to replace the existing bridge. Kent has argued that a separate new bridge should be built while the old one is maintained. Plans for the replacement bridge would have “light rail that dumps downtown Portland’s problems into downtown Vancouver,” Kent said.

    4th Congressional District

    Newhouse’s bid for a sixth term is running up against Sessler, who was one of two Trump-endorsed candidates in the August primary. Together, Sessler and Tiffany Smiley took more than 52% of the vote — spelling trouble for the incumbent.

    Newhouse is endorsed by the NRA and Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, and he has mostly steered clear of the subject of Trump. He’s instead focused on agriculture and border security in a state with millions of acres of pastures, orchards and cereal grain lands where immigrant labor is extremely important.

    Sessler’s positions are in lockstep with Trump. He says he will fight for strong national security measures, including “an impenetrable border”; work to dismantle regulations imposed by the Environmental Protection Agency and other administrative agencies; and encourage tariffs and other sanctions on China.

    “China’s obsession with global power, combined with its atheistic mindset, which removes the morality component, makes it a dangerous adversary,” Sessler said in one of many video statements about issues posted to his campaign website.

    8th Congressional District

    The 8th District, a mix of wealthy Seattle exurbs and central Washington farmland, had always been held by the GOP before incumbent Democratic Rep. Kim Schrier, a pediatrician, took office in 2019. She has survived a series of somewhat close races since then, taking about 52% or 53% of the vote.

    Schrier combines progressive stances, such as protecting abortion rights, with an emphasis on securing highway money or funding for specialty crop research facilities. The Washington Farm Bureau endorsed her this year.

    Schrier’s opponent is Carmen Goers, a commercial banker who says she is running to tamp down inflation, stop further regulation of American businesses, support law enforcement and cut back on crime. She also promised to “go to war with the Department of Education,” saying that instead of learning reading, writing and math, children are being “caught in the culture wars of the progressive left.”

    Goers took 45% of the vote in the August top-two primary, compared to about 50% for Schrier. Two other Democrats combined for close to 5%.

  • ‘Excitement in the air’: newly created Alabama district votes for first time | US elections 2024

    On Tuesday, residents in Alabama’s newly redrawn congressional district two will vote for the first time.

    A June 2023 ruling by the supreme court created the new district in the Black belt, which spans from the state’s Choctaw county, on its western border, to Russell county, in the east, where Black people make up 48.7% of the population. The decision also preserved the only other majority-Black district in the state – district seven. Voters in district two will have the opportunity to increase their political power, a historic change that has the potential to give voters in the Black belt a representative government.

    For Letetia Jackson, one of the plaintiffs in Allen v Milligan, the US supreme court case that formed the new district, this election is personal, the culmination of a years long struggle.

    “[We wanted to] make sure that Black voters and the African American population in the state of Alabama have an opportunity to have the type of representation that our numbers support,” said Jackson, who is also convener of the South Alabama Black Women’s Roundtable, an organization that works to engage Black voters.

    Black people make up about 29% of Alabama’s population, making it the fifth Blackest state in the country, behind Mississippi, Louisiana, Georgia and Maryland. But Black voters within the Black belt had been pushed into different congressional districts, which prevented them from voting as a contiguous district and, ultimately, suffocated their political power.

    “We have seven congressional districts,” Jackson said “We only [had] one Black majority district, and we were advocating for at least one additional opportunity to elect another congressional member to represent our areas.”

    Map of Alabama 2nd Congressional District

    Following the 2020 census, in which the population of Black respondents grew, Jackson said that there was an opening to push for a more representative government. After years of lawsuits and appeals that ultimately made their way to the supreme court, the lines were redrawn, creating the new congressional district two.

    On election day, after voting for a presidential candidate, district two’s voters will move down ballot to vote for their representative in the United States House. They will choose between the Democrat Shomari Figures, who is Black, and Republican Caroleene Dobson, who is white. Despite its demographics, since 1823, the area has only been represented by white politicians, the majority of whom were, since the 1960s, Republicans. If Figures is elected, he would become the first Democrat to hold the position since 2008. And for the first time in the state’s history, two of Alabama’s seven House representatives would be Balck.

    “People are really, really excited about that position because in this area there’s been very little representation that actually reflects the needs, the issues, the policies of the people who live there,” she said. “And so they’re excited about the possibility of being able to have someone that really knows the district and that knows the people.”

    Casting the vote

    Jackson said that even though her district changed, no one from the elections office notified her and many other residents.

    Shomari Figures, Democratic candidate for Alabama’s second congressional district. Photograph: Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc/Getty Images

    And during the Super Tuesday primary earlier this year, advocates reported that more than 6,000 voters in district two received postcards with incorrect voting information. In the absence of official voter information and mobilization efforts, the South Alabama Black Women’s Roundtable and other organizations are working to educate voters.

    “We’ve seen the district voting age population increase by 49%,” Rodriesha Russaw, executive director of The Ordinary People Society (Tops), said. “And so these people are learning more and more about how redistricting impacts the voting process and how it impacts their daily lives.”

    Russaw also said that there has been an “increase of harm”, since the last election, specifically for Black voters. She said that 15 to 20% of the calls made to a call center that is run for the Alabama Election Protection Network were from elders who were afraid to vote. She said the feeling of anxiety was pervasive.

    “One thing that we found is that the voter intimidation has increased in many ways through marketing, through social media, through just everyday contact with individuals, with police officers when it comes to police brutality and violence … [it’s] scare tactics so Black people and people of color would not show up to the polls,” she said.

    Tops and other organizations are planning to deploy trusted community leaders as volunteers throughout neighborhoods to encourage people to vote and give voters a sense of comfort when they are at the polls.

    They have received voter education training, are working throughout multiple counties in district two. They will be present at the polls, helping folks get off of vans and out of buses and into the polling places.

    “We have a really good chance to see a high [turnout] in young voters and first-time voters for this year – more than ever since the Obama election,” she said. “We’re amped up to make sure that these trusted leaders are at the forefront and that when they get to the polls, they see these faces because we don’t want them scared off by the police officers.”

    Jackson, from South Alabama Black Women’s Roundtable, said that she had heard from many folks who are feeling enthusiastic.

    Evan Milligan, center, plaintiff in Merrill v Milligan, flanked by Deuel Ross, Letetia Jackson, Terri Sewell and Janai Nelson. Photograph: Patrick Semansky/AP

    “I will not say that it’s a slam dunk or that everything is going to be rosy on election day, but I do know that there’s a lot of excitement in the air,” she said. “There are pockets of poor communities in the Black belt that no one ever generally even pays any attention to, and when you talk to some of those people, they’re excited to have an opportunity to finally get somebody who will come and speak to them and represent them.”

    In collaboration with other organizations, Tops is working to ensure that every county in district two has transportation to and from the polls. Transportation could prove to be key in a largely rural district, especially one in which voting locations may have changed without voters being notified.

    “[We are] ensuring that every particular county and district too has a means of transportation for those who maybe have disabilities or have physical impediments because we believe that equity and inclusion is a big thing,” Russaw said.

    Their inclusive voter engagement also extends to childcare. While talking to voters, Russaw said that organizers repeatedly heard that people had to choose between staying home with their children and going to the voting polls. This year, Tops is partnering with community volunteers to give people a safe place for their children while they go out and vote. The organization’s multipurpose center will have activities for children from the morning until after polling locations close.

    Jackson said that multiple organizations have been working across the state to reach voters via knocking on doors, making phone calls, sending information and holding rallies and events. They have been trying to ensure that people know when, how and where to vote.

    “Our education and mobilization strategy throughout this process is to let voters know they need to make a plan to vote, not to just show up where they normally show up, but to make sure that’s where they’re supposed to be,” she said.

    Tops is also using their radio station, WKCD99.1FM, to provide updated information about the election, criminal justice and reproductive justice. That station is also being used for their “Bringing hope to the vote” campaign, in which they aim to inspire people to vote.

    “People have lost so much hope,” Russaw said. “We’ve seen the political climate change. We’ve seen Covid, lost a lot of family members. The economical challenges in Alabama are not changing – minimum wage is still $7.25. People are struggling to eat and feed their kids. When we’re talking about engaging voters, we have to remind them that there’s hope … If we continue to focus on bringing hope to people, we will find that people are more amped to cast their vote because they feel like it matters.”

  • Live Results: New Jersey 10th Congressional District Special Primary

    Live Results: New Jersey 10th Congressional District Special Primary

    The death of Democratic Rep. Donald Payne Jr. in April created a vacancy in New Jersey’s 10th congressional district. Party nominees will be chosen Tuesday, with a special general election on September 18.

    The winner of the special election will serve through the end of the year.

    Polls close at 8:00 PM Eastern.

    Democratic Primary

    Democrats outnumber Republicans 6 to 1 in this Newark-area district; Payne won his final term by a 78% to 20% margin in 2022. As such, this primary has drawn a lot of interest. 

    Eleven Democrats are on the ballot. Most of the party establishment is behind Newark City Council president LaMonica McIver.

    Other notables include “Hudson County Commissioner Jerry Walker (D-Jersey City), former East Orange Councilwoman Brittany Claybrooks, Linden Mayor Derek Armstead, and state economic development official Darryl Godfrey.”

    In a related note, Payne’s death occurred after ballots were printed for the state’s regular June primary. Payne was unopposed, and was posthumously renominated for the November general election.

    Party officials in the affected counties (Essex, Hudson, Union) will choose a ballot replacement at a convention this Thursday. It could be the same person that wins Tuesday’s primary, although it is not required to be.

    Republican Primary

    Businessman Carmen Bucco is unopposed for the Republicans. He also had no opposition in the June primary, so will be on the ballot again in November.

    Upcoming Elections and Events

    Down-ballot primaries will continue through early September. The remaining ones are listed below, along with other contests we’ll be tracking during that period.

    • July 15-18

      • Republican National Convention

    • July 30

      • Arizona Primary

        • Includes mayoral primaries in Gilbert, Glendale, Mesa, and Scottsdale

      • Wisconsin State Senate District 4 Special General

    • August 1
    • August 6

      • Kansas Primary
      • Michigan Primary
      • Missouri Primary
      • Washington Top-Two Primary

    • August 10

      • Hawaii Primary
      • Hawaii State Senate District 5 (Special Primary)
      • Honolulu Mayor (Primary)

    • August 13

      • Connecticut Primary
      • Minnesota Primary
      • Vermont Primary
      • Wisconsin Primary
      • Wisconsin U.S. House District 8 Special Primary
      • Minnesota State Senate District 45 Special Primary

    • August 19-22

      • Democratic National Convention

    • August 20

      • Alaska Top-Four Primary
      • Florida Primary
      • Wyoming Primary

    • August 27
    • September 3
    • September 10

      • Delaware Primary
      • New Hampshire Primary
      • Rhode Island Primary

  • New Hampshire will decide incumbent’s fate in 1 US House district and fill an open seat in the other

    New Hampshire will decide incumbent’s fate in 1 US House district and fill an open seat in the other

    CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — Democrats are hoping to maintain their dominance in New Hampshire’s congressional delegation Tuesday, while Republicans seek to regain a foothold by ousting an incumbent or picking up an open seat.

    In the 1st District, which covers the eastern half of the state and includes Manchester, its largest city, Democratic U.S. Rep. Chris Pappas is running for a fourth term. He faces Republican former state Sen. Russell Prescott. The district once was quite politically volatile, with party control flipping five times in six election cycles from 2006 to 2016.

    The 2nd District, which includes the cities of Nashua and Concord, hasn’t been in Republican hands since 2013. That seat is open because Democratic U.S. Rep. Annie Kuster, the longest serving member in the district’s history, is retiring after six terms. Former White House aide Maggie Goodlander, a Democrat, faces Republican activist Lily Tang Williams in the race for Kuster’s seat.

    Those are New Hampshire’s only congressional districts. Neither of the state’s U.S. senators, both Democrats, were up for reelection.

    1st Congressional District

    Both Pappas and Prescott served on the governor’s Executive Council, a five-member panel that approves state contracts and judicial nominees. They overlapped during the last of Pappas’ three terms and the first of Prescott’s two terms.

    Pappas, who considers himself a pragmatic voice in Washington, touted his support from women, veterans and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce during the campaign. He made abortion rights a top issue, calling Prescott “radically out of step” and accusing him of distrusting women to make health care decisions.

    “I don’t believe that politicians should be making this decision,” he said during a debate last week. “I take my cues directly from the people of New Hampshire.”

    Prescott, who spent 10 years in the state Senate, said he opposes abortion but would not support a federal ban on the procedure. He said he would focus on U.S.-Mexico border security and reducing inflation and taxes. He said Pappas has spent his time in Washington backing liberal policies that he claims have increased taxes and illegal immigration.

    Prescott ran for the same congressional seat in 2022, finishing fourth in the GOP primary, but defeated six candidates this year to win the nomination.

    “I’m asking you to look into my record and to my behavior and to who I am as a person,” he said in last week’s debate. “And I’m asking for your trust again to work for you to make sure we solve our border problems, our economy and make sure that we have energy independence.”

    2nd Congressional District

    Tang Williams also took two tries to win the GOP nomination. She finished third in 2022 before beating a dozen candidates in this year’s Republican primary. Goodlander defeated one opponent to win the Democratic nomination.

    Goodlander, who is married to President Joe Biden’s national security advisor, grew up in Nashua and recently moved back there from Washington. She worked in the Justice Department as a top antitrust official and as counsel to Attorney General Merrick Garland before moving to the White House chief of staff’s office earlier this year.

    During her campaign, she promised to protect democracy, expand abortion access and take on corporate monopolies that she says are jacking up the price of housing, health care, prescription drugs and groceries.

    The 2024 election is here. This is what to know:

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    “We can still come together as Democrats and Republicans to tackle the challenges that unite us as Americans, and that’s what I’ve done on the front lines of the fight against some of the biggest drivers of high costs for people across this state,” she said during a debate last week.

    Tang Williams is a native of China who became a U.S. citizen in 1994 and now works as a business and legal consultant. A former chair of the Colorado Libertarian Party, she unsuccessfully ran for office there before moving to New Hampshire.

    Describing herself as the embodiment of the American dream, she said her priorities in Washington will be reducing inflation, improving border security and stopping what Republicans say is a “weaponization” of government against conservatives.

    “Do you want somebody who truly represents the people or do you want somebody from the D.C. swamp?” she said during last week’s debate. “I will represent you with pride and transparency.”

  • Supreme Court will weigh in on new mostly Black Louisiana congressional district, after election

    Supreme Court will weigh in on new mostly Black Louisiana congressional district, after election

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court said Monday it will take up a new redistricting case involving Louisiana’s congressional map with two mostly Black districts.

    The court won’t hear arguments until early next year and the 2024 elections are proceeding under the challenged map, which could boost Democrats’ chances of retaking the closely divided House of Representatives.

    A lower court had invalidated the map, but the justices allowed it to be used in 2024 after an emergency appeal from the state and civil rights groups.

    The issue in front of the justices is whether the state relied too heavily on race in drawing a second majority Black district.

    The court’s order Monday is the latest step in federal court battles over Louisiana congressional districts that have lasted more than two years. Louisiana has had two congressional maps blocked by lower courts and the Supreme Court has intervened twice.

    The state’s Republican-dominated legislature drew a new congressional map in 2022 to account for population shifts reflected in the 2020 Census. But the changes effectively maintained the status quo of five Republican-leaning majority white districts and one Democratic-leaning majority Black district in a state that is about one-third Black.

    Noting the size of the state’s Black population, civil rights advocates challenged the map in a Baton Rouge-based federal court and won a ruling from U.S. District Judge Shelly Dick that the districts likely discriminated against Black voters.

    The Supreme Court put Dick’s ruling on hold while it took up a similar case from Alabama. The justices allowed both states to use the maps in the 2022 elections even though both had been ruled likely discriminatory by federal judges.

    The high court eventually affirmed the ruling from Alabama, which led to a new map and a second district that could elect a Black lawmaker. The justices returned the Louisiana case to federal court, with the expectation that new maps would be in place for the 2024 elections.

    The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals gave lawmakers in Louisiana a deadline of early 2024 to draw a new map or face the possibility of a court-imposed map.

    Gov. Jeff Landry, a Republican, had defended Louisiana’s congressional map as the state’s attorney general. Now, though, he urged lawmakers to pass a new map with another majority Black district at a special session in January. He backed a map that created a new majority Black district stretching across the state, linking parts of the Shreveport, Alexandria, Lafayette and Baton Rouge areas.

    A different set of plaintiffs, a group of self-described non-African Americans, filed suit in western Louisiana, claiming that the new map was also illegal because it was driven too much by race, in violation of the Constitution. A divided panel of federal judges ruled 2-1 in April in their favor and blocked use of the new map.

    The Supreme Court voted 6-3 to put that ruling on hold and allow the map to be used.

    State Attorney General Liz Murrill, whose office has defended both maps enacted by lawmakers, called on the court to “provide more clear guidance to legislators and reduce judicial second-guessing after the Legislature does its job. Based upon the Supreme Court’s most recent pronouncements, we believe the map is constitutional.”

    The state and civil rights groups were at odds over the first map, but are allies now.

    “Federal law requires Louisiana to have a fair map that reflects the power and voice of the state’s Black communities,” Stuart Naifeh of the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund said in a statement. “The state recognized as much when it adopted a new map with a second majority-Black district in January. Now the Supreme Court must do the same.”

    The Supreme Court vote to use the challenged map in this year’s elections was unusual in that the dissenting votes came from the three liberal justices, who have been supportive of Black voters in redistricting cases. But, in an opinion by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, they said their votes were motivated by their view that there was time for a new map to be drawn, and their disagreement with past court orders that cited the approach of an election to block lower-court rulings.

    “There is little risk of voter confusion from a new map being imposed this far out from the November election,” Jackson wrote in May.

    In adopting the districts that are being used this year, Landry and his allies said the driving factor was politics, not race. The congressional map provides politically safe districts for House Speaker Mike Johnson and Majority Leader Steve Scalise, fellow Republicans. Some lawmakers have also noted that the one Republican whose district was greatly altered in the new map, Rep. Garret Graves, supported a GOP opponent of Landry in last fall’s governor’s race. Graves chose not to seek reelection under the new map.

    Among the candidates in the new district is Democratic state Sen. Cleo Fields, a former congressman who is Black.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Sara Cline contributed to this report from Baton Rouge.