ATLANTA — Former President Donald Trump wanted Herschel Walker as the Republican Senate nominee in Georgia when few other party leaders did.
Now, Mr. Walker is in a jump-ball election against Democratic incumbent Sen. Raphael Warnock, and it’s a contest that could say just as much about Mr. Trump as about Mr. Walker.
Georgia is a state Mr. Trump won in 2016, then lost in 2020, then went to battle with fellow Republicans Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger over their handling of that election.
Now polls show Mr. Kemp and Mr. Raffensperger cruising to victories.
“If everyone won but Herschel, you can draw your own conclusions,” said former Georgia House Majority Leader Jerry Keen.
It’s not just Georgia.
From Arizona to Ohio to North Carolina to Pennsylvania, Trump-backed candidates are competing in races that will determine how big of a night Republicans will have on Tuesday.
They also will determine whether Mr. Trump, the undisputed king of Republican primary politics, remains a viable force beyond his core base of voters.
“Trump will have bragging rights if most of his candidates win on Election Day,” said Darrell M. West, director of governance studies at the Brookings Institution. “If several of them in high-profile races lose, it will undermine his electoral credibility and create openings for other Republicans to contest the 2024 presidential nomination.”
Most intriguing are Georgia, Pennsylvania and Arizona, states that Mr. Trump won in 2016 but lost in 2020.
In Arizona, Trump-backed Blake Masters is running for the U.S. Senate and Kari Lake is seeking the governorship.
Brian Seitchik, an Arizona-based Republican Party strategist, said Ms. Lake’s contest is “the most important” race for Mr. Trump.
“She is very much running as a first cousin of Donald Trump,” Mr. Seitchik said. “If she is able to flip the script in Arizona, that is a very good sign for Donald Trump and his desire to both win the nomination and return to the White House.
“If Lake loses, it would be extremely troubling because this was the closest state in the country in the 2020 presidential election,” he said.
Ms. Lake has embraced Mr. Trump and showered him with praise.
“I mean, short of getting Abraham Lincoln to endorse you, which is impossible, I think President Trump’s endorsement is pretty big,” she told The Washington Times in a recent interview.
She enters Election Day a slight favorite, according to prognosticators.
Meanwhile, Mr. Masters’ race against Democratic incumbent Sen. Mark Kelly is considered a toss-up, as is Trump-endorsed Republican Mehmet Oz’s race against Democrat John Fetterman in Pennsylvania’s race for U.S. Senate.
Analysts have wondered whether candidates with less of an association with Mr. Trump would have been doing better in those races right now.
Early this year, Republicans were confident about taking control of the Senate.
After Trump-backed candidates emerged from primaries, those hopes dimmed in the eyes of some analysts. Democrats even pumped money into races to bolster those candidates, figuring they would be the easiest to defeat in a general election.
Most of the candidates have since proved competitive. Prognosticators now say Republicans are likely to reclaim the House and it’s anyone’s guess who emerges on top in the Senate. There’s a real possibility that the Senate remains divided 50-50, with Vice President Kamala Harris delivering control to Democrats.
Stan Barnes, a Republican strategist, said the primaries settled the fact that the GOP is the party of Mr. Trump and his “America First” movement.
“So the question is, now that we know that, how big is the phenomenon when it comes to the general electorate, and we are going to find that out,” said Mr. Barnes, who is based in Phoenix.
“Like Arizona, in states with crowded primaries where Donald Trump made an endorsement and won the nomination … if the general election yields Republican victories, then we will have multiple examples of ‘America First’ politics winning the day despite being outspent and maligned 24 hours a day by the Democratic Party,” Mr. Barnes said. “That is going to scare the hell out of Democratic operatives and candidates in every state that looks and feels like Arizona.”
Other analysts caution against reading too much about Mr. Trump from Tuesday’s results and say different dynamics are at play in each race.
In Georgia, Mr. Walker transcends the Trump brand and remains legendary from his days playing football at the state’s flagship university and later in the NFL.
“No one here associates Herschel Walker with Donald Trump. Hershel Walker is separate from him. He’s an icon,” said Brian Robinson, a Georgia-based Republican Party strategist. “I literally have never lived in a home where there weren’t pictures of Herschel Walker on the wall going back to the 1980s.”
He said Mr. Trump hasn’t been a factor in the campaign.
“We’re an outlier,” Mr. Robinson said. “You see Trump doing events in Arizona and Nevada and Pennsylvania and Ohio, but not here, and I think it shows you those candidates think he is a net positive, and in Georgia, it’s a little more complicated.”
Pennsylvania has intricacies with Mr. Fetterman, the state’s lieutenant governor, having suffered a stroke in May that has raised serious questions about the Democrat’s ability to serve.
In Arizona, Republican Party strategist Barrett Marson said Ms. Lake’s opponent, Ms. Hobbs, has been struggling.
“A win is a win, but I will tell you, Katie Hobbs has run one of the worst campaigns in America,” he said. “If she had run a halfway decent campaign, she probably would have won.”
• Seth McLaughlin can be reached at smclaughlin@washingtontimes.com.
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