LGBT candidates scoring big wins in primaries
It’s been a stellar month for LGBT candidates. Two non-incumbent openly gay candidates for the U.S. House advanced to the general election, Tammy Baldwin won the Democratic Party nomination in her re-election bid for the U.S. Senator, and a transgender candidate won the Democratic nomination for governor in Vermont.
Christine Hallquist’s victory in Vermont drew the most media attention. She is the first transgender person in the nation to secure a major party nomination for governor. Hallquist took 41 percent of the Democratic primary vote against three other candidates. The total turnout for Democrats –67,000—was twice that for the Republican primary –36,000. In that contest, incumbent Republican Governor Phil Scott won 66 percent of the vote despite a strong challenge over his willingness to accept some gun restrictions.
Hallquist, 62, ran on a platform of growing the economy for the people with the bottom 20 percent income, expand Medicare, and improve public education.
“Just like we’ve got to take care about every marginalized community, regardless of their race, gender, color, and all that stuff, we’ve got to take care of every one of our communities. No matter how small our communities are in this state, we’ve got to take care of them,” Hallquist told her supporters on election night.
Hallquist thanked her spouse Pat and their three children for their support. She has been transitioning since 2015, when she was a top official at the Vermont Electric Cooperative. This is her first run for office.
In Kansas, Sharice Davids won her Democratic primary August 7 for a Congressional seat representing the 3rd District. Davids, an attorney and Native American, won 37 percent of the vote but beat out two other candidates for the nomination.
In Minnesota’s 2nd Congressional District, businesswoman Angie Craig secured a second chance to face off against a Trump-like radio talk show host named Jason Lewis. Lewis won the seat in 2016 by 47 percent to 45 percent, but an independent candidate siphoned off a significant eight percent of the vote.
The U.S. Senate’s first and only openly LGBT member, Tammy Baldwin, secured the Democratic Party nomination to run for re-election in November. She’ll face Republican State Senator Leah Vukmir. Vukmir has a record of voting against the interests of LGBT people, and she’ll likely have the financial backing of the Koch brothers and other right-wing interests who want very much to turn Baldwin’s seat into a Republican one. Vukmir won 49 percent of the vote, compared to her closest competitor, with 42 percent, and three other candidates.
Openly gay Michigan State House Rep. Jon Hoadley won the Democratic Party nomination for re-election. And Dana Nessel won the Democratic Party’s nomination for Michigan Attorney General. Nessel was the attorney who represented a lesbian couple in one of the key cases that challenged state bans on same-sex marriage at the U.S. Supreme Court.
In Washington State on August 7, three openly LGBT state house candidates won their Democratic nominations –including two incumbents (Nicole Macri and Christine Kilduff) and one newcomer (Kathy Gillespie).
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