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Weekly Roundup – May 31, 2025

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SENATE


Alabama 


As expected, US Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R) formally announced what had been hinted at for weeks: that is, he will run for Governor. The Tuberville decision will open Alabama’s Senate race, and a huge Republican field is expected to form. For the Democrats, ex-Sen. Doug Jones is the most formidable prospective candidate, but he has not yet made the decision to run.


At this point, Sen. Tuberville appears to be a lock for the open GOP gubernatorial nomination; therefore, he will be a heavy favorite in the general election. Gov. Kay Ivey (R) is ineligible to seek a third term.


Arizona 


State Treasurer Kimberly Yee (R), who was considered a possible 2026 gubernatorial candidate, instead announced this week that she will run for state Superintendent of Public Instruction. This likely winnows the GOP nomination campaign field to two major contenders, US Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Gilbert) and 2022 gubernatorial candidate Karrin Taylor Robson. President Trump has jointly endorsed both candidates. The eventual nominee will face Gov. Katie Hobbs (D) in the general election.


Georgia 


A recently released Cygnal survey research firm poll finds the Republican Senate candidate pool pulling closer to Georgia Sen. Jon Ossoff (D), but the two best available performers aren’t yet in the race.


The Cygnal poll (5/15-17; 800 GA likely voters; live interview & text) projects that Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger (R) runs barely ahead of Sen. Ossoff, 44.3 to 44.1%. US Rep. Mike Collins (R-Jackson) appears next strongest, trailing the incumbent, 45.7 – 44.3%. Neither, however, are Senate candidates. The announced candidates, however, fall into the same close polling realm. Sen. Ossoff would lead US Rep. Buddy Carter (R-Pooler/Savannah), 46-42%, while state Agriculture Commissioner John King trails the Senator by a slightly closer 45-42% split.


The Georgia race promises to be one of the most hotly contested battleground Senate campaigns of the 2026 election cycle. It is clearly the Republicans’ best chance to convert a Democratic seat so the party will be all-in here, regardless of which Republican will ultimately challenge Sen. Ossoff.


South Carolina 


Democrat Annie Andrews, who unsuccessfully challenged US Rep. Nancy Mace (R-Charleston) in 2022, announced that she will oppose Sen. Lindsey Graham (R) next year.  The Senator is already facing Republican primary competition from wealthy businessman Mark Lynch. 


Mr. Graham’s GOP challenger recently released an internal campaign poll from Pulse Opinion Research (5/15-21; 1,062 SC likely voters) that projected the incumbent’s lead at only 43-29%. According to a Breitbart News article, Sen. Graham’s campaign attacked the poll as “fake news” for failing to inform voters that President Trump has already endorsed the incumbent for re-election.


Texas 


Sen. John Cornyn (R), faces a major fight for renomination against Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) and possibly US Rep. Wesley Hunt (R-Houston). The Senator now sees some relief coming as a major Trump political figure, former co-campaign manager Chris LaCivita, has joined a Super PAC leadership team to help Mr. Cornyn in the coming election. 


Texans for a Conservative Majority will be the principal outside organization that promotes Sen. Cornyn in the 2026 election. AG Paxton has been close to the Trump organization for years, while the President’s political coalition in Texas has not been as favorable toward the incumbent. The Super PAC move is designed to get Cornyn closer to Trump with the hope of persuading the President not to endorse Mr. Paxton in the upcoming Republican primary.


The Barbara Jordan Public Policy Research and Survey Center at Texas Southern University sponsored a YouGov statewide survey (5/9-19; 1,200 TX registered voters; 564 TX likely Republican primary voters; online) and again found Sen. Cornyn trailing in a GOP primary poll. This ballot test finds AG Paxton leading Sen. Cornyn and Rep. Hunt, 34-27-15%, respectively.


West Virginia 


Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R), planning to seek a third term, has drawn a 2026 Republican primary opponent. State Sen. Tom Willis (R-Martinsburg) announced at the end of last week that he will file for the statewide office. Sen. Capito, in a state that continues to grow more Republican, is rated as a prohibitive favorite for renomination and re-election.


HOUSE


NV-3


Drew Johnson, who last November held US Rep. Susie Lee (D-Las Vegas) to a 51-49% re-election margin in one of 13 districts that voted for President Trump and a Democratic US Representative, announced that he will forgo a re-match with Rep. Lee. Mr. Johnson instead declared his candidacy in the open State Treasurer’s race. In the 3rd District contest, already six Republicans have announced their candidacy including 2024 candidate Marty O’Donnell, a business owner and music composer.


NH-1 


Former Portsmouth City Councilmember Stefany Shaheen (D), daughter of retiring US Senator Jeanne Shaheen (D), announced that she will enter the open 1st District congressional race. At this point, the only declared candidate is Marine veteran Maura Sullivan. The 1st CD is a lean Democratic eastern New Hampshire district that at one time, for the period from 2004 to 2018, was the most swing CD in the country. US Rep. Chris Pappas (D-Manchester) is running for the Shaheen open Senate seat and appears to be on his way to becoming a consensus Democratic candidate.


VA-11 


While it appears key Democratic prospective congressional candidates are lining up behind Fairfax County Supervisor James Walkinshaw (D) to replace the late Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Fairfax), once person joining the primary field is Fairfax County Planning Commissioner Candice Bennett. She joins Mr. Walkinshaw and state Sen. Stella Pekarsky (D-Centreville) in the forming Democratic primary. Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) will soon schedule the special election to replace Rep. Connolly who passed away on May 21st.


GOVERNOR


Maine 


Veteran state Senator James Libby (R-Standish), who unsuccessfully ran for Governor all the way back in 2002, announced this week that he will enter the open 2026 Republican gubernatorial primary. Currently in the race is former US Assistant Secretary of State Bobby Charles, local official Robert Wessels, and businessman Owen McCarthy. 


The Democrats already have a crowded field featuring Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, businessman Angus King, III, and ex-state Senate President Troy Jackson.  Former state House Speaker Hannah Pingree, daughter of US Rep. Chellie Pingree (D-North Haven; Portland), is expected to soon announce her candidacy. Gov. Janet Mills (D) is ineligible to run for a third term.


Michigan 


The Glengariff Group survey research firm released a statewide survey (5/5-8; 600 MI registered voters; live interview) that finds a tight three-way open gubernatorial race among Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson (D), US Rep. John James (R-Farmington Hills), and Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan (I). 


The original ballot test for the three most likely general election competitors finds a 34.5-30-21.5% split among Benson, James and Duggan, respectively. In the Detroit metro area, however, it is Mr. Duggan who leads with 35.8%, followed by Ms. Benson’s 33.0% preference, and Rep. James’ 23.9% support factor. Both Benson and James have large leads in the Glengariff respective Democratic and Republican primary ballot tests. Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) is term-limited.


New Jersey 


We see further evidence that US Rep. Mikie Sherrill (D-Montclair) is pulling away in the crowded 2025 Democratic gubernatorial primary. A newly released internal poll for the Sherrill campaign (Global Strategy Group; 5/10-13; 600 NJ likely Democratic primary voters; live interview) finds Rep. Sherrill leading her closest opponent, Jersey City Mayor Stephen Fulop, by a 33-16% count. Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, US Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-Wycoff), former state Senate President Steve Sweeney, and Montclair Mayor and New Jersey Education Association President Sean Spiller trail with 15-11-7-6%, respectively. 


The New Jersey primary is scheduled for June 10. Gov. Phil Murphy (D) is term-limited.  Should Ms. Sherrill or Mr. Gottheimer win the Governorship in November, a special election will then be scheduled to fill her or his vacant congressional seat.


New Mexico


Former US Interior Secretary and ex-Congresswoman Deb Haaland, who for a time looked to have a clear shot at the open Democratic gubernatorial nomination, is finding a much rockier intra-party road.

 

Former Las Cruces Mayor Ken Miyagishima (D) announced his gubernatorial candidacy during the week, joining Ms. Haaland and Bernalillo County District Attorney Sam Bregman, father of Boston Red Sox baseball star Alex Bregman, in what will now be a competitive Democratic primary. The winner of the June primary will have the inside track to winning the general election against the eventual Republican nominee. Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham (D) is ineligible to seek a third term.


New York 


A political survey that the New York Post recently covered found US Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-Schuylerville) drawing into a virtual general election tie with New York Governor Kathy Hochul (D) according to the study’s ballot test result.


The co/efficient survey research firm conducted their New York poll in early May (5/1-2; 1,163 NY likely voters; live interview & text) and the results showed Gov. Hochul holding only a 43-42% lead over Rep. Stefanik, meaning a virtual dead heat. In a hypothetical Republican primary, co/efficient sees Ms. Stefanik leading US Rep. Mike Lawler (R-Pearl River) and Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman (R), 56-9-8%. The Hochul job approval number stood at 44:46% favorable to unfavorable.


At this point, it appears likely that Rep. Stefanik will enter the Governor’s race since the early signs surrounding her proposed candidacy are relatively positive.


Ohio 


Former US Senator Sherrod Brown (D), according to The Down Ballot political blog, quickly refuted a Politico story in which the writer said Brown had ruled out running for Senate next year. Mr. Brown, who served three terms in the Senate before losing to now-Sen. Bernie Moreno (R) in November, says he has not made any decisions about running for an office in 2026, and rules nothing out. Down Ballot also reports that Mr. Brown is saying privately, however, that he is more likely to run for Governor if he decides to again seek public office.


South Dakota 


The Republican gubernatorial primary is already becoming a crowded affair. This week, businessman Toby Doeden (R) announced his candidacy joining state House Speaker Jon Hansen (R-Dell Rapids) as official candidates. 


Gov. Larry Rhoden (R), who ascended to the state’s top position when then-Gov. Kristi Noem (R) resigned to become US Homeland Security Secretary, is now expected to run for a full term. US Rep. Dusty Johnson (R-Mitchell) is also predicted to join the race, as is Attorney General Marty Jackley, likely if Gov. Rhoden chooses not to run. The eventual Republican nominee will become a prohibitive favorite in the general election.


Jim Ellis is a 35-year veteran of politics at the state and national levels. He has served ss executive director for two national political action committees, as well as a consultant to the three national Republican Party organizations in DC, the National Federation of Independent Business, and various national conservative groups.


Born and raised in Sacramento, California, he earned a B. A. in Political Science from the University of California at Davis in 1979. Jim raised his daughter, Jacqueline, alone after his wife died following a tragic car accident. He helped establish the Joan Ellis Victims Assistance Network in Rochester, NH. Jim also is a member of the Northern Virginia Football Officials Association, which officiates high school games throughout the region.


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Editor-in-Chief, Souls and Liberty

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