
LaJeunesse withdraws from Senate primary in ME, endorses Gideon
Ross LaJeunesse withdrew from the Democratic primary for Senate in Maine and endorsed the state's House speaker, Sara Gideon. In a Medium post, he said the following:
"I cannot ask my supporters to continue working hard, to continue making financial contributions, to continue volunteering, to continue advocating for my campaign when the country is focused on an unprecedented health and economic crisis, and when the type of campaign I planned, meeting voters where they live and work and speaking person to person, is impossible."
LaJeunesse, whom the LGBTQ Victory Fund endorsed, ran on a 10-point tech policy agenda and criticized Gideon by saying she received special interest money.
Gideon had raised $7.8 million by the end of 2019. LaJeunesse was second in fundraising with $600,000. The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, EMILY's List, and NARAL Pro-Choice America endorsed Gideon early in her bid.
Bre Kidman and Betsy Sweet are also running in the June 9 primary.
Majority Forward, a not-for-profit affiliated with the Senate Majority PAC, recently announced a six-figure ad campaign praising Gideon's work on a coronavirus relief bill in the state legislature. The PAC also spent six figures on an ad campaign in November criticizing incumbent Sen. Susan Collins' (R) votes related to Medicare and saying she hadn't held a town hall in 20 years.
Three election forecasters rate the general election Toss-up, Tilt Republican, or Lean Republican.
Tlaib, Jones rematch in MI-13
Detroit City Council President Brenda Jones entered Michigan's 13th Congressional District Democratic primary, setting up a rematch against Rep. Rashida Tlaib.
In August 2018, Tlaib defeated Jones in the regular primary election 31.2% to 30.2%, while Jones defeated Tlaib in a special primary the same day 37.7% to 35.9%. Jones completed the term to which John Conyers Jr. had been elected in 2016 until Tlaib took the seat in January 2019.
The Detroit Metro Times wrote,
"In the last election, Jones had the backing of Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan’s formidable political machine.
But since Tlaib was elected, she has become a household name nationwide — thanks, in part, to her promise to 'impeach the mother******' on her first day in office — and raised $1.6 million this cycle, bringing her campaign chest total to $2.8 million."
The primary is Aug. 4, and April 21 is the filing deadline.
Sunrise Movement endorses Bowman in NY-16, Morse in MA-01
Sunrise Movement endorsed two challengers to longtime House incumbents last week: Jamaal Bowman in New York's 16th District and Alex Morse in Massachusetts' 1st District. The incumbents in both districts—Eliot Engel in New York and Richard Neal in Massachusetts—were first elected in 1988.
Sunrise Movement is a nonprofit organization that describes itself as "a movement to stop climate change and create millions of good jobs in the process."
In New York's 16th, six candidates are running, including Bowman and Engel. Engel chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Bowman is a middle school principal. He is running to Engel's left and received the Working Families Party endorsement. The Working Families Party endorsed Engel in previous elections. The primary is June 23.
Rep. Neal chairs the House Ways and Means Committee. Morse was elected mayor of Holyoke, Massachusetts at age 22 and is running to Neal's left. Neal and Morse are currently the only candidates running in the Sept. 1 primary.
Find our previous story on New York's 16th District primary and our "Power Players" feature on the Sunrise Movement here.
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