Congressional upsets: Progressives, candidates of color, and GOP outsiders net primary wins – USA TODAY

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The 2020 congressional primary elections have been marked by a number of upsets, where candidates with little name recognition have been propelled into the national spotlight.

Early primary upsets demonstrated the strength of some progressive  and staunch conservative candidates, who sometimes lacked backing from their respective parties.

In New York, three Democratic candidates are poised to replace or succeed moderate longtime incumbents in June. In Illinois, a progressive candidate, backed by the Justice Democrats organization, beat the most conservative Democrat in Congress. In Pittsburgh, a progressive statehouse candidate making her first run for office ousted an incumbent who is the brother of the city’s former mayor.

More:Booker beats progressive challenger, Van Drew race set and other takeaways from Tuesday’s primary

Candidates of color, specifically Black candidates, have been on the winning side of several notable upsets. Physician Cameron Webb, who is Black, beat three white opponents in Virginia’s 5th congressional district primary, a seat Democrats hope to take back now that the Republican incumbent lost his own primary. Wesley Hunt and Burgess Owens, Black candidates who won Republican nominations in Texas and Utah, respectively, are both running to represent districts in which Black people are minorities. 

Jamaal Bowman, who's running against Rep. Eliot Engel in a Democratic Party primary, pictured at an endorsement event with Zephyr Teachout in Mount Vernon.

More Republican women are also winning primaries. According to the Center for American Women in Politics at Rutgers, a record 55 Republican women won House primaries this year, clearing the previous bar of 53 set in 2004. That’s in part because more Republican women are running — 220 filed to run for the House, up from 120 who ran in 2018. 

Here are some of this primary season’s most surprising upsets:

Lauren Boebert

Rep. Scott Tipton, a five-term incumbent from Colorado, lost the 3rd congressional district’s Republican nomination to Lauren Boebert, a restaurant owner and outspoken gun rights activist. Boebert beat Tipton by nearly ten points

More:John Hickenlooper wins Colorado Democratic primary, will face Sen. Cory Gardner

Trump had endorsed Tipton, tweeting his support for the congressman in December as well as the night before the election. Boebert’s website describes her as a supporter of Trump, praising “his policies to Make America Great Again.”

Lauren Boebert waits for returns during a watch party in Grand Junction, Colo., Tuesday, June 30, 2020.

Boebert’s restaurant, Shooters Grill in Rifle, Colorado, became the subject of national media attention in 2014, for an open carry policy allowing staff to be armed with guns. Her commitment to gun rights also earned her a viral moment in 2019, when she confronted then-presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke at a town hall. “I was one of the gun owning Americans who heard (O’Rourke) speak regarding your ‘Hell yes I’m going to take your AR-15s and AK-47s,'” she said. “Well, I’m here to say, hell no you’re not.’”

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2020/07/22/2020-election-democrats-republicans-both-see-congressional-primary-runoff-upsets/5369587002/

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