'Earthquake throughout the nation': Trump candidates score big wins

(Photo by Joe Kovacs)
(Photo by Joe Kovacs)

Trump-backed candidates won key Republican primary contests Tuesday night in Arizona, Michigan and Kansas.

In Arizona, as Election Day votes were counted, former TV news journalist Kari Lake came roaring back to take the lead from Mike Pence-backed candidate Karrin Taylor Robson in the gubernatorial primary.

Lake, who believes Trump won Arizona in 2020 and says she would not have certified the election results, was 10 points down Monday night as the mail-in ballots were counted. But she has been winning more than 70% of the Election Day vote. With nearly 80% of the vote counted, Lake leads Robson by about two points.

Lake told Steve Bannon in a “War Room” interview Wednesday morning that she expects the lead to increase to eight or 10 points.

“And there were a lot of shenanigans going on,” she said, referring to reports of voting irregularities. “So, we knew the shenanigans were happening. We knew that the first batch to be counted was going to go to my opponent, most likely.”

Then, she said, “when we started seeing the numbers come in as big as they were, the day-of voting – we’ve never seen anything like it.”

See Lake’s interview with “War Room”:

Trump-backed Blake Masters, whose campaign was sponsored by tech billionaire Peter Thiel, has been declared the winner in the Arizona GOP Senate primary, with 39%, over Jim Lamon’s 29%. Masters will face incumbent Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly.

In the Arizona GOP primary for secretary of state, Mark Finchem, whose campaign focused on election integrity, was the winner.

“At the end of the day, I stand for the rule of law, that nobody has their thumb on the scale of election integrity and election justice,” the Trump-backed Finchem told the Epoch Times.

“I want to make sure every candidate, whether they’re Democrat, Republican, Libertarian – I don’t care what party they are – they have a right to be on the ballot if they qualify, and they have a right to be treated fairly under the law,” said Finchem, a member of the Arizona House of Representatives.

Trump appeared with Finchem at a rally in January in Florence, Arizona.

Finchem declared to the crowd: “Ladies and gentlemen, we know it and they know it – Donald Trump won.”

Significantly, Arizona’s state House speaker, Rusty Bowers – who testified against President Trump before the Jan. 6 committee – lost his bid for a state Senate seat by some 30 points.

In Arizona’s GOP attorney general primary, Trump-backed Abe Hamadeh is leading.

In Michigan, Trump-backed GOP gubernatorial candidate Tudor Dixon won decisively with 40% of the vote over Kevin Rinke.

For 25 years, WND has boldly brought you the news that really matters. If you appreciate our Christian journalists and their uniquely truthful reporting and analysis, please help us by becoming a WND Insider!

In a Michigan GOP House primary, incumbent Rep. Peter Meijer – one of 10 Republicans who voted to impeach President Trump in January 2021 – lost to Trump-endorsed challenger John Gibbs nearly 3 points in what was considered an upset.

Gibbs, who served in the Trump administration as an acting assistant secretary in the Department of Housing and Urban Development, spoke Wednesday morning with Steve Bannon on “War Room.”

“This was an earthquake throughout the nation,” said Gibbs, a former software developer in Silicon Valley.

“We were outspent on outside spending probably 100 to 1, on hard cash probably 10 to 1. [Meijer] was sending out two to three mailers a day for the past two or three weeks. Expensive TV ads, radio ads,” said Gibbs.

“It didn’t work. We were out there doing the thing that didn’t cost any money. Meeting people.”

And Gibbs, who was a Christian missionary in Japan, said “the power of prayer undergirding us” was the most important difference, noting he has a place on his campaign website where people can sign up to commit to pray for him and his campaign.

See Gibbs’ interview with “War Room”:

In the closely watched Missouri Senate primary, former governor Eric Greitens finished third to Attorney General Eric Schmitt. Trump caused confusion Monday when he announced his endorsement for “Eric,” which has been interpreted to mean that he viewed both Erics as acceptable candidates.

Schmitt will square off in November with Democratic Party winner Trudy Busch Valentine, the Anheuser-Busch heiress, for the seat vacated by retiring Republican Sen. Roy Blunt.

In Kansas, the Trump candidate for governor, state Attorney General Derek Schmidt, won the GOP nomination.

Voters in Kansas were presented with a ballot measure on the issue of abortion with wording described by CNN as “convoluted.” The question essentially was whether or not the state Constitution should forbid a right to abortion, and the 58.8% of voters said no.

Content created by the WND News Center is available for re-publication without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact [email protected].

SUPPORT TRUTHFUL JOURNALISM. MAKE A DONATION TO THE NONPROFIT WND NEWS CENTER. THANK YOU!

This article was originally published by the WND News Center.

Related Posts