Sat. Nov 23rd, 2024
WILKES-BARRE, PENNSYLVANIA - SEPTEMBER 03: Former president Donald Trump speaks to supporters at a rally to support local candidates on September 03, 2022 in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Trump still denies that he lost the election against President Joe Biden and has encouraged his supporters to doubt the election process. Trump has backed Senate candidate Mehmet Oz and gubernatorial hopeful Doug Mastriano. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Candidates who were endorsed by President Trump compiled a record of 217 wins against 19 losses. No one could come close to matching that record. The Republican Party belongs to President Trump. President Trump is doing what he should have done in 2016. And that is purge the Republican Party of the RINOS, and replace them with pro-America candidates who can win. #Trump2024!

 

How Trump’s 236 endorsed candidates fared in the primary season

By Washington Examiner, September 15, 2022

Former President Donald Trump has loomed large over Republican primary races across the country, embracing a kingmaker role to steer the GOP’s trajectory with his coveted endorsement.

As the primary season came to a close Tuesday night, Trump finished strong, with about 92% of his preferred candidates crossing the finish line. None of his preferred candidates were on the ballot Tuesday, with the former president notably abstaining from the New Hampshire primary.

Winners
Jerry Carl, Alabama’s 1st Congressional District — uncontested
Barry Moore, Alabama’s 2nd Congressional District — uncontested
Mike Rogers, Alabama’s 3rd Congressional District
Robert Aderholt, Alabama’s 4th Congressional District — uncontested
Gary Palmer, Alabama’s 6th Congressional District — uncontested
Katie Britt, Alabama Senate
Mike Dunleavy, Alaska governor
Sarah Palin, Alaska at-large congressional district
Kelly Tshibaka, Alaska Senate
Sarah Sanders, Arkansas governor
Tim Griffin, Arkansas attorney general
Rick Crawford, Arkansas’s 1st Congressional District
Bruce Westerman, Arkansas’s 4th Congressional District — uncontested
John Boozman, Arkansas Senate
Kari Lake, Arizona governor
Mark Finchem, Arizona secretary of state
Eri Crane, Arizona’s 2nd Congressional District
Debbie Lesko, Arizona’s 8th Congressional District — uncontested
Paul Gosar, Arizona’s 9th Congressional District
Blake Masters, Arizona Senate
Wendy Rogers, Arizona state Senate’s 7th District
Robert Scantlebury, Arizona state Senate’s 9th District
David Farnsworth, Arizona state Senate’s 10th District
Anthony Kern, Arizona state Senate’s 27th District
Janae Shamp, Arizona state Senate’s 29th District
Doug LaMalfa, California’s 1st Congressional District
Kevin Kiley, California’s 3rd Congressional District
Tom McClintock, California’s 5th Congressional District
Kevin McCarthy, California’s 20th Congressional District
Jay Obernolte, California’s 23rd Congressional District
Ken Calvert, California’s 41st Congressional District
Darrell Issa, California’s 48th Congressional District
Connie Conway, California’s 22nd Congressional District — unique special election
Lauren Boebert, Colorado’s 3rd Congressional District
Leora Levy, Connecticut Senate
Ashley Moody, Florida attorney general — uncontested
Jimmy Patronis, Florida chief financial officer — uncontested
Wilton Simpson, Florida Agriculture commissioner
Matt Gaetz, Florida’s 1st Congressional District
Neal Dunn, Florida’s 1st Congressional District — uncontested
Kat Cammack, Florida’s 3rd Congressional District
Michael Waltz, Florida’s 6th Congressional District
Gus Bilirakis, Florida’s 12th Congressional District
Anna Paulina Luna, Florida’s 13th Congressional District
Scott Franklin, Florida’s 15th Congressional District
Vern Buchanan, Florida’s 16th Congressional District
Greg Steuben, Florida’s 17th Congressional District — uncontested
Byron Donalds, Florida’s 19th Congressional District
Brian Mast, Florida’s 21st Congressional District
Mario Diaz-Balart, Florida’s 26th Congressional District
Carlos Gimenez, Florida’s 28th Congressional District
Marco Rubio, Florida Senate
Joe Gruters, Florida’s state Senate’s 23rd District
Kevin Cabrera, Florida’s Miami-Dade District 6 county commissioner
Juan Carlos Bermudez, Florida’s Miami-Dade District 12 county commissioner
Burt Jones, Georgia lieutenant governor
Buddy Carter, Georgia’s 1st Congressional District — uncontested
Andrew Clyde, Georgia’s 9th Congressional District
Barry Loudermilk, Georgia’s 11th Congressional District — uncontested
Rick Allen, Georgia’s 12th Congressional District — uncontested
Marjorie Taylor Greene, Georgia’s 14th Congressional District
Herschel Walker, Georgia Senate
Russ Fulcher, Idaho’s 1st Congressional District — uncontested
Mike Crapo, Idaho Senate
Darren Bailey, Illinois governor
Mike Bost, Illinois’s 12th Congressional District — uncontested
Mary Miller, Illinois’s 15th Congressional District
Darin LaHood, Illinois’s 18th Congressional District
Jackie Walorski, Indiana’s 2nd Congressional District — uncontested
Jim Banks, Indiana’s 3rd Congressional District — uncontested
Jim Baird, Indiana’s 4th Congressional District — uncontested
Victoria Spartz, Indiana’s 5th Congressional District — uncontested
Greg Pence, Indiana’s 6th Congressional District
Larry Bucshon, Indiana’s 8th Congressional District — uncontested
Kim Reynolds, Iowa governor — uncontested
Ashley Hinson, Iowa’s 2nd Congressional District — uncontested
Randy Feenstra, Iowa’s 4th Congressional District — uncontested
Chuck Grassley, Iowa Senate
Derek Schmidt, Kansas governor
Jerry Moran, Kansas Senate
James Comer, Kentucky’s 1st Congressional District — uncontested
Brett Guthrie, Kentucky’s 2nd Congressional District
Thomas Massie, Kentucky’s 4th Congressional District
Hal Rogers, Kentucky’s 5th Congressional District
Andy Barr, Kentucky’s 6th Congressional District
Rand Paul, Kentucky Senate
Julia Letlow, Louisiana’s 5th Congressional District — unique special election
Dan Cox, Maryland governor
Geoff Diehl, Massachusetts governor
Tudor Dixon, Michigan governor
Kristina Karamo, Michigan secretary of state
Matthew DePerno, Michigan attorney general
John Moolenaar, Michigan’s 2nd Congressional District
John Gibbs, Michigan’s 3rd Congressional District
Bill Huizenga, Michigan’s 4th Congressional District
Lisa McClain, Michigan’s 9th Congressional District
John James, Michigan’s 10th Congressional District
Jonathan Lindsey, Michigan state Senate’s 17th District
Rachelle Smit, Michigan state House’s 43rd District
Matt Maddock, Michigan state House’s 44th District — uncontested
Angela Rigas, Michigan state House’s 79th District
Mike Hoadley, Michigan state House’s 99th District
Trent Kelly, Mississippi’s 1st Congressional District
Ryan Zinke, Montana’s 1st Congressional District
Blaine Luetkemeyer, Missouri’s 3rd Congressional District
Sam Graves, Missouri’s 6th Congressional District
Jason Smith, Missouri’s 8th Congressional District
Matt Rosendale, Montana’s at-large congressional district
Adrian Smith, Nebraska’s 3rd Congressional District
Joe Lombardo, Nevada governor
Adam Laxalt, Nevada Senate
Nicole Malliotakis, New York’s 11th Congressional District — uncontested
Elise Stefanik, New York’s 21st Congressional District — uncontested
Claudia Tenney, New York’s 24th Congressional District
Jeff Van Drew, New Jersey’s 2nd Congressional District
Greg Murphy, North Carolina’s 3rd Congressional District
Virginia Foxx, North Carolina’s 5th Congressional District
David Rouzer, North Carolina’s 7th Congressional District
Dan Bishop, North Carolina’s 8th Congressional District — uncontested
Richard Hudson, North Carolina’s 9th Congressional District
Patrick McHenry, North Carolina’s 10th Congressional District
Bo Hines, North Carolina’s 13th Congressional District
Ted Budd, North Carolina Senate
Kelly Armstrong, North Dakota’s at-large congressional district — uncontested
John Hoeven, North Dakota Senate
Dave Yost, Ohio attorney general — uncontested
Frank LaRose, Ohio secretary of state
Robert Sprague, Ohio treasurer — uncontested
Keith Faber, Ohio state auditor — uncontested
Steve Chabot, Ohio’s 1st Congressional District — uncontested
Brad Wenstrup, Ohio’s 2nd Congressional District
Jim Jordan, Ohio’s 4th Congressional District — uncontested
Bob Latta, Ohio’s 5th Congressional District — uncontested
Bill Johnson, Ohio’s 6th Congressional District
Max Miller, Ohio’s 7th Congressional District
Warren Davidson, Ohio’s 8th Congressional District
Mike Turner, Ohio’s 10th Congressional District — uncontested
Troy Balderson, Ohio’s 12th Congressional District
Madison Gesiotto Gilbert, Ohio’s 13th Congressional District
Mike Carey, Ohio’s 15th Congressional District — uncontested
J.D. Vance, Ohio Senate
Kevin Stitt, Oklahoma governor
Kevin Hern, Oklahoma’s 1st Congressional District — uncontested
Frank Lucas, Oklahoma’s 3rd Congressional District
Tom Cole, Oklahoma’s 4th Congressional District
Markwayne Mullin, Oklahoma Senate
Doug Mastriano, Pennsylvania governor
Jim Bognet, Pennsylvania’s 8th Congressional District
Scott Perry, Pennsylvania’s 10th Congressional District — uncontested
Lloyd Smucker, Pennsylvania’s 11th Congressional District — uncontested
John Joyce, Pennsylvania’s 13th Congressional District — uncontested
Guy Reschenthaler, Pennsylvania’s 14th Congressional District — uncontested
Mike Kelly, Pennsylvania’s 16th Congressional District — uncontested
Dr. Mehmet Oz, Pennsylvania Senate
Henry McMaster, South Carolina governor
Alan Wilson, South Carolina attorney general
Joe Wilson, South Carolina’s 2nd Congressional District — uncontested
Jeff Duncan, South Carolina’s 3rd Congressional District — uncontested
William Timmons, South Carolina’s 4th Congressional District
Ralph Norman, South Carolina’s 5th Congressional District — uncontested
Russell Fry, South Carolina’s 7th Congressional District
Tim Scott, South Carolina Senate — uncontested
Kristi Noem, South Dakota governor
Bill Lee, Tennessee governor — uncontested
Diana Harshbarger, Tennessee’s 1st Congressional District — uncontested
Chuck Fleischmann, Tennessee’s 3rd Congressional District
Mark Green, Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District — uncontested
Greg Abbott, Texas governor
Ken Paxton, Texas attorney general
Dan Patrick, Texas lieutenant governor
Sid Miller, Texas agriculture commissioner
Glenn Hegar, Texas comptroller
Dawn Buckingham, Texas land commissioner
Pat Fallon, Texas’s 4th Congressional District
Lance Gooden, Texas’s 5th Congressional District — uncontested
Jake Ellzey, Texas’s 6th Congressional District
Michael McCaul, Texas’s 10th Congressional District — uncontested
August Pfluger, Texas’s 11th Congressional District — uncontested
Kay Granger, Texas’s 12 Congressional District
Ronny Jackson, Texas’s 13th Congressional District — uncontested
Randy Weber, Texas’s 14th Congressional District
Monica De La Cruz, Texas’s 15th Congressional District
Jodey Arrington, Texas’s 19th Congressional District — uncontested
Troy Nehls, Texas’s 22nd Congressional District
Beth Van Duyne, Texas’s 24th Congressional District
Roger Williams, Texas’s 25th Congressional District — uncontested
Michael Burgess, Texas’s 26th Congressional District
Michael Cloud, Texas’s 27th Congressional District
John Carter, Texas’s 31st Congressional District
Brian Babin, Texas’s 36th Congressional District — uncontested
Wesley Hunt, Texas’s 38th Congressional District
Angela Paxton, Texas state Senate’s 8th District
Mayes Middleton, Texas state Senate’s 11th District
Pete Flores, Texas state Senate’s 24th District
Kevin Sparks, Texas state Senate’s 31st District
Steve Toth, Texas state House’s 15th District
Ryan Guillen, Texas state House’s 31st District
Frederick Frazier, Texas state House’s 61st District
Tim O’Hare, Texas Tarrant County judge
Phil Sorrells, Texas Tarrant County district attorney
Chris Stewart, Utah’s 2nd Congressional District
Burgess Owens, Utah’s 4th Congressional District
Mike Lee, Utah Senate
Rob Wittman, Virginia’s 1st Congressional District — uncontested
Bob Good, Virginia’s 5th Congressional District
Ben Cline, Virginia’s 6th Congressional District
Morgan Griffith, Virginia’s 9th Congressional District — uncontested
Joe Kent, Washington’s 3rd Congressional District
Tim Michels, Wisconsin governor
Derrick Van Orden, Wisconsin’s 3rd Congressional District — uncontested
Ron Johnson, Wisconsin Senate
Janel Brandtjen, Wisconsin state House’s 22nd District — uncontested
Carol Miller, West Virginia’s 1st Congressional District
Alex Mooney, West Virginia’s 2nd Congressional District
Chuck Gray, Wyoming secretary of state
Curt Meier, Wyoming treasurer
Harriet Hageman, Wyoming’s at-large Congressional District

Losers
David Perdue, Georgia governor
John Gordon, Georgia attorney general
Patrick Witt, Georgia insurance commissioner
Jody Hice, Georgia secretary of state
Jake Evans, Georgia’s 6th Congressional District
Vernon Jones, Georgia’s 10th Congressional District
Janice McGeachin, Idaho governor
Mike Detmer, Michigan state Senate’s 22nd District
Jacky Eubanks, Michigan state House’s 63rd District
Kevin Rathbun, Michigan state House’s 71st District
Jonathan Rocha, Michigan state House’s 78th District
Mick Bricker, Michigan state House’s 88th District
Charles Herbster, Nebraska governor
Madison Cawthorn, North Carolina’s 11th Congressional District
Katie Arrington, South Carolina’s 1st Congressional District
Morgan Ortagus, Tennessee’s 5th Congressional District — removed from the ballot
Loren Culp, Washington’s 4th Congressional District
Adam Steen, Wisconsin state House’s 63rd District
Brian Schroeder, Wyoming superintendent

Both Winners and Losers (not counted in the tally)
“Eric,” Missouri Senate — there were two prominent men named Eric in the race, one of whom won while the other one lost. Trump did not choose either “Eric” over the other.

To be determined
Clay Higgins, Louisiana’s 3rd Congressional District
Mike Johnson, Louisiana’s 4th Congressional District
John Kennedy, Louisiana Senate

With primary season closing, Trump has begun shifting gears for the general election, endorsing Republicans who have already clinched the party nod. This includes the recent endorsements of Mike DeWine for Ohio governor and Jon Husted for Ohio lieutenant governor.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

The former president has also issued endorsements in foreign elections, supporting Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban. The latter won reelection earlier this year.

In August, Trump issued a slew of spoof endorsements, playfully throwing his political might behind the likes of Reps. Jerry Nadler (D-NY) and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), both of whom voted to impeach him. Spoof endorsements are not included in the Washington Examiner’s tally.

How Trump’s 236 endorsed candidates fared in the primary season

By Michael Loyman

Я родился свободным, поэтому выбора, чем зарабатывать на жизнь, у меня не было, стал предпринимателем. Не то, чтобы я не терпел начальства, я просто не могу воспринимать работу, даже в хорошей должности и при хорошей зарплате, если не работаю на себя и не занимаюсь любимым делом.

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