Indiana holds a May 7 primary election with competitive races up and down the ballot.
Voters in Indiana will head to the polls on Tuesday to participate in their primaries, which will include a six-way primary for governor and crowded races for several open congressional seats, in what has become a game of political musical chairs. The number of open races has driven a“In recent political memory, it’s unlike anything we’ve seen before,” said Laura Merrifield Wilson, an associate professor of political science at the University of Indianapolis.
“There’s a lot of outside money coming in, so it tells you it’s not just Hoosiers that are interested in who’s going to represent them in Washington D.C. in January, but there’s a lot of people that see these as potential seats to really use to perpetuate their own interests and ideas,” Wilson said.Six Republicans are facing off to be the Republican nominee for governor, where current GOP Gov. Eric Holcomb is term-limited after serving eight years in office.
Indiana’s airwaves have been blanketed in ads – with the six Republicans projected to spend about $40 million by election day, which is a Spartz is facing State Rep. Chuck Goodrich, businessman and speech pathologist, Raju Chinthala, Max Engling, attorney Mark Hurt, CPA Patrick Malayter, Matthew Peiffer, Larry Savage, and veteran L.D. Powell. RecentRep. Victoria Spartz speaks during a Lincoln Day Dinner, Thursday, May 2, 2024, in Noblesville, Ind.
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