Tuesday election roundup: Mace wins early, Golden to face ex-NASCAR driver

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Daniela Altimari, Mary Ellen McIntire and Niels Lesniewski | CQ-Roll Call (TNS)

The House Republican Conference will get a new member soon after voters in an Ohio district filled a vacant seat Tuesday. In Maine, a former NASCAR driver will face a Democrat on the GOP’s target list. Republicans in South Carolina, meanwhile, backed an incumbent over a challenger in a marquee race, but an open seat is headed for a GOP runoff in two weeks. North Dakota also picked nominees for an open seat, while Republicans in Nevada chose challengers for targeted Democrats.

Here’s a rundown of those elections.

Ohio

Rulli to fill Johnson seat: Michael Rulli, a Republican state senator whose family name is on grocery stores, won a special election to the 6th District seat that has been vacant since Rep. Bill Johnson resigned in January.

Rulli had 52 percent to Democrat Michael Kripchak’s 48 percent when The Associated Press called the special election at 9:02 p.m. Eastern time. When he is sworn in, Republicans will hold 219 seats to Democrats’ 213.

Rulli won a close primary victory against a fellow state lawmaker in March in part because his state legislative district lined up with more of the House district. He said his focus will be on growing the local economy, including manufacturing and energy industries in eastern Ohio.

Maine

Ex-NASCAR driver laps opponent: State Rep. Austin Theriault, a former NASCAR driver backed by former President Donald Trump and national Republicans, won the nomination to take on Democratic Rep. Jared Golden in the 2nd District.

Theriault had 70 percent of the vote when the AP called the race at 8:52 p.m., defeating fellow state Rep. Mike Soboleski, a former actor in TV police dramas.

Theriault was the clear fundraising leader, taking in $1.2 million to Soboleski’s $117,000 as of May 22.

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Golden, who in 2018 flipped a district that backed Trump in 2016 and won reelection by 6 percentage points in 2020 when district voters again backed Trump, had raised $3.7 million through May 22. He had $2.4 million on hand to Theriault’s $581,000.

Golden has shown he’s a good fit for voters, but Republicans think Theriault, 30, will be a strong counter to the incumbent especially with new policy dynamics that could play out this year.

After a mass shooting in the district in 2023 left 18 people dead, Golden said he would support an assault weapons ban after previously opposing such proposals. Theriault has sought to go on offense on the issue, criticizing Golden for proposing a government gun registry.

Inside Elections with Nathan L. Gonzales rates the November race Lean Democratic.

North Dakota

Fedorchak wins nod to succeed Armstrong: Public Service Commissioner Julie Fedorchak won the Republican primary to succeed Rep. Kelly Armstrong in the state’s at-large House seat.

Fedorchak had 46 percent of the vote when the AP called the race at 10:19 p.m. Eastern time. Former state Rep. Rick Becker had 29 percent in the five-candidate field. Trygve Hammer won the Democratic primary.

Armstrong won the Republican nomination for governor, and had 68 percent of the vote when the AP called the race at 9:21 p.m. He’ll face Merrill Piepkorn, who was unopposed in the Democratic primary.

Both races in November are rated Solid Republican by Inside Elections.

South Carolina

Mace crushes rival: Rep. Nancy Mace, who battled with some ultraconservative members of the Republican conference but also voted to oust Speaker Kevin McCarthy, pushed back a primary challenge from fellow Republican Catherine Templeton.

Mace, who is seeking her third term, had 58 percent of the vote to Templeton’s 29 percent in a three-candidate race when The Associated Press called the race at 8:40 p.m.

Since coming to Congress in 2021, Mace has cultivated a reputation as a fiscally conservative but socially moderate Republican who craves the limelight.

Templeton, the former director of the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control, had the backing of McCarthy. Mace was endorsed by Trump.

The race got expensive: Some outside groups have spent $5.3 million to help Templeton, while others spent $2.6 million to help Mace.

Templeton’s backers included $3.8 million from South Carolina Patriots PAC, a super PAC that reported most of its money coming from another super PAC that has not disclosed most of its donors. She also benefited from $652,000 spent by WFW PAC, which backs Republican women running for Congress.

Outside spending to support Mace included $1 million by Club for Growth Action and another $1.5 million by Win It Back PAC, a group whose top donors include Club for Growth Action.

Mace will face the winner of Tuesday’s Democratic primary, business executive Michael B. Moore, in November. Inside Elections rates the race Likely Republican.

GOP runoff in 3rd District: The Republican primary for an open seat held by retiring Rep. Jeff Duncan will be decided June 25 after none of the seven candidates got more than 50 percent of the vote.

Trump-endorsed pastor and motivational speaker Mark Burns and psychiatric nurse practitioner Sheri Biggs were the top two vote-getters, with 31 percent and 30 percent, respectively, when the AP called that the race would go to a runoff at 9:16 p.m.

Paint store manager Byron Best easily won the Democratic primary, with more than 60 percent of the vote when the AP called the race at 8:30 p.m.

The seat has been held since 2011 by Duncan, a Republican who routinely won with 70 percent of the vote. Duncan said in January he would not seek reelection. Inside Elections rates the November race as Solid Republican.

©2024 CQ-Roll Call, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Visit cqrollcall.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Opinion: Borough Jails Must Move Forward, With Guidance From Impacted People

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“When the state takes away a person’s liberty, it bears a serious obligation to provide them proper care, and the built environment is a big part of that. Cutting our jail population significantly and overhauling the material conditions that people live in will be a massive victory.”

Gerardo Romo/NYC Council

Protestors hold signs calling for the closure of Rikers Island jails at a rally in 2019.

CityViews are readers’ opinions, not those of City Limits. Add your voice today!

Last fall, I attended a community design guidelines meeting for the Manhattan borough-based jail that will replace “the Tombs” as part of the plan to close Rikers. At the time, my nephew had just been transferred upstate after spending two hellish years on Rikers Island. For me, my sisters, and my mom, that also meant two hellish years struggling to support him in an environment that was designed to banish him out of sight and disconnect him from his community. As someone who knows the strain that Rikers puts on families, and as an organizer with Freedom Agenda working to shut it down, I knew that I had the exact insights needed to shape this design process.

Unfortunately, I didn’t get to do that. Instead, I was subjected to hours of people shouting that the replacement jail shouldn’t be built at all. They complained about noise, costs, parking, and sometimes very openly about the people who would be held there and people, like me, who would visit them. Some people expressed outrage over the Department of Correction’s failure to keep trees outside The Tombs alive, but made no mention of the dozens of people who have died on Rikers Island since 2021.

At one point a graduate student sitting in front of me, who later told me she was an abolitionist, rolled her eyes and said mockingly, “Oh how nice, you’re gonna make a visiting room…in a jail.” I thought about the multiple buses and hours-long wait I had to endure to sit in a cramped, decrepit Rikers visiting room and look at my nephew through glass so scratched I could barely see him.

While the audience at the design session seemed to include both people who were content to let Black and brown folks keep dying on Rikers Island and a few who presented themselves as advocates for us, the effect was the same—I was completely silenced. I expected the city to make it difficult for people with lived experience to be heard in this process, but that night my fellow New Yorkers were actually a bigger barrier to participation.

I’m a staunch advocate for closing Rikers, and for the borough jails. Let me explain why. The first and most important is that this is a plan to shrink incarceration, from 14 jails to four. Any misconceptions about that should have been resolved by the fact that our lock-em-up mayor frequently complains that the borough jails will hold too few people for his liking and tries at every turn to delay their construction.

Thankfully, other city leaders have shown a firm understanding that reducing incarceration, while investing in alternatives, will increase safety, not jeopardize it, and are resisting Mayor Eric Adams’ efforts to derail this plan and fill up Rikers. People who talk about the borough jail plan as an expansion are either deliberately lying, or they’re revealing how invisible the sprawling capacity of Rikers is to them.

Incarceration is inherently harmful, so reducing it is the most important way to reduce that harm. But it’s not enough. As long as anyone is still incarcerated, conditions of confinement matter. 

When people arrive at Rikers now, they first go through intake areas that are nothing more than a massive cage, where people have to sit on the floor next to broken toilets, with mice and roaches crawling over them. Then they’re transferred to dank housing areas that are stifling in the summer and frigid in the winter, with communal showers and plumbing so faulty that sometimes raw sewage leaks into their cells and dayrooms.

Even constant repairs can’t fix this, since the Rikers jails are largely built on decomposing trash. The ground shifts as it settles and causes cracks in the buildings, and also exposes people on the island to leaking methane. If you’ve never been deprived of your liberty, you might forget how much small things in your environment matter. But I know being able to shower in an individual stall, look out an actual window in a space that doesn’t stink, and access to clinic and recreation spaces directly instead of relying on guards for transport would all have been transformative for my nephew’s physical and mental well-being. Not to mention being close enough for us to come for a quick visit after work, instead of only when we could put aside a half-day.

Creating these transformed conditions via the borough jails won’t be cheap, but cheap isn’t the goal. The goal is, first, for incarceration to be as limited as possible, and, second, as responsible as possible. When the state takes away a person’s liberty, it bears a serious obligation to provide them proper care, and the built environment is a big part of that. Cutting our jail population significantly and overhauling the material conditions that people live in will be a massive victory.

And we’ll still have a lot of work to do. The Department of Correction’s corruption is well-known, and the work to uproot it is ongoing. But I can guarantee you that everyone who is actually invested in doing something about that knows that every step of that work will be made easier when DOC no longer enjoys the privilege of operating a 400-acre penal colony hidden from public view.

Personally, I won’t be fully satisfied until all of our people are free. As a Native New Yorker and Puerto Rican woman raised in pre-gentrification Jackson Heights by a single mother, I have seen how disinvestment combined with criminalization has stolen so much from my community and the people I love. I desperately want our society to get to a place where we can make prisons and jails obsolete. But I know that while we tackle the long-term work of undoing these entrenched systems of oppression, we also have to do everything we can to ease the suffering of the people dealing with their impacts here and now.

It comes down to this: if you believe that a plan to close Rikers is acceptable only if it inconveniences no one, costs nothing, and solves every problem with the criminal legal system in one fell swoop, then no plan will ever suffice and we’ll end up with…Rikers. I won’t accept that, and no one else should either.

The borough jail designs are not yet finalized and we cannot waste the opportunities that exist right now to shape this plan for the better—for example, pushing back on the mayor’s plan to add beds and reduce therapeutic housing units in the process. Not everyone will want to participate in this design process, but I hope they at least won’t stand in the way of letting me and other impacted people do so.

Ashley Abadia-Santiago Conrad is a senior community organizer with Freedom Agenda.

Christina Rost named director of Ramsey County Veterans Services

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Christina Rost has been named director of Ramsey County Veterans Services.

Christina Rost. (Courtesy of Ramsey County)

Rost had served as interim department director since August 2022, and before that, was a veteran services officer with the county starting in 2016.

She also worked 12 years as a contractor for the U.S. Department of Defense, where she served as a military family assistance specialist, worked as a case manager as well as a nursing assistant.

Rost has a bachelor’s degree in human services from Metro State University and was in the Minnesota Army National Guard for nine years.

A resident of Rosemount, Rost volunteers at her church and serves on the Minneapolis Veterans Administration Medical Center’s Consumer Advisory Board. She replaces Maria Wetherall who retired after 13 years in 2022 as department director.

Ramsey County Veterans Services provides county-wide education, assistance, counsel, and advocacy for veterans, their dependents and survivors who are eligible for federal, state, and local benefits based on service in the military. The department connects peacetime and war-era veterans and their families from all branches of services to the benefits they’ve earned.

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US widens sanctions on Russia to discourage countries such as China from doing business with Moscow

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By EMMA BURROWS (Associated Press)

The United States widened its sanctions against Russia Wednesday as G7 leaders prepared to gather in Italy for a summit where the top priorities will be boosting support for Ukraine and grinding down Russia’s war machine.

Wednesday’s package targeted Chinese companies which help Russia pursue its war in Ukraine and raised the stakes for foreign financial institutions which work with sanctioned Russian entities.

The U.S. has sanctioned more than 4,000 Russian businesses and individuals since the war began, in an effort to choke off the flow of money and armaments to Moscow, whose superior firepower has given it an advantage on the battlefield in recent months. Nonetheless, new companies continually pop up as Russia attempts to rework supply chains.

“We have to be very honest with ourselves that Putin is a very capable adversary who is willing to adapt and find those willing collaborators,” Aaron Forsberg, the State Department’s Director for Economic Sanctions Policy and Implementation, told The Associated Press.

Sanctions against Russia, he said, are therefore a “dynamic affair.”

While sanctions have not stopped the flow of illicit goods, the aim is to make it harder for Russia to source crucial technology as well as driving up the mark-up on the goods. Wednesday’s package targets more than $100 million in trade between Russia and suppliers for its war.

More than 300 new sanctions are largely aimed at deterring individuals and companies in countries including China, the United Arab Emirates and Turkey from helping Moscow circumvent Western blocks on obtaining key technology. They also threaten foreign financial institutions with sanctions if they do business with almost any sanctioned Russian entity, underscoring the U.S. view that the Kremlin has pivoted the Russian economy on to a war footing.

Russia’s military is “desperate for access to the outside world,” said Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen.

The announcement came shortly before President Joe Biden arrived in Italy where he and other G7 leaders are urgently looking at aiding Ukraine, including turning frozen Russian assets into billions of dollars of support for Kyiv.

Seven Chinese and Hong-Kong based companies were targeted Wednesday for shipping millions of dollars of material to Russia, including items which could be used in Russian weapons systems.

U.S officials say China is the leading supplier of critical components to Russia, supplying both Chinese and Western technology.

On Wednesday the U.S sanctioned a Chinese state-owned defense company which officials said had shipped military equipment for use in the Russian defense sector.

The move sends the message that the U.S. is “willing to wade into more treacherous territory” by increasing the pressure on the Chinese government, said Benjamin Hilgenstock, senior economist at the Kyiv School of Economics.

“We will address (China’s) support for the Russian defense industrial base. And we will confront China’s non-market policies that are leading to harmful global spillovers,” White House national security spokesman John Kirby told reporters Tuesday.

China did not sanction Russia after President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine, and Putin ended a visit to China in May by emphasizing the two countries’ burgeoning strategic ties.

“The Chinese leadership is not interested in making these sanctions a success,” said Janis Kluge, a Russia sanctions specialist at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs in Berlin (SWP.)

Beijing, Kluge said, is reluctant to stop a valuable trade is worth large amounts of money and it does not want to “add to the pressure on Putin in this war.”

Imports from China are vital to Russia because China is a major producer of critical components, including for Western companies. Chinese companies also act as intermediaries for the sale and shipment of Western components to Russia.

But while Chinese technology has been found on the battlefield in Ukraine, most of the components still come from Western nations including those which are “overwhelmingly” found in high-tech drones and ballistic missiles, said Hilgenstock.

As well as China, the U.S. targeted businesses in Turkey and the United Arab Emirates which officials said sent high-priority items to companies in Russia, including to businesses which were already sanctioned.

In December, the White House said foreign financial institutions could be sanctioned if they worked with entities in Russia’s defense sector. Wednesday’s expansion of sanctions now means that those institutions could face sanctions if they work with almost any sanctioned Russian entity.

The fear of triggering secondary sanctions is an effective threat, analysts said.

While President Xi Jinping may not want to facilitate Western sanctions on Russia, “Chinese banks have always been very careful not to become a target of secondary sanctions because it would be very costly,” Kluge said, pointing to cases where Chinese banks have ended relationships with Russian customers.

Wednesday’s package targeted Russia’s financial infrastructure, including the Moscow Stock Exchange, in an attempt to limit the amount of money flowing in and out of Russia.

It also aims to hobble the development of Russia’s energy sector and future sources of cash, including Arctic liquified natural gas projects which have been shipped critical LNG technology by a Chinese company.

In addition, the package targeted people involved in the forced transfer and deportation of Ukrainian children to Russia. Five people in Russia and Russian-occupied Ukraine were sanctioned after participating in the forced militarization and reeducation of the children and of providing them with Russian passports.