Missouri, Michigan, Washington and Kansas primaries 2024: Cori Bush loses
The fields are set for Michigan's Senate and Missouri's governor contests.
Three months out from the big November election, around a third of all states had yet to hold (non-presidential) primaries. On Tuesday, Democrats and Republicans in Missouri, Michigan, Washington and Kansas went to the polls to pick which candidates will appear on their ballots in the fall.
The electoral fate of a couple endangered House incumbents hung in the balance on this packed primary day. In Missouri, a progressive "Squad" member was defeated by centrist forces, and in Washington, one of only two remaining House Republicans who voted to impeach President Donald Trump was challenged by not one but two Trump-endorsed opponents from his right.
Meanwhile, both parties locked in their nominees for Michigan’s critical Senate race, and the outcomes of Republican primary contests are likely to determine Missouri’s next governor and attorney general. In battleground House districts, the fields were set for competitive fall contests, while in safe red and blue districts, ideological lines were drawn as candidates duke it out in primaries tantamount to election.
As usual, 538 reporters and contributors broke down the election results as they came in with live updates, analysis and commentary. Check out our full live blog below!
Latest headlines:
- McDonald Rivet projected winner in Michigan's 8th District Democratic primary
- Marlinga secures a rematch in Michigan's 10th
- Hudson projected to win GOP primary in Michigan's 3rd District
- Will Washington's 6th District get a bipartisan matchup or two Democrats in November?
- Baumgartner advances in Washington's 5th District
Don't count Cori Bush out just yet
As our friends at Daily Kos Elections pointed out, Bush's margin right now is almost the exact same as it was at this point in her 2020 primary race, which she ended up narrowly winning. A good reminder to be careful about jumping to conclusions based on early returns!
—Cooper Burton, 538
Kehoe out to an early lead for Missouri governor
With 13 percent of the expected vote now counted in the Republican primary for Missouri governor, here are the early results: Kehoe 40 percent, Eigel 29 percent, Ashcroft 26 percent. Yes, that’s one-time front-runner Ashcroft, the son of the state's former senator and governor, in last place. This, too, could be an artifact of the fact that Missouri reports absentee votes first; Kehoe is the most moderate candidate in the primary, and moderate candidates tend to do better with Republican absentee voters. But it will be a notable result if it holds.
—Nathaniel Rakich, 538
Checking in on Missouri's 3rd
Only about 10 percent of expected votes have been counted so far in the Republican primary in Missouri's deep-red 3rd Congressional District, according to the AP. But so far, as expected, it looks like it's shaping up to be a two-way race between Schaefer, who was endorsed by the retiring incumbent, and Onder, who was endorsed by Trump. Right now, Schaefer has 48 percent to Onder's 35 percent, but that won't necessarily hold because it includes a large number of absentee votes.
—Monica Potts, 538
Bell leads the absentee vote in Missouri’s 1st
Both counties in Missouri’s 1st District have reported their absentee votes (in Missouri, absentee ballots are counted first, then in-person votes), and Bell has a big lead among them, 64 percent to 33 percent. That’s a strong showing, but absentee votes are just a fraction of the vote in Missouri (18 percent of the final expected total, according to the AP), so don’t count Bush out yet.
—Nathaniel Rakich, 538