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Election Results: Key House Primaries in California, New Jersey, Iowa, Montana and New Mexico - The New York Times

Election Results: Key House Primaries in California, New Jersey, Iowa, Montana and New Mexico

California

Democrats are targeting seven Republican-held House districts that Hillary Clinton won: Districts 10 and 21 in the Central Valley; District 25 in Los Angeles County; Districts 39, 45 and 48 in Orange County; and District 49 in Orange and San Diego counties. Keep a close eye on Districts 39 and 48, where the sheer number of Democratic candidates has party officials scared that two Republicans will advance on the back of a splintered Democratic vote.

Dist.Top two candidates3rd4thRpt.
10
Jeff Denham*
Rep.
37.8%
Josh Harder
Dem.
16.7%
Ted Howze
Rep.
14.4%
Michael Eggman
Dem.
10.2%
100%
21
David Valadao*
Rep.
0.0%
T.J. Cox
Dem.
0.0%
0%
25
Steve Knight*
Rep.
52.9%
Katie Hill
Dem.
20.3%
Bryan Caforio
Dem.
18.3%
Jess Phoenix
Dem.
5.9%
100%
39
Young Kim
Rep.
21.7%
Gil Cisneros
Dem.
19.1%
Phil Liberatore
Rep.
14.4%
Andy Thorburn
Dem.
9.1%
100%
45
Mimi Walters*
Rep.
52.6%
Katie Porter
Dem.
20.0%
Dave Min
Dem.
17.6%
Brian Forde
Dem.
5.7%
100%
48
Dana Rohrabacher*
Rep.
30.5%
Hans Keirstead
Dem.
17.3%
Harley Rouda
Dem.
17.2%
Scott Baugh
Rep.
16.0%
100%
49
Diane Harkey
Rep.
25.6%
Mike Levin
Dem.
17.5%
Sara Jacobs
Dem.
15.6%
Doug Applegate
Dem.
13.2%
100%

* Incumbent

Iowa

District 1

Iowa’s First District is overwhelmingly white, which would tend to pull it to the right based on national voting patterns — but it’s also mostly urban, with large population centers in Cedar Rapids, Dubuque and Waterloo, which would tend to pull it to the left. The result is a highly competitive re-election campaign for Representative Rod Blum, a Trump-supporting Tea Party Republican and House Freedom Caucus member. Four Democrats are running to challenge him, foremost among them State Representative Abby Finkenauer.

Democratic Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Finkenauer Abby Finkenauer29,52567.0%
Heckroth Thomas Heckroth8,46719.2%
Rowe Courtney Rowe3,3207.5%
Ramsey George Ramsey2,7866.3%

44,098 votes, 100% reporting (416 of 416 precincts)

Republican Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Blum* Rod Blum* Uncontested00.0%

0% reporting (0 of 0 precincts)

* Incumbent

District 3

Three Democrats are seeking to challenge Representative David Young in the Third District, which includes Iowa’s largest city, Des Moines. They are Pete D’Alessandro, who led Bernie Sanders’s caucus campaign in Iowa, and two small-business owners: Cindy Axne and Eddie Mauro. If none of them reach 35 percent of the vote, the party will hold a convention, a prolongation of the nominating process that the candidates would prefer to avoid.

Democratic Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Axne Cindy Axne32,07058.0%
Mauro Eddie Mauro14,58226.4%
D'Alessandro Pete D'Alessandro8,59515.6%

55,247 votes, 100% reporting (375 of 375 precincts)

Republican Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Young* David Young* Uncontested00.0%

0% reporting (0 of 0 precincts)

* Incumbent

Libertarian Party Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Holder Bryan Holder Uncontested00.0%

0% reporting (0 of 0 precincts)

Montana

At-Large District

Democrats are hotly pursuing Montana’s only House seat, currently held by Greg Gianforte. The top Democratic candidates in terms of fund-raising are John Heenan, a lawyer in Billings, and Grant Kier, a former nonprofit director. In the first quarter of 2018, though, Mr. Gianforte raised more money than all his Democratic challengers combined.

Democratic Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Williams Kathleen Williams37,15833.5%
Heenan John Heenan35,16331.7%
Kier Grant Kier26,83524.2%
Moss Lynda Moss5,5925.0%
Meyer John Meyer3,6953.3%
Pettinato Jared Pettinato2,4402.2%
Others Others11,72710.6%

110,883 votes, 100% reporting (669 of 669 precincts)

– Show fewer candidates

Republican Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Gianforte* Greg Gianforte* Uncontested00.0%

0% reporting (0 of 0 precincts)

* Incumbent

Libertarian Party Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Swanson Elinor Swanson Uncontested00.0%

0% reporting (0 of 0 precincts)

Independent Party Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Campbell Doug Campbell Uncontested00.0%

0% reporting (0 of 0 precincts)

New Jersey

District 2

The Second District, in South Jersey, would not be a Democratic target in a normal year, but Democrats believe this year’s anti-Trump energy gives them a chance. The incumbent, Frank LoBiondo, is retiring, and four Democrats and five Republicans are running to replace him. The Democratic race is interesting as a microcosm of a national tussle: It pits Jeff Van Drew, a conservative Democrat who might appeal more in such a Republican-leaning district in November, against Tanzie Youngblood, a progressive.

Democratic Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Van Drew Jeff Van Drew15,65455.4%
Youngblood Tanzie Youngblood5,41719.2%
Cunningham William Cunningham4,73916.8%
Kleinman Nate Kleinman2,4438.6%

28,253 votes, 100% reporting (523 of 523 precincts)

Republican Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Grossman Seth Grossman10,10639.0%
Singh Hirsh Singh7,90630.5%
Fiocchi Sam Fiocchi6,07123.4%
Turkavage Robert Turkavage1,8427.1%

25,925 votes, 100% reporting (523 of 523 precincts)

District 7

Representative Leonard Lance, the incumbent in the Seventh District, is highly vulnerable thanks to anti-Trump sentiment, even though he is a moderate Republican who voted against his party’s tax plan and voted to repeal the Affordable Care Act. He isn’t likely to face much trouble from his Republican primary challengers, so the real action on Tuesday is in the Democratic primary, where the former Obama administration official Tom Malinowski is running against Peter Jacob, who lost to Mr. Lance in 2016.

Democratic Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Malinowski Tom Malinowski26,07966.8%
Jacob Peter Jacob7,47419.1%
Jois Goutam Jois5,48914.1%

39,042 votes, 100% reporting (639 of 639 precincts)

Republican Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Lance* Leonard Lance*24,85674.9%
Brown Lindsay Brown4,77414.4%
Barsoom Raafat Barsoom3,54510.7%

33,175 votes, 100% reporting (639 of 639 precincts)

* Incumbent

District 11

The 11th district, being vacated by Representative Rodney Frelinghuysen, attaches heavily Democratic areas of Essex County to Republican-dominated Morris County, creating a seat that has been reliably Republican until this year. The Democratic front-runner is Mikie Sherrill, a former Navy helicopter pilot and prosecutor backed by Joe Biden; she is running against the former social worker Tamara Harris and three others. On the Republican side, State Assemblyman Jay Webber is running against Antony Ghee and Peter De Neufville.

Democratic Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Sherrill Mikie Sherrill35,20777.5%
Harris Tamara Harris6,58414.5%
Washburne Mark Washburne1,5323.4%
Heslin Alison Heslin1,2492.7%
Cobert Mitchell Cobert8841.9%
Others Others2,1334.7%

45,456 votes, 99% reporting (575 of 576 precincts)

– Show fewer candidates

Republican Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Webber Jay Webber16,37740.0%
De Neufville Peter De Neufville12,47230.5%
Ghee Antony Ghee8,97421.9%
Allocco Patrick Allocco1,6774.1%
Hewitt Martin Hewitt1,4283.5%
Others Others3,1057.6%

40,928 votes, 99% reporting (575 of 576 precincts)

– Show fewer candidates

New Mexico

District 2

The Second District, which sprawls across almost 72,000 square miles, has long been a Republican stronghold, but it’s vulnerable this year with Representative Steve Pearce leaving to run for governor. Four Republicans are pursuing the seat, including State Representative Yvette Herrell, whom the New Mexico Republican Party endorsed over its former chairman Monty Newman. The Democrats have two candidates: Xochitl Torres Small, a lawyer supported by Emily’s List and the state party, and Madeline Hildebrandt, a Coast Guard veteran.

Democratic Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Small Xochitl Torres Small25,19372.6%
Hildebrandt Madeline Hildebrandt9,50027.4%

34,693 votes, 100% reporting (501 of 501 precincts)

Republican Primary

CandidateVotePct.
Herrell Yvette Herrell15,81149.0%
Newman Monty Newman10,34632.1%
Clarkson Gavin Clarkson4,01012.4%
Griffin Clayburn Griffin2,1016.5%

32,268 votes, 100% reporting (501 of 501 precincts)