Highlights from Tuesday’s primary elections in Missouri, Kansas and Michigan.
Top of the ticket
Republican Sen. Pat Roberts beat back a primary challenge from radiologist Milton Wolf in his bid for re-nomination in Kansas, as Senate incumbents continued their unbeaten streak in this year’s midterm elections.
Roberts, seeking a fourth term in the Senate, questioned Wolf’s fitness for office by running television ads focused on the 43-year-old’s posting in 2010 of X-ray images of patients’ injuries on his Facebook page. They included images of fatal gunshot wounds and comments intended to be humorous, for which Wolf apologized.
Senate control
Roberts is all but a lock to return to Washington on Election Day. Kansas is a reliably Republican state and his race isn’t among the roughly 10 expected to determine control of the Senate.
He’ll face likely Democratic nominee Chad Taylor, a district attorney from Topeka, and independent candidate Greg Orman, a businessman from suburban Olathe who has submitted more than twice the number of signatures to qualify for the November ballot.
In Michigan, six-term Sen. Carl Levin, a Democrat, is not seeking re-election. Republican Terri Lynn Land will face Democratic Rep. Gary Peters in a race considered a toss-up.
U.S. House in Michigan
Dave Trott contributed almost $2.5 million of his own money to his campaign for Congress, and it paid off as he beat first-term Republican Rep. Kerry Bentivolio.
Investment adviser Brian Ellis didn’t get the same return on his investment. He lent his campaign $1 million, but was unable to topple GOP Rep. Justin Amash, who has sparred often with Republican leaders since his election in the 2010 tea party wave.
Meanwhile, Democratic Rep. John Dingell, who has been in Congress for a record 58 years, is retiring. But his wife, Debbie, won her primary bid to replace her husband on Tuesday and is expected to extend the Dingell dynasty come November.
Missouri roads and rights
Missouri primary voters rejected a three-quarters-of-a-cent sales tax for roads, bridges and other types of transportation that was projected to generate at least $540 million annually for 10 years.
By taxing almost all consumer items, the proposal would have marked a historic shift for a state that until now has funded its roads by taxing drivers for fuel and vehicles. State transportation officials promised it would have paid for more than 800 projects, including the widening of Interstate 70 to three lanes in each direction between Kansas City and St. Louis.
Supporters and opponents spent well over $1 million battling over a measure that would make Missouri the second state after North Dakota to create a constitutional right to engage in farming. It was backed by agricultural industry groups such as the state’s pork, corn and soybean associations. Opponents were financed heavily by the Humane Society of the United States, which had helped sponsor a 2010 Missouri initiative imposing stricter limits on dog breeders.
Voters added cellphones and other electronic data to the list of things protected by search-warrant requirements, and considered a proposal to enhance the state’s right to bear arms by subjecting gun-control policies to strict legal scrutiny.
Up next
Tuesday’s primary was the first of three election days this week. Voters in Tennessee will cast ballots Thursday, when GOP Sen. Lamar Alexander faces a challenge in the GOP primary from tea party-backed state lawmaker Joe Carr.
On Saturday, Democratic Sen. Brian Schatz seeks his party’s nomination in Hawaii against Rep. Colleen Hanabusa, as they both seek to complete the term of the late Sen. Daniel Inouye, who died in 2012.
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