South Carolina, Nevada, North Dakota primaries and Ohio special election 2024: Nancy Mace, Sam Brown win

Democrats nearly won a safely Republican congressional seat.

June 11 was another packed primary day, as voters in South Carolina, Maine, North Dakota and Nevada weighed in on who will make the ballot this fall. We had our eyes on a slew of Republican primaries on Tuesday, including several competitive contests for U.S. House seats, as well as contests to pick Nevada's GOP Senate nominee and effectively pick the next governor of North Dakota.

In South Carolina, Rep. Nancy Mace's Trumpian pivot didn't cost her, as she handily fended off an establishment-aligned primary challenger. Fellow incumbent Rep. William Timmons, who was looking vulnerable after an infidelity scandal, also came out ahead in a closer race against his right-wing challenger. In North Dakota's At-Large Congressional District, Julie Fedorchak became the first non-incumbent woman this cycle to win a GOP primary for a safely red seat. In Nevada, Republican voters chose Sam Brown as their candidate to challenge incumbent Democratic Sen. Jacky Rosen this fall.

Finally, a special election is set to give House Republicans one more seat of breathing room, as voters in Ohio's 6th District filled the seat vacated by Rep. Bill Johnson's departure in January — though not without some unexpected suspense.

As usual, 538 reporters and contributors broke down the election results as they came in with live updates, analysis and commentary. Read our full live blog below.


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Fedorchak projected to win in North Dakota congressional primary

The AP is projecting that Fedorchak will win the Republican primary in North Dakota's at-large congressional district race. With 72 percent of the expected vote reporting, she has 46 percent of the vote so far. Her nearest challenger, Becker, has 29 percent of the vote so far.

—Monica Potts, 538


The GOP will choose between old and new faces in Nevada's 1st District

We're also monitoring the GOP primary in the 1st District, a light-blue seat in and around Las Vegas held by Democratic Rep. Dina Titus. In the 2022 general election, Titus defeated Army veteran Mark Robertson by nearly 6 percentage points, but Robertson is back for another go. However, he's only raised $106,000, a figure dwarfed by restaurateur Flemming Larsen, a GOP rival who has brought in a whopping $1.8 million thanks to $1.5 million in self-funding. It's unclear if a recent report by the Nevada Independent disclosing that Larsen hired undocumented immigrants at his southern California restaurants will notably impact the race.

—Geoffrey Skelley, 538


A huge overperformance for Democrats in Ohio

The AP now estimates that virtually all of the vote is counted in Ohio's 6th District, and the final-ish margin is Rulli 55 percent, Kripchak 45 percent. According to a weighted average of presidential results in this district, this is an R+32 district, which means Democrats overperformed here by a whopping 22 points.

Obviously, that's a very impressive performance by Democrats. However, one special election on its own doesn't necessarily mean anything. That said, the average of a party's overperformance in special elections for the cycle has historically been correlated with its performance in the subsequent general election, and that's good news for Democrats. On average this cycle, they have now overperformed in federal special elections by an average of 7 points — not Ohio 6th-level, but still quite solid.

—Nathaniel Rakich, 538


Polls have closed in Nevada

It's 10 p.m. Eastern, and polls are now closed in the Silver State, our last primary state of the evening. Nevada law says that the state can't report results until the last voter in line has voted, so we may not see results right away. (But once we do, it will likely be a big chunk of the final tally.)

—Tia Yang, 538


Is Brown a good candidate?

I'm not yet sold on Brown being a better than average Senate candidate. I think he's done a good job of staying under the radar relative to other GOP nominees in Montana, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Arizona, and avoided some of the missteps those candidates have made. (It doesn't hurt that Nevada is the perpetual redheaded stepchild of the Senate battlefield, always there but never paid much attention.) But he's still relatively untested. His political record includes failed bids for Texas state House a decade ago and for Senate two years ago. If he does ultimately win, I think it has a lot more to do with Trump's performance in the state than Brown's special strength.

—Jacob Rubashkin, Inside Elections