Most of the candidates that former President Donald J. Trump endorsed in contested Republican primaries have won in this first phase of the 2022 legislature. funded.
There have been some notable losses, however.
Here’s a look at Mr. Approval’s record. Trump in some of the most watched races.
Doug Mastriano, who received the support of Mr. Trump just days before the May 17 primary, won the Republican nomination for governor of Pennsylvania. Credit … Michael M. Santiago / Getty Images
A win in Pennsylvania and a key race was too close to be called
Doug Mastriano, a retired state senator and colonel who has spread countless false claims about the 2020 election and attended the protest that led to the Capitol riots, won the Republican nomination for governor of Pennsylvania. Mr. Trump endorsed it just days before the May 17 primary.
In the primary criticisms of the Republican Senate of the state, it is not yet known how the endorsement of Mr. Trump to Dr. Mehmet Oz. The career between Dr. Oz and Dave McCormick was extremely tight and is likely an official count. Kathy Barnette, who had a late rise in the race, took a strong third place.
Rep. Ted Budd won the Republican Senate nomination in North Carolina. Credit … Allison Lee Isley / The Winston-Salem Journal, via Associated Press
Two wins and one loss to North Carolina
Representative Ted Budd, who received the support of Mr. Trump and the influential anti-tax group Club for Growth, won the Republican nomination in the Senate, and Bo Hines, a 26-year-old political novice who captivated Mr. Trump was catapulted to victory in his Republican primary by a seat in the House outside Raleigh.
But Rep. Madison Cawthorn sank under the weight of repeated scandals and mistakes. He was ousted from his primary on May 17, a scathing rejection of a Trump-backed candidate. Voters elected Chuck Edwards, a state senator, in the primary.
JD Vance won his competitive Republican primary for a seat in the Ohio Senate with the help of Mr. Jance’s endorsement. Trump. Credit … Maddie McGarvey for The New York Times
Victories in Ohio
Senate candidate JD Vance won his hard-fought primaries for a field of well-funded candidates, almost all of whom ran as Trump-like Republicans. Mr. Vance, an author and venture capitalist, had transformed from a “never Trump boy” in 2016 to an “America First” candidate in 2022. His long-running campaign benefited financially from the large expenses of his former to Peter. Thiel, a billionaire founder of PayPal.
Max Miller, a former Trump aide who denied allegations of assault by an ex-girlfriend and later received the support of Mr. Trump won the primary in the House after two other Republican incumbents chose not to run. Rep. Anthony Gonzalez, who had voted to oust Trump, withdrew after just two terms. Rep. Bob Gibbs, a Trump supporter, left after his district was redrawn at the end of the campaign, confronting Mr. Miller.
Trump also supported Madison Gesiotto Gilbert, a lawyer and former beauty queen who had been a replacement for her presidential campaign. He won a seven-member primary for an open seat in Congress that left vacant Rep. Tim Ryan, a Democratic candidate for the Senate.
Representative Alex Mooney of West Virginia, right, with Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, leader of the House minority. Mr. Mooney prevailed in his primaries over Rep. David McKinley. Credit … Stefani Reynolds for The New York Times
A victory in West Virginia
In a head-to-head House primary, Rep. Alex Mooney defeated Rep. David McKinley in a newly drawn Congressional district that largely overlaps with what Mr. McKinley represented for over a decade.
The endorsement of Mr. Trump was seen as the deciding factor in the race, in which Mr. Mooney attacked Mr. McKinley for supporting President Biden’s infrastructure spending agenda and for voting to create the committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by Mr. Trump’s supporters.
Charles W. Herbster, a longtime financial supporter of Mr. Trump, lost his Republican primary for governor in Nebraska despite the endorsement of Mr. Trump. Credit … Walker Pickering for The New York Times
A loss to Nebraska
Charles W. Herbster, a wealthy agribusiness executive, lost his three-way primary to Jim Pillen, a University of Nebraska regent who had the backing of longtime Governor Pete Ricketts. Trump and has a limited term.
Mr. Herbster had linked his identity to that of Trump, making the name of a cheeky strange stranger facing the “swamp” of Lincoln, the state capital. Mr. Trump supported Mr. Herbster, a longtime financial advocate, last year. At the end of the campaign, Mr. Herbster was accused of touching several women. Mr. Herbster denied the allegations, saying they were orchestrated by his political rivals. Mr. Trump then staged a rally for him.
Idaho Lt. Gov. Janice McGeachin lost her main challenge to Gov. Brad Little. Credit … Grant Hindsley for The New York Times
And another defeat in Idaho
Idaho Governor Brad Little surpassed Mr. Trump to the state’s lieutenant governor, Janice McGeachin, who challenged him in the Republican primary.
Mrs. McGeachin, who was a starter in defying Mr. Pandemic’s orders. Little, he had tried to beat the ultraconservatives in the intense red state that Mr. Trump ran overwhelmingly in 2016 and 2020. But he appeared to garner less than 30 percent of the vote. in Idaho, which has separate primaries for the governor and the lieutenant governor: the genesis of the tense couple.