Winners, Losers and Warning Signs
Winners, Losers and Warning Signs
Since the May primary is officially over, it’s time to do the annual post-mortem winners and losers blog post. Feel free to add your own in the comment section…
Winners
- Donald Trump, obviously. Hoosiers not only gave him 53 percent of the vote but him on the clear path to the GOP nomination. Good luck uniting your party.
- Bernie Sanders. The old socialist puts together a coalition and beats Hillary Clinton. Not that it matters at the convention, but you take your wins where you can get them; just not the delegates.
- Todd Young. A superior air and ground campaign, coupled with missteps by his opponent and bad press at the end vaulted him to likely be the next U.S. Senator from Indiana.
- Jim Banks and Trey Hollingsworth. Both men managed to navigate a crowded field and come up with victories. Albeit Hollingsworth’s will be short-lived if he can’t unite 9th CD Republicans because Shelli Yoder and the Democrats are definitely going to target him.
- David Long. The President Pro Tempore took his challenger seriously and beat the hell of him, 73-27.
- Luke Kenley. (See David Long)
Losers
- Ted Cruz. I had written a Facebook post earlier saying Indiana would either Cruz’s Alamo or Gettysburg. Turns out it was both. And by the way, we broke the news five hours before it was official that Cruz was preparing a concession speech where he would suspend his campaign and it made Fox News. I’m just sayin.
- Hillary Clinton. In a state where she gets the support of Evan Bayh, Joe Donnelly, Joe Hogsett and Andre Carson and she still loses to the old Socialist from Vermont. Ouch! She even lost Marion County. Get some band aids.
- Marlin Stutzman. You would have thought Stutzman could have thrived in the “outsider” environment, however between joining the Young petition challenge, the campaign finance issues, the out of state consultants and running out of money at the end, it was the perfect storm to lose in.
- Everyone who ran against Jim Banks and Trey Hollingsworth. Although both only got about 35 percent of the vote, that’s all you need in crowded field and had not everyone and his mother run in those seats, it might have been a different story, much like the Presidential race.
- Pete Miller. Although a nice guy, Miller got it from both sides. The far right had an axe to grind over RFRA and LGBT rights and there was an undercurrent by some local folks that he just wasn’t representing his District. A bad combination.
- Casey Cox. He got a far right challenge over RFRA, but also I am told as the author of the abortion bill that banned abortions based on race, gender and disability, some Democrats crossed over to support his opponent.
- The guys who ran against David Long and Luke Kenley. I’d call the cops after the beating you got.
- Curt Smith, Indiana Family Institute. Not only did Ted Cruz get his clocked cleaned. Smith’s efforts to take out the Senate President failed. And Smith even lost his race to be convention delegate. Yes, he did managed to help take out Miller, but that’s like taking home a box of Rice-A-Roni, a case of Turtle Wax and a copy of the home game after losing on Jeopardy.
Warning Signs
- Mike Pence and John Gregg. Although it might be easy for hard Ds and Rs to paint Pence and Gregg as either winners or losers after last night (Pence getting nearly 200,000 more primary votes than Gregg or Pence’s under-vote in some Republican areas) it’s actually a little more complicated than that. In fact it’s so complicated; you will have to read about it in my next column on one of my various media platforms. I promise to let you know when it goes up.