Eric Greitens – Michmutters
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Eric Schmitt beats former Gov. Eric Greitens in Missouri GOP Senate primary, NBC projects

FARMINGTON, MISSOURI – JULY 31: Missouri Attorney General and Republican Senate candidate Eric Schmitt speaks to supporters in Hall Pavilion at Englar Park on July 31, 2022 in Farmington, Missouri. Schmitt is holding campaign events on the last weekend before the August 2nd primary elections in Missouri. He is the front runner in the primary race that includes former Missouri Governor Eric Greitens, to replace outgoing Senator Roy Blunt. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

Michael M. Santiago | Getty ImagesNews | Getty Images

Eric Greitens, the scandal-tarred former Missouri governor who launched a comeback bid against the wishes of many Republicans, will lose the state’s GOP Senate primary, NBC News projects.

Eric Schmitt, currently the state’s attorney general, is projected to proceed to the general election, where he will compete with a Democratic nominee for the seat being vacated by retiring Republican Sen. Roy Blunt.

The primary results mark a thudding defeat for Greitens, who fully embraced former President Donald Trump and fought against recent allegations of domestic abuse as he looked to claw his way back to the political fore.

Greitens had announced his Senate bid nearly three years after resigning from the governor’s office amid accusations that he blackmailed a hairdresser with whom he was having an affair. Greitens admitted to the tryst of her, but denied he had threatened to release her nude photographs he took of her if she revealed the affair.

He was charged with felony invasion of privacy related to the alleged blackmailing. Greitens was also charged with illegally using a charity donor list to help fund his 2016 gubernatorial campaign. Both charges were dropped around the time Greitens resigned in June 2018.

Eric Greitens, Missouri Governor, pictured at the Robin Hood Veterans Summit in New York City.

Craig Barritt | Getty ImagesEntertainment | Getty Images

Those and other scandals led mainstream Republicans to worry about a Greitens candidacy jeopardizing the party’s hold on a Senate seat in a state that otherwise reliably votes Republicans into high office. Democrats are desperate to keep their razor-thin majority in the Senate, but their control of the chamber is threatened by a challenging political environment, exacerbated by President Joe Biden’s unpopularity and recent economic turmoil.

Greitens had aligned himself completely with Trump during his Senate campaign, including echoing Trump’s false claims about widespread fraud tainting the 2020 presidential election. Kimberly Guilfoyle, the girlfriend of Donald Trump Jr., joined Greitens’ campaign as national co-chair.

But the former president ultimately did not give Greitens a full-throated endorsement. Rather, he bizarrely endorsed “Eric” in the Missouri GOP Senate primary, where two of the top candidates are named Eric.

“I trust the Great People of Missouri, on this one, to make up their own minds,” Trump said in a social media post on the eve of the primary.

Both Greitens and Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt touted Trump’s announcement as though it were a personal endorsement.

Polling averages from RealClearPolitics showed Greitens had a smaller lead over a top Democratic primary candidate than either of his two biggest competitors in the Republican primary.

After Sheena Greitens filed court documents in March alleging Eric Greitens abused her and their young son while they were married, numerous top Republicans called on Greitens to drop out.

“If you hit a woman or a child, you belong in handcuffs, not the United States Senate,” said Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., who had investigated Greitens when he was Missouri’s attorney general.

Blunt himself said that Greitens “should not be a candidate for the Senate” if Sheena Greitens’ allegations are true.

Correction: This article has been updated to correct the photo of Eric Schmitt.

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Eric Schmitt beats former Gov. Eric Greitens in Missouri GOP Senate primary, NBC projects

FARMINGTON, MISSOURI – JULY 31: Missouri Attorney General and Republican Senate candidate Eric Schmitt speaks to supporters in Hall Pavilion at Englar Park on July 31, 2022 in Farmington, Missouri. Schmitt is holding campaign events on the last weekend before the August 2nd primary elections in Missouri. He is the front runner in the primary race that includes former Missouri Governor Eric Greitens, to replace outgoing Senator Roy Blunt. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

Michael M. Santiago | Getty ImagesNews | Getty Images

Eric Greitens, the scandal-tarred former Missouri governor who launched a comeback bid against the wishes of many Republicans, will lose the state’s GOP Senate primary, NBC News projects.

Eric Schmitt, currently the state’s attorney general, is projected to proceed to the general election, where he will compete with a Democratic nominee for the seat being vacated by retiring Republican Sen. Roy Blunt.

The primary results mark a thudding defeat for Greitens, who fully embraced former President Donald Trump and fought against recent allegations of domestic abuse as he looked to claw his way back to the political fore.

Greitens had announced his Senate bid nearly three years after resigning from the governor’s office amid accusations that he blackmailed a hairdresser with whom he was having an affair. Greitens admitted to the tryst of her, but denied he had threatened to release her nude photographs he took of her if she revealed the affair.

He was charged with felony invasion of privacy related to the alleged blackmailing. Greitens was also charged with illegally using a charity donor list to help fund his 2016 gubernatorial campaign. Both charges were dropped around the time Greitens resigned in June 2018.

Eric Greitens, Missouri Governor, pictured at the Robin Hood Veterans Summit in New York City.

Craig Barritt | Getty ImagesEntertainment | Getty Images

Those and other scandals led mainstream Republicans to worry about a Greitens candidacy jeopardizing the party’s hold on a Senate seat in a state that otherwise reliably votes Republicans into high office. Democrats are desperate to keep their razor-thin majority in the Senate, but their control of the chamber is threatened by a challenging political environment, exacerbated by President Joe Biden’s unpopularity and recent economic turmoil.

Greitens had aligned himself completely with Trump during his Senate campaign, including echoing Trump’s false claims about widespread fraud tainting the 2020 presidential election. Kimberly Guilfoyle, the girlfriend of Donald Trump Jr., joined Greitens’ campaign as national co-chair.

But the former president ultimately did not give Greitens a full-throated endorsement. Rather, he bizarrely endorsed “Eric” in the Missouri GOP Senate primary, where two of the top candidates are named Eric.

“I trust the Great People of Missouri, on this one, to make up their own minds,” Trump said in a social media post on the eve of the primary.

Both Greitens and Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt touted Trump’s announcement as though it were a personal endorsement.

Polling averages from RealClearPolitics showed Greitens had a smaller lead over a top Democratic primary candidate than either of his two biggest competitors in the Republican primary.

After Sheena Greitens filed court documents in March alleging Eric Greitens abused her and their young son while they were married, numerous top Republicans called on Greitens to drop out.

“If you hit a woman or a child, you belong in handcuffs, not the United States Senate,” said Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., who had investigated Greitens when he was Missouri’s attorney general.

Blunt himself said that Greitens “should not be a candidate for the Senate” if Sheena Greitens’ allegations are true.

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Kansas, Missouri Primary Election Results

Aug. 2, 2022 Kansas, Missouri Primary Election Results

Stay with KMBC for the latest election updates



I’M CHRIS KATZ ON THIS PRIMARY ELECTION NIGHT. THE LATEST RESULTS RUNNING AT THE BOTTOM OF YOUR SCREEN AND AT KMBC.COM IN KANSAS, SENATOR. JERRY MORAN WINS THE GOP PRIMARY HEADING TO NOVEMBER THE AP HAS ALSO DECLARED, KANSAS GOVERNOR KELLY THE AND THE DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY FOR GOVERNOR, AND AGAIN, NO SURPRISE THE AP DECLARING ATTORNEY GENERAL ERIC SMITH THE WINNER IN THE GOP NOMINATION THE SUNFLOWER STATE FIRST STATE OF THE NATION TO VOTE ON ABORTION SINCE THE SUPREME COURT STRUCK DOWN ROE VS. WADE. HERE IS A LOOK AT THE LATEST NUMBERS WITH JUST A BARELY A QUARTER OF THE STATEWIDE VOTE IN AND WE HAVE YET TO HEAR ANYTHING IN TERMS OF NUMBERS FROM JOHNSON COUNTY. WE HAVE TEAM COVERAGE TONIGHT KMB TONIGHT’S EMILY HOLWICK IS FOLLOWING OPPONENTS OF KANSAS AMENDMENT 2, EMILY. OF MONEY SOLUTIONS A SUPPORTERS OF THE NO VOTE WHO HAVE GATHERED HERE IN OVERLAND PARK TO WATCH THOSE RESULTS COME IN TELL ME THAT THEY ARE STILL CAUTIOUSLY OPTIMISTIC. THEY NOTED THAT OF COURSE SINCE YOU SAID ONLY ABOUT 25% OF THAT VOTE HAS COME IN. THEY SAID THEY KNOW IT IS STILL EARLY, BUT RIGHT NOW THEY DON’T WANT TO GET AHEAD OF THEMSELVES. SO AGAIN CAUTIOUSLY OPTIMISTIC IS WHAT THEY ARE SAYING RIGHT NOW, OF COURSE, THEY SAY THAT THEY WANT TO PROTECT REPRODUCTIVE FREEDOMS REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS HERE IN KANSAS. THEY HAVE WORKED HARD. THE PAST COUPLE OF MONTHS GETTING THAT MESSAGE OUT KNOCKING ON DOORS TEXT PHONE CALLS. WE’VE HAD MANY SUPPORTERS TAKE THE STAGE HERE TONIGHT TO ADDRESS THE CROWD IN SUPPORT OF VOTING. NO, SO THEY CONTINUE TO WATCH THOSE RESULTS COME IN AND WE’LL KEEP BRINGING YOU LIVE COVERAGE FROM HERE IN OVERLAND PARK THROUGHOUT THE NIGHT REPORTING LIVE EMILY HOLWICK KNBC 9 NEWS EMILY. THANK YOU CAME. IT’S A NICE HALEY HARRISON ALSO LIVE IN OVERLAND PARK WITH SUPPORTERS OF KANSAS AMENDMENT TWO HALEY. AND THE MOOD IS FESTIVE HERE TONIGHT CHRIS IN OVERLAND PARK WHERE IT’S REALLY OF THE KANSAS PRO-LIFE MOVEMENT. WE ACTUALLY JUST HAD AN APPEARANCE FROM KANSAS ATTORNEY GENERAL AND GOVERNMENTAL CANDIDATE DEREK SCHMIDT. IT’S ALSO SEEN THE PRESIDENT FOR KANSANS FOR LIFE AND FORMER CASEY KAY MAYOR, DAVID ALVEY THEY KICKED OFF THIS EVENT TONIGHT WITH A PRAYER ASKING PTHAT GOD’S WILL BE DONE. THEY ALSO SPOKE ABOUT THE RECENT ACTS OF VANDALISM AGAINST CHURCHES THAT HAVE STOOD IN SUPPORT OF THIS AMENDMENT REPORTING LIVE IN OVERLAND PARK HALEY HARRISON, KMC 9 NEWS. ALRIGHT DAILY. THANKS. HERE’S A LOOK AT OTHER RESULTS COMING IN TONIGHT MCCAB. 9 YOUR HOME FOR ELECTION COVERAGE WILL HAVE UPDATES THROUGHOUT THE EVENING SCROLLING AT THE BOTTOM OF YOUR SCREEN. AND OF COURSE LIVE COVERAGE TONIGHT AT 9:00 ON KCWE AND AT 10 ON KMBC.

Aug. 2, 2022 Kansas, Missouri Primary Election Results

Stay with KMBC for the latest election updates

Voters headed to the polls Tuesday to decide a number of candidate races and issues. The polls closed at 7 pm in Kansas and Missouri.The latest unofficial election results will display here after polls close:TOP RACES RESULTS:KANSAS ELECTION RESULTS:MISSOURI ELECTION RESULTS:KANSAS CITY-AREA RACES, BALLOT QUESTION RESULTS:

Voters headed to the polls Tuesday to decide a number of candidate races and issues. The polls closed at 7 pm in Kansas and Missouri.

The latest unofficial election results will display here after polls close:

[Click here to see Kansas results, or scroll down.]

[Click here to see Missouri results, or scroll down.]

TOP RACES RESULTS:

KANSAS ELECTION RESULTS:

MISSOURI ELECTION RESULTS:

KANSAS CITY-AREA RACES, BALLOT QUESTION RESULTS:

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Trump sparks confusion after endorsing ‘ERIC’ in Missouri GOP race

Two Erics are top contenders in Tuesday’s GOP primary for an open US Senate seat in Missouri.

But it wasn’t clear who former President Donald Trump backed even after he issued an endorsement in the race where Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt and former Governor Eric Greitens are both running.

On the eve of the election, Trump said in a statement he was “proud to announce that ERIC has my Complete and Total Endorsement!”

“There is a BIG Election in the Great State of Missouri, and we must send a MAGA Champion and True Warrior to the US Senate, someone who will fight for Border Security, Election Integrity, our Military and Great Veterans, together with having powerful toughness on Crime and the Border,” Trump stated.

“We need a person who will not go back down to the Radical Left Lunatics who are destroying our Country.

“I trust the Great People of Missouri, on this one, to make up their own minds, much as they did when gave me landside victories in the 2016 and 2020 Elections, and I am therefore proud to announce that ERIC has my Complete and Total Endorsement!”

Both candidates were quick to claim and tout Trump’s support.

Schmitt, in a tweet, wrote, “I’m grateful for President Trump’s endorsement. As the only America First candidate who has actually fought for election integrity, border security & against the Left’s indoctrination of our kids – I’ll take that fight to the Senate to SAVE AMERICA!”

FILE - In this Aug. 6, 2020 file photo, Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt speaks during a news conference in St. Louis.  Schmitt announced Wednesday, March 24, 2021, that he's making a bid for retiring US Sen.  Roy Blunt's seat
Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt was quick to claim Trump’s support after the former president’s confusing statement was released.
AP Photo/Jeff Roberson, File

Greitens also wrote he was “honored to receive President Trump’s endorsement.”

“From the beginning, I’ve been the true MAGA Champion fighting against the RINO establishment backing Schmitt,” I have tweeted.

He also bragged about being backed by Donald Trump Jr. and his girlfriend, media personality Kimberly Guilfoyle, in a separate tweet.

Greitens also claimed he “just had a GREAT phone call with President Trump” and thanked him for the support.

Republican gubernatorial candidate Eric Greitens during the first general election debate in the race for Missouri governor at the Missouri Press Association convention Friday, Sept.  30, 2016, in Branson, Mo.
Former Governor Eric Greitens also interpreted Trump’s statement as a sure endorsement of him.
AP Photo/Jeff Robersob

Schmitt hit back by reposting a tweet from conservative media personality Dan Bongino commenting on Greitens’ claim.

“Bulls—t. Read the endorsement. This dude is a FRAUD,” Bongino said in reference to Greitens.

Schmitt and Greitens are both vying to replace outgoing Sen. Roy Blunt. Schmitt is the favorite with an Emerson College poll last week showing him with about 33% of the predicted vote. After that, Rep. Vicky Hartzler had 21% and Greitens was in third with 16%.

Many national Republicans want Greitens to lose because of past scandals he was involved in, including charges of domestic abuse by his ex-wife.

While there’s a third candidate named Eric — Eric McElroy — also running, he is a long shot contender.

Still, Hartzler threw congratulations his way Monday.

“Congratulations to Eric McElroy. He’s having a big night,” she said in statement, according to CBS News.

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Trump, declining to pick one candidate, endorses ‘ERIC’ in Tuesday’s US Senate primary | politics







Eric Greitens Eric Schmitt Donald Trump

From left: Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, former President Donald Trump, and former Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens


St. Louis Post Dispatch and AP photos


ST. LOUIS — Former President Donald Trump, declining to make a single endorsement in Tuesday’s US Senate primary, announced he trusted Missouri voters to “make up their own minds” between former Gov. Eric Greitens and Attorney General Eric Schmitt.

In a statement posted after 5 pm Monday on Truth Social, a blogging site similar to Twitter, Trump wrote, “I trust the Great People of Missouri, on this one, to make up their minds, much as I did when they gave me landslide victories in the 2016 and 2020 Elections, and I am therefore proud to announce that ERIC has my Complete and Total Endorsement.”

The late nod to two of the frontrunners in the Senate race represented an anti-climatic end to the sweepstakes in which Republican candidates sought to ingratiate themselves to the former president, who dominated his Democratic opponents in his two elections here.

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Nationally, political scientists, analysts and journalists are watching the Missouri race to weigh Trump’s impact on midterm elections. But Trump didn’t make a final pick, potentially saving face in what has been a tight three-way contest.

Trump said in July he definitely wouldn’t endorse US Rep. Vicky Hartzler, the third Republican frontrunner, in the race. Asked earlier Monday about expectations that Trump still may endorse a Republican in the race, Hartzler shook off her non-endorsement, acknowledging the unpredictability of the former president.

“President Trump is going to do what he wants to do,” she said. “He may even endorse me.”

Greitens had claimed Trump’s endorsement in a tweet minutes after Trump’s announcement, making no mention of Schmitt.

“Honored to have the support of President Trump! We will MAGA!” Greitens said.

Schmitt followed that with his own tweet that made no mention of Greitens: “Donald Trump endorses Eric Schmitt for Senate. Stand with Trump and vote for conservative Eric Schmitt tomorrow.”

Hartzler, meanwhile, issued a statement noting there is a third, lesser-known Eric also is seeking the GOP nomination, a fact that may have escaped the former president.

“Congratulations to Eric McElroy. He’s having a big night,” Hartzler said.

McElroy is a comedian and author who lives in Tunas in Dallas County.

Ending months of speculation

Political observers had for months speculated as to which candidate Trump would back in Missouri’s 21-candidate Republican primary to replace Sen. Roy Blunt, to Republican.

In December, conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt pleaded with Trump not to back Greitens, who resigned in 2018 after being consumed with scandals connected to an extramarital affair he had and his unreported receipt of a campaign donor list from the veterans charity he founded.

“Please don’t endorse Eric Greitens. That’s a nightmare, Mr. President. We’ll lose that seat,” Hewitt told Trump in a radio interview.

Trump made no promises at the time.

“Well, that’s an interesting opinion, that’s true,” Trump said. “He’s right now leading by quite a bit.”

Indeed, the former president had been warming to Greitens, Politico reported in early March. After all, despite scandals other Republicans feared they could hand the seat to Democrats in the fall, Greitens was out front in opposing Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, with whom Trump has feuded. (Schmitt and Hartzler also distanced themselves from McConnell last week.)

But two weeks after the Politico article, headlined “Trump’s McConnell obsession leads him toward Eric Greitens,” Greitens’ ex-wife accused the ex-governor of spousal and child abuse in court documents.

After those revelations, US Rep. Billy Long said Trump contacted him and talked about the allegations against Greitens, indicating concern from the former president about Greitens’ viability.

After the phone call, Trump issued a statement signaling he’d like to back Long but wondered if voters had “been considering” the southwest Missouri congressman, indicating Trump wanted to endorse a candidate with strong public support.

Greitens has been the subject of a multimillion-dollar campaign financed by GOP donors and operatives to paint him as unfit for office.

After leading the polls in the early going, Greitens began to fade, with Schmitt appearing to take the lead in the closing week.

Schmitt, too, had tried to court the former president.

On Dec. 23, Schmitt tweeted a picture of himself sitting next to Trump.

“It was great to be back at Mar-a-Lago and spend some time with President Trump during the holiday season. Merry Christmas!” I have tweeted.

On March 11, Schmitt made another appearance at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago, according to photos he posted on Twitter.

But the charm offensive apparently wasn’t enough to earn Trump’s outright backing.

Trump angered by recent poll

Trump, on his social media website on Sunday, signaled disapproval with Schmitt and Axiom Strategies, a political consulting firm working for Schmitt. Axiom’s polling arm, Remington Research Group, had released polls showing Schmitt leading the race.

On Sunday, Trump shared a link to a Breitbart article that accused Remington of underestimating Trump’s support in Missouri to boost the attorney general in polls.

“Wow, great dishonesty in politics,” Trump said in his social media post, with a photo of Schmitt below his statement. “Too bad!”

At a campaign stop in the St. Louis area, Schmitt was asked about a possible endorsement.

“I’d love to have it,” Schmitt said, adding voters had a choice between the “fighter,” Schmitt; Greitens, “who quit,” and Hartzler, “a do-nothing congresswoman who’s part of the establishment,” according to audio by St. Louis Public Radio.

Trump said in July that Hartzler called him for his endorsement, but he declined, saying she doesn’t have “what it takes to take on the Radical Left Democrats, together with their partner in the destruction of our Country, the Fake News Media and , of course, the deceptive & foolish RINOs.”

On Monday, Hartzler, R-Harrisonville, hosted a news conference in a St. Louis Lambert International Airport parking lot to criticize her two main competitors in the US Senate race.

To Greitens, she pointed out that he’s accused of abusing his family.

“That’s not conservative,” Hartzler said.

To Schmitt, she said he tried to use millions of dollars in tax credits to lure the Chinese to build a hub at the airport behind her.

“That’s not conservative,” Hartzler said.

And she criticized both of them for not sitting down for a debate.

“I guess they are afraid to fight a farm girl from Missouri,” said Hartzler, 61, describing herself as the “true conservative” in the race.

Hartzler left the airport, driving to other last-minute campaign stops in Rolla and southwest Missouri.

“We are getting a lot of support from every corner of the state,” she said.

Support for Democratic contenders

On the Democratic side of the race, former Marine Lucas Kunce touted endorsements Monday from US Sen. Bernie SanderI-Vt., and former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich, who served under President Bill Clinton.

Democrat Trudy Busch Valentine, meanwhile, announced her election night watch party would be at the Sheet Metal Local 36 union hall in St. Louis.

On the GOP side, Greitens wound up his campaign with a statewide fly-around that included a scheduled stop at the Spirit of St. Louis Airport in Chesterfield.

updated at 6:25 pm Monday, Aug. 1

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Trump, declining to pick one candidate, endorses ‘ERIC’ in Tuesday’s US Senate primary | politics







Eric Greitens Eric Schmitt Donald Trump

From left: Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, former President Donald Trump, and former Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens


St. Louis Post Dispatch and AP photos


ST. LOUIS — Former President Donald Trump, declining to make a single endorsement in Tuesday’s US Senate primary, announced he trusted Missouri voters to “make up their own minds” between former Gov. Eric Greitens and Attorney General Eric Schmitt.

In a statement posted after 5 pm Monday on Truth Social, a blogging site similar to Twitter, Trump wrote, “I trust the Great People of Missouri, on this one, to make up their minds, much as I did when they gave me landslide victories in the 2016 and 2020 Elections, and I am therefore proud to announce that ERIC has my Complete and Total Endorsement.”

The late nod to two of the frontrunners in the Senate race represented an anti-climatic end to the sweepstakes in which Republican candidates sought to ingratiate themselves with the former president, who dominated the Democrats in his two elections here.

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Top Republicans had raced to tie themselves to the former president, betting his support would be the key to success in deeply conservative Missouri, where the former president has been widely celebrated.

Without an early endorsement, the candidates crisscrossed the state Monday, hoping to seal up support heading into Election Day.

The former president had been warming to Greitens, Politico reported in early March — weeks before Greitens’ ex-wife accused the ex-governor of spousal and child abuse in court documents.

After those reliefs, US Rep. Billy Long said Trump contacted him and talked about the allegations against Greitens, indicating concern from the former president about Greitens’ viability.

After the phone call, Trump issued a statement signaling he’d like to back Long, but wondered if voters had “been considering” Long, indicating Trump wanted to endorse a candidate with strong public support.

Greitens has been the subject of a multi-million dollar campaign financed by GOP donors and operatives to paint him as unfit for office. After leading the polls in the early going, Greitens began to fade, with Schmitt appearing to take the lead in the closing week.

Trump, on his social media website on Sunday, conveyed disapproval with Schmitt and Axiom Strategies, a political consulting firm working for Schmitt. Axiom’s polling arm, Remington Research Group, had released polls showing Schmitt leading.

On Sunday, Trump shared a link to a Breitbart article that accused Remington of underestimating Trump’s support in Missouri to boost the attorney general in polls.

“Wow, great dishonesty in politics,” Trump said in his social media post, with a photo of Schmitt below his statement. “Too bad!”

At a campaign stop in the St. Louis area, Schmitt was asked about a possible endorsement.

“I’d love to have it,” Schmitt said.

Trump made clear in early July there was one candidate he definitely wouldn’t endorse: US Rep. Vicky Hartzler, one of the leading candidates in the primary.

Trump said Hartzler called him for his endorsement, but he declined, saying she doesn’t have “what it takes to take on the Radical Left Democrats, together with their partner in the destruction of our Country, the Fake News Media and, of course , the deceptive & foolish RINOs.”

On Monday, Hartzler, R-Harrisonville, hosted a press conference in a St. Louis Lambert International Airport parking lot to criticize her two main competitors in the US Senate race.

To Greitens, she pointed out that he’s accused of abusing his family.

“That’s not conservative,” Hartzler said.

To Schmitt, she said he tried to use millions of dollars in tax credits to lure the Chinese to build a hub at the airport behind her.

“That’s not conservative,” Hartzler said.

And she criticized both of them for not sitting down for a debate.

“I guess they are afraid to fight a farm girl from Missouri,” said Hartzler, 61, describing herself as the “true conservative” in the race.

Nationally, political scientists, analysts and journalists are watching the race, to weigh Trump’s impact on mid-term elections.

Asked Monday about expectations that Trump still may endorse a Republican in the race, Hartzler shook off her non-endorsement, acknowledged the unpredictability of the former president.

“President Trump is going to do what he wants to do,” she said. “He may even endorse me.”

She left the airport, driving to other last-minute campaign stops in Rolla and southwest Missouri.

“We are getting a lot of support from every corner of the state,” she said.

On the Democratic side of the race, former Marine Lucas Kunce touted endorsements from US Sen. Bernie SanderI-Vermont, and former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich, who served under President Bill Clinton.

Democrat Trudy Busch Valentine, meanwhile, announced her election night watch party would be at the Sheet Metal Local 36 union hall in St. Louis.

On the GOP side, Greitens wound up his campaign with a statewide fly-around that included a scheduled stop at the Spirit of St. Louis Airport in Chesterfield.

updated at 5:24 pm with Trump’s endorsement. This story will be updated.

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What to watch in primaries in Arizona, Michigan, elsewhere

In Missouri, scandal-ridden former Gov. Eric Greitens is attempting a political comeback. In Michigan, a crowded field of Republican gubernatorial candidates includes a man charged in the Jan. 6 US Capitol attack. In Arizona, a prominent figure in the QAnon conspiracy movement is running for the US House.

Those are among some of the most notable contests in Tuesday’s primary elections being held in six states.

Arizona, which Democrat Joe Biden narrowly won in 2020, is a top target for former President Donald Trump, who tried in vain to get his defeat overturned. He has endorsed a slate of candidates up and down the ballot who have promoted his false claims of a stolen election.

Trump has also been zeroed in on the 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach him over the Jan. 6 insurrection. Three of them are on the ballot Tuesday in Washington state and Michigan, as are two members of “the Squad,” Democratic Reps. Cori Bush of Missouri and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan.

Meanwhile, Kansas voters could clear the way for the Republican-controlled Legislature to further restrict or ban abortion if they approve a proposed state constitutional change. It’s the first referendum vote on abortion policy by a state since the US Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June.

Ohio is also holding a primary for state legislative races on Tuesday, three months after its statewide and congressional contests — a split system that resulted from legal wrangling over redistricting.

What to watch:

ARIZONA

Trump’s endorsed in Arizona all have one thing in common: They have loudly candidates disseminated misinformation about the legitimacy of the 2020 election, despite election officials and Trump’s own attorney general saying there is no credible evidence the race was tainted.

In the governor’s race, Trump has backed former television news anchor Kari Lakewho has said that she would not have certified Arizona’s election results in 2020. Lake faces businesswoman Karrin Taylor Robson, who is endorsed by former Vice President Mike Pence and outgoing Gov. Doug Duey.

Secretary of State Katie Hobbs, a staunch defender of the 2020 election, is strongly favored to win the Democratic nomination for governor.

In the Republican primary for US Senate, Trump has backed tech investor Blake Masters as the candidate to go up against Democratic incumbent Mark Kelly in the fall. Masters, whose campaign has been bankrolled by billionaire Peter Thiel, has called for reducing legal immigration and espoused the baseless “great replacement” conspiracy theory, claiming Democrats are trying to “replace Americans who were born here.”

Attorney General Mark Brnovich, another Senate candidate, has been weighed down by lackluster fundraising and fierce criticism from Trump, who says Brnovich did little to advance his election fraud claims. Another top candidate, Jim Lamonthe founder of a solar energy firm, has touted his experience as a military veteran and entrepreneur.

The Republican primary for secretary of state includes Trump-backed legislator Mark Finchem, a state representative who worked to overturn Trump’s 2020 loss; state Rep. Shawnna Bolick, who introduced a bill to let legislators ignore election results and choose their own presidential electors; and state Sen. Michelle Ugenti-Rita, who has long pushed to overhaul election laws. The GOP establishment has rallied around advertising executive Beau Lane in the race.

Ron Watkins, who has ties to the QAnon conspiracy theory, is considered a long shot in his House run. Watkins, a Republican, served as the longtime administrator of the online message boards that became the home of the anonymous “Q.” The conspiracy theory is centered around the baseless belief that Trump waged a secret campaign against enemies in the “deep state” and that a group of satanic, cannibalistic child molesters secretly runs the globe.

In the state Legislature, Arizona House Speaker Rusty Bowerswho testified at a Jan. 6 hearing about Trump’s pressure to overturn the 2020 election, faces a Trump-backed candidate in his bid to run for the state Senate.

MICHIGAN

The Republican primary for governor was wild from the start, with five candidates getting kicked off the ballot for failing to file enough valid nominating signatures.

Several of the remaining candidates have baggage that could hurt in a general election against Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

Real estate broker Ryan Kelley has pleaded not guilty to misdemeanor charges after authorities said he rallied Trump’s supporters to storm the US Capitol. Businessman Kevin Rinke was sued in the 1990s for sex harassment and racial discrimination — allegations he says were lies. Chiropractor Garrett Soldano hawked supplements he falsely claimed treated COVID-19. Businesswoman Tudor Dixonwho has been endorsed by Trump, has previously acted in low-budget horror pictures, one of which included a zombie biting off a man’s genitals.

All of the candidates falsely say there was fraud in the 2020 election, with Dixon, Kelley and Soldano saying the election was stolen from Trump.

Republican Rep. Peter Meijer is hoping to hold on to his seat after voting to impeach Trump. The former president has endorsed businessman and missionary John Gibbswho worked in the Trump administration under Housing Secretary Ben Carson.

MISSOURI

Greitens’ political career appeared over when he resigned as governor in 2018, following his admission to an extramarital affair and accusations of blackmail and campaign finance violations. On Tuesday, the former Navy SEAL officer has a chance at redemption in his Republican primary for the seat held by retiring GOP US Sen. Roy Blunt.

Greitens, Attorney General Eric Schmitt and US Rep. Vicky Hartzler are the front-runners in a crowded 21-person GOP field that includes US Rep. Billy Long and Mark McCloskey, the St. Louis lawyer who along with his wife pointed guns at racial injustice protesters who ventured onto their private street.

Trump has not made an endorsement in the race, though he’s ruled out Hartzler.

The GOP winner in Missouri, a solidly Republican state, will be favored in November. But Republican leaders have long worried that Greitens — his ex-wife has also accused him of abuseallegations Greitens has called “baseless” — could win the primary but lose the general election.

On the Democratic side, the nomination appears to be up for grabs between Lucas Kuncea Marine veteran and self-proclaimed populist, and Trudy Busch Valentinean heiress of the Busch beer fortune who has largely self-funded her campaign.

WASHINGTON

Two Republican House members from Washington state who voted to impeach Trump face primary challengers endorsed by him.

Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler, who has been in Congress since 2011, has said she voted for impeachment because she had “an obligation to the Constitution.” Trump has endorsed Joe Kenta former Green Beret and a conservative cable show regular who echoes the former president’s grievances about the 2020 election outcome.

Rep. Dan Newhouse, a congressman since 2015, said he cast the vote to impeach Trump for inciting and refusing to immediately stop the Jan. 6 insurrection. Among his challengers he is Loren Culpa Trump-backed former small-town police chief who refused to concede the 2020 governor’s race to Democrat Jay Inslee.

In Washington, the top two vote-getters in each race, regardless of party, move forward to November.

KANSAS

Voters will decide whether to approve a change to the state constitution that could allow the Legislature to restrict or ban abortion despite a 2019 state Supreme Court ruling that abortion access is a fundamental right. It’s the first referendum on abortion by a state since Roe v. Wade’s reverse.

In statewide races, Republican Kris Kobach is running for attorney general as he attempts a political comeback following losses in races for governor and US Senate in previous years. Kobach, the state’s former secretary of state, served as vice chair of a short-lived Trump commission on election fraud after the 2016 election.

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Associated Press writers Jonathan J. Cooper in Phoenix; Sara Burnett in Chicago; Jim Salter in O’Fallon, Missouri; Chris Grygiel in Seattle; and John Hanna in Topeka, Kansas; contributed to this report.

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Meg Kinnard can be reached at http://twitter.com/MegKinnardAP.

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Follow AP for full coverage of the midterms at https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections and on Twitter at https://twitter.com/ap_politics.

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