Republican former Gov. Paul LePage is moving on to the general election in Maine’s 2nd District, NBC News projects, as the crowded Democratic field in one of the country’s most important battleground districts remains unresolved ahead of a ranked choice voting tabulation.
The seat is being vacated by Jared Golden, one of the most conservative Democrats in the House and a candidate who has held on to it repeatedly, even as Donald Trump carried the district in 2020 and 2024. His decision to retire jeopardizes Democrats’ ability to hold the seat, and Republicans are optimistic they can finally flip it.
Joe Baldacci, a state senator and son of a former governor, is the establishment pick, running with a boost from the House Democratic campaign committee and the top House Democratic super PAC. State Auditor Matt Dunlap, the former secretary of state, is running as a progressive, embracing “Medicare for All” and leaning on his decadeslong political career in the state.
And Jordan Wood, the former chief of staff to then-Rep. Katie Porter of California and a top staffer at End Citizens United, is also running from the progressive wing of the party. He’s the top fundraiser by a large margin.
Since no candidate is projected to win a majority, the race moves on to the ranked choice tally, in which voters’ second, third and fourth choices (where applicable) are reallocated from low-performing candidates until only two candidates remain — and the candidate with the most votes wins.
Whichever Democrat wins will be at the center of one of the most competitive House races in the country.
The other major battleground seats on the ballot Tuesday are in Nevada, home to a trio of incumbent Democrats — two representing seats then-Vice President Kamala Harris won by about 2 points in 2024 and the other in a district Trump won by less than 1 point. Democratic Reps. Dina Titus, Susie Lee and Steven Horsford have repeatedly bested Republican challengers in battleground races.
Meanwhile, in South Carolina, state Sen. Wes Climer ran unopposed in the Republican primary to replace Rep. Ralph Norman, who decided to run for governor. He’ll be the heavy favorite to join Congress next year in a district Trump won by almost 23 points in 2024.
In another seat where the incumbent Republican sought the governorship, South Carolina’s 1st District, which Trump won by 13 points in 2024, the Republican and Democratic primaries will head to runoffs.
Republican Jenny Costa Hunnycutt, a lawyer backed by Winning for Women Action Fund, a group that backs Republican women, will move on to the runoff. So will state Rep. Mark Smith, who sports the backing of some South Carolina legislative leaders and mayors and former Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania.
The Democratic runoff will be between retired Vice Adm. Nancy Lacore, who was fired as chief of the Navy Reserve, and Mac Deford, a Coast Guard veteran and lawyer. Whoever wins that Democratic primary will have an uphill battle against the eventual Republican nominee in a seat Trump won by 13 points in 2024.
And in North Dakota, freshman Republican Rep. Julie Fedorchak fended off a primary challenge from Alex Balazs, who won the state party’s endorsement at its convention.
