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Midterm campaign updates: GOP's Cheney endorses Ohio Democrat Tim Ryan for Senate

ABC News is reporting on campaign developments in key states across the U.S.

Last Updated: November 1, 2022, 4:26 PM EDT

The 2022 campaign is shaping up to be a historic, decisive moment in American politics.

From our reporters across the country, ABC News brings you all the latest on what the candidates are saying and doing -- and what voters want to happen in November's midterm elections.

For more from ABC News' team of reporters embedded in battleground states, watch "Power Trip: Those Seeking Power and Those Who Chase Them" on Hulu, with new episodes on Sunday.

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Power Trip

"Power Trip: Those Seeking Power and Those Who Chase Them" follows 7 young reporters as they chase down candidates in the lead up to the midterms with George Stephanopoulos guiding them along the way.

Sep 20, 2022, 5:53 PM EDT

Ohio secretary of state, backed by Trump, says mail ballots are 'safe and secure'

Frank LaRose, Ohio's Republican secretary of state running for reelection with former President Donald Trump's endorsement, said Tuesday that -- in a break with Trump -- mail-in ballots represent a "secure" method to vote in this year's midterms.

At a brewery in Cleveland, LaRose said he was happy he received Trump's endorsement but that the support doesn't mean the two "agree on everything." Trump has lambasted absentee and mail-in voting, baselessly claiming without evidence that those methods are ripe for fraud.

"I don't speak for President Trump. He speaks for himself and does so very well," said LaRose. "But that doesn't mean we agree on everything. I can tell you that Ohio runs secure elections. In many ways, we're really the example for the rest of the country. And President Trump himself has said that Ohio runs clean elections."

LaRose defended his record, leaning into GOP talking points on drop boxes and other voting issues.

"We faced this in Ohio in the month of September of 2020. I was sued five different times. And they were asking us to expand drop boxes to locations that we couldn't secure so we were worried about doing that. There were lawsuits that were asking us to stop doing signature verification, which I thought was a positively terrible idea," LaRose said.

-- ABC News’ Paulina Tam

Sep 20, 2022, 12:13 PM EDT

Wis. Senate hopeful Mandela Barnes skipping another Biden admin appearance

Wisconsin Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes, the Democratic Senate nominee, for the second time this month will skip out on a Biden administration campaign stop in his state.

Barnes will not attend the Democratic Attorneys General Association conference with Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday in Milwaukee, his communications director confirmed to ABC News. That follows his absence at a Milwaukee Labor Day speech delivered by President Joe Biden earlier this month.

Wisconsin Lt. Gov. and Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Mandela Barnes participates in a televised Wisconsin Democratic U.S. Senate debate in Milwaukee, July 17, 2022.
Morry Gash/AP, FILE

"The Lt. Governor doesn’t have plans to attend the Democratic Attorney Generals Association conference. He appreciates the Vice President taking the time to visit Wisconsin,” Barnes' communications director said in a statement to ABC News.

Ahead of Biden’s earlier visit, Barnes told ABC affiliate WISN that he had a "pretty packed schedule" and noted that he was "grateful that the president has shown his support for the labor movement here in Wisconsin."

While she is in Milwaukee, Harris is expected to also meet with local Latino leaders and young Americans as the midterm elections are now just seven weeks away.

Barnes, who according to a Spectrum News/Siena College released on Tuesday is leading his race against incumbent Republican Sen. Ron Johnson by 1%, is one of multiple swing-state Democrats who have been delicately balancing their affiliation with the Biden administration at a time when the White House is consistently polling low in their handling of inflation and the economy.

-- ABC News’ Paulina Tam

Sep 20, 2022, 11:58 AM EDT

Migrant stunts bring blowback and outrage: The Note

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott have managed to move immigration and border debates to an island in Massachusetts and to Massachusetts Avenue in Washington -- and also to the middle of the midterm campaign season.

"It's on the ballot," DeSantis said at a weekend rally in Wisconsin, "and we got to make the most of it."

That includes, from DeSantis' perspective, spending up to $12 million in state funds for more efforts like the stunt that involved a plane taking would-be refugees to Martha's Vineyard.

Venezuelan migrants stand outside St. Andrew's Church after arriving in Martha's Vineyard from Florida in Edgartown, Mass., Sept. 14, 2022.
Ray Ewing/vineyard Gazette via Reuters

But the current combination of policy goals and future ambitions that manifests itself in this moment is also surfacing intra-party tensions while also playing directly into reelection politics. The Democratic sheriff of Bexar County, Texas, said Monday he is opening a criminal investigation of the operation DeSantis directed, saying there is a “high possibility” that laws were broken. Immigration advocates on Tuesday are also planning a rally in Florida to protest treatment of migrants that Democratic gubernatorial candidate Charlie Crist is calling "cruel" and "heartless."

-- ABC News' Rick Klein

Sep 19, 2022, 10:18 PM EDT

San Antonio sheriff opens probe into DeSantis’ migrant flight to Martha’s Vineyard

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ decision to send two planes last week filled with Venezuelan migrants from San Antonio, Texas, to Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts, has been met with its first law enforcement challenge.

The San Antonio-area sheriff announced Monday that he had opened a criminal investigation into the circumstances surrounding the Republican governor's operation to transport roughly 50 migrants to Martha’s Vineyard.

In a news conference on Monday on the migrant flights, Bexar County Sheriff Javier Salazar said that his office was investigating whether the migrants were victims of crimes after they were “lured” from the county’s migrant resource center, flown to Florida and then taken to Martha’s Vineyard.

“There’s a high possibility that the laws were broken here in the state of Texas in Bexar County,” Salazar said.

"As we understand it, 48 migrants were lured -- I will use the word 'lured' -- under false pretenses, into staying at a hotel for a couple of days …They were taken by airplane, at a certain point they were shuttled to an airplane where they were flown to Florida and then eventually flown to Martha's Vineyard again under false pretenses,” he said.

His office said in a tweet that they are working with advocacy groups and private attorneys representing the migrants and were “preparing to work with any federal agencies that have concurrent jurisdiction, should the need arise.”

“We’re going to discover what extent the law can hold these people accountable,” Salazar said.

Gov. Ron DeSantis' communications director, Taryn Fenske, responded to the investigation on social media Monday night, contrasting the migrants who went through Florida with others who have traveled in Texas.

"Immigrants are more than willing to leave Bexar County after being enticed to cross the border and ‘to fend for themselves.’ FL provided an opportunity in a sanctuary state w/ resources, as expected - unlike the 53 who died in an abandoned truck in Bexar County in June," Fenske wrote.

-- ABC News’ Miles Cohen