Wisconsin Congressional Seat Called Most Likely to Flip to GOP
With hopes of filling a seat that opened with longtime Democratic U.S. Rep. Ron Kind’s retirement, four Democrats are vying for the nomination in Wisconsin’s 3rd Congressional District.
Derrick Van Orden, who is endorsed by former President Donald Trump and narrowly lost to Kind in 2020, is running unopposed in the Republican primary.
The district is now friendlier to Republicans, and it is the No. 1 congressional district likely to flip, according to the National Journal.
“It’s pretty clear. That is the number one race in Wisconsin,” political analyst Joe Heim told LaCrosse, Wisconsin-based News8000.com.
Kind defeated Van Orden by less than three percentage points in 2020 in a district that Trump won by five percentage points the same year.
Kind was first elected in 1997 and announced in 2021 that he would not seek another term.
“The truth is I’ve run out of gas,” Kind said during a news conference after announcing his retirement.
Politics, he added, should not be “a constant combat sport” with the goal of destroying the other side.
The four Democratic primary candidates are state Sen. Brad Pfaff, former CIA officer Deb McGrath, small business owner Rebecca Cooke, and La Crosse City Council member Mark Neumann.
Pfaff, FiveThirtyEight reports, could be considered the favorite, though there has not been a poll conducted in the race. Democratic Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers has endorsed Pfaff, who served as the governor’s chief of staff.
Pfaff leads fundraising among the candidates with $722,000 followed by McGrath at $639,000 and Cooke with $432,000.
Cooke is an Evers appointee to the Wisconsin Economic Development Commission. She has emphasized her childhood growing up on a farm.
“I say, ‘Hi, I’m Rebecca Cooke. I grew up on a dairy farm up in Eau Claire, and these are my values and these are the things
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