Indianapolis, Indiana. Republican primary voters this week are deciding whether President Donald Trump's endorsements and an estimated $9 million in advertising by national groups will unseat state senators who opposed his push to reshape Indiana's U.S. House maps. Pro-redistricting groups seek to defeat enough incumbents to force Senate President Pro Tem Rodric Bray from his leadership role after the Senate voted down the plan. Political organizations affiliated with U.S. Sen. Jim Banks paid for many of the television, radio and digital ads, which label targeted senators 'anti-Trump' or 'liberal.' Sen. Spencer Deery said the negative ads are lies coming from outside his district and intended to intimidate legislators. The primary election on Tuesday, with early in-person voting through noon Monday, will determine nominees for U.S. House seats, state legislative posts, many county offices, party precinct officials and delegates to state conventions. In-person voting hours are 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday, and mailed absentee ballots must be received at local election offices by 6 p.m. Tuesday to be counted. High-profile House contests include Democratic Rep. André Carson facing George Hornedo and Destiny Wells in the 7th District, and Republican Rep. Jim Baird challenged by state Rep. Craig Haggard; Baird has highlighted a Trump endorsement. Republicans hold seven of Indiana's nine congressional seats, and winners in the 4th and 7th District primaries will be heavily favored going into November given the districts' partisan leanings. Voters will also see contested state Senate primaries in districts such as 11, 19, 21, 23, 38, 41, 15, 22 and the swing 29th, where Republicans Mike Delph, John Ruckelshaus and Roni Ford are competing. No statewide offices appear on primary ballots this year; nominees for secretary of state, treasurer and comptroller will be decided by party convention delegates in June, and delegate candidates are listed on the primary ballot by county.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
Cette élection primaire a un impact sur votre communauté. Il s'agit de savoir qui vous représente au Congrès et à la législature de l'État. Elle teste également le pouvoir des parrainages, comme celui de Trump. Vérifiez les candidats de votre district et leurs positions. Faites un vote éclairé.
Cette primaire de l'Indiana est un test décisif pour l'influence de Trump et le pouvoir de l'argent dans la politique. C'est un rappel que chaque vote compte, surtout dans les élections locales. Il est bon de transférer ce message si vous connaissez quelqu'un en Indiana.
Les challengers pro-Trump, les groupes conservateurs nationaux alliés et les donateurs ont bénéficié de parrainages de haut niveau et d'environ 9 millions de dollars de publicité ciblée, conçus pour destituer les élus républicains qui s'opposaient au plan de redécoupage électoral de 2025.
Les sénateurs républicains de l'État qui se sont opposés à l'effort de redécoupage de 2025, et les instances locales du Parti républicain qui se sont alignées sur eux, ont subi des attaques ciblées, des désaveux et une campagne publicitaire concentrée qui pourrait leur coûter des sièges primaires et de l'influence.
No left-leaning sources found for this story.
Les électeurs des primaires républicaines de l'Indiana décident si les soutiens de Trump peuvent déloger les sénateurs qui se sont opposés au redécoupage
WISH-TV | Indianapolis News | Indiana Weather | Indiana Traffic WRTV Indianapolis PBS.org PBS.orgNo right-leaning sources found for this story.
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