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Protect Freedom PAC airs pro-Cawthorn ad in NC-11 runoff
Protect Freedom PAC aired an ad supporting Madison Cawthorn in North Carolina's 11th District primary runoff.
The ad says Cawthorn is "an outsider who supports term limits and a balanced budget amendment, and he will help President Trump secure our borders, enforce the rule of law, and ban sanctuary cities."
The PAC says it supports "pro-freedom and liberty-minded candidates" and was "founded by seasoned political veterans with decades of national campaign experience, which includes working on the campaigns of both Ron and Rand Paul."
Cawthorn, a motivational speaker and CEO of a real estate investment company, is running against Lynda Bennett. Bennett is a former vice-chair of the Haywood County Republican Party and a real estate broker.
Former 11th District incumbent Rep. Mark Meadows announced in December he wouldn't seek re-election. He vacated the seat in March to become White House chief of staff. Meadows is a former chairman of the House Freedom Caucus. He and the House Freedom Fund endorsed Bennett.
Court-ordered redistricting in 2019 affected the partisan composition of the 11th District, though the 2020 general election race rating remained Safe or Solid Republican. The Cook Political Report wrote that in the 2016 election President Donald Trump won the former 11th District by 29 percentage points and the redistricted 11th by 17 percentage points.
Bennett received 22.7% of the primary vote to Cawthorn's 20.4%. The Mountaineer’s Kyle Perotti reported that "much of the territory Cawthorn claimed was only brought into the district after a three-judge panel approved the new Congressional district in December of last year."
The runoff is June 23.
McCarthy disputes King's statement about committee assignment restoration
Iowa's 4th Congressional District incumbent Steve King said at a May 11 debate that House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R) agreed to ask the Republican Steering Committee to restore King's committee assignments in the next session of Congress. King said, "I have Kevin McCarthy’s word that that will be my time for exoneration."
McCarthy said May 15, "Congressman King's comments cannot be exonerated and I never said that." McCarthy also said King "has the right to go to the Steering committee and the Steering committee would take up the committee assignments just like every Congress, just like every single member."
King was removed from his committee assignments in January 2019 after The New York Times published an interview in which King mentioned white nationalism and supremacy and Western civilization. King has said his comments were taken out of context.
A campaign official for King’s primary challenger Randy Feenstra said of King's May 11 remarks, "The only thing worse than Steve King costing our district our voice on committees was lying to his constituents that they had been restored." The Republican Main Street Partnership PAC and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce endorsed Feenstra in the primary.
Candidate Jeremy Taylor said, "The issues facing our 4th District families are too important to risk not having a voice on committees."
King said following McCarthy's comments that the minority leader "didn't say that he wouldn’t go to the steering committee and advocate for me. If he wanted to clarify or if he wanted to rebut me, he would have had to say that but he didn’t clarify that either."
King has been in the House since 2003. His closest election was in 2018 when he defeated Democratic J.D. Scholten 50% to 47%.
King, Feenstra, and Taylor are among five candidates running in the June 2 primary.
National Association for Gun Rights airs ad opposing Nehls in TX-22
The National Association of Gun Rights aired an ad opposing Fort Bend County Sheriff Troy Nehls in Texas' 22nd Congressional District primary runoff.
The ad says Nehls supports gun-free zones. It features footage of Nehls speaking against guns in churches and open carry in a local criminal justice building. The ad says Nehls sounds more like Beto O'Rourke, a former U.S. representative and former Democratic presidential candidate than a Texan or a Republican.
Nehls' campaign website says, "I'm 100% pro-2A, endorsed by NRA board members, and as Sheriff famously told looters to stay out of Ft. Bend County because we believe in the 2nd Amendment and many of us are well armed, and they may leave in a body bag."
The National Association of Gun Rights endorsed Kathaleen Wall, a tech startup investor, ahead of the March 3 primary. Nehls and Wall were the top two finishers in the 15-candidate field. Nehls received 40.5% of the vote to Wall's 19.4%.
Incumbent Pete Olson (R), who was first elected in 2008, is not seeking re-election.
Independent election observers view the general election a Toss-up or as Tilt Republican.
Virginia's 5th and 7th District Republican convention dates set
Republican parties in Virginia's 5th and 7th Districts will hold conventions as opposed to primary elections. The 5th District convention will be held on June 13, and the 7th District convention will be July 18.
The conventions were originally scheduled for April 25 but were postponed because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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