


Democratic state Sen. Sarah McBride defeated two primary competitors in Delaware on Tuesday to advance to the general election, where a win would make the lawmaker the first openly transgender member of Congress.
The Associated Press called the House race for McBride at 8:41 p.m., 41 minutes after polls closed. The Democrat received 84% of the vote compared to Earl Cooper with 13% and Elias Weir with 3%.
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Republican John Whalen is leading in the primary with 55.5% compared to challenger Donyale Hall’s 44.5% as of 8:46 p.m. Hall reported a fundraising haul of almost $7,500, making him the second-highest fundraiser this primary cycle behind McBride with $1.7 million as of June.
If Whalen wins, he and McBride will go on to the general election to replace Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-DE), who is running for the state’s open Senate seat being vacated by Sen. Tom Carper (D-DE). Blunt Rochester is also looking to make history as the first woman and first black senator from Delaware.
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Both Carper and Blunt Rochester, as well as former Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), have endorsed McBride. McBride’s strongest primary challenger, Eugene Young, suspended his campaign in June. Young had Gov. John Carney’s (D-DE) endorsement but had not filed paperwork.
The Cook Political Report rates the House race as “solid Democratic.”