Analysis
Politics
5 takeaways from the first primaries of the 2026 midterms
Updated March 4, 202611:21 AM ET, Heard on Morning Edition

By Domenico Montanaro, 3-Minute Listen

The first primaries of the 2026 midterm campaign are in the books.
The results in North Carolina and Texas could have big consequences for control of Congress.
Not all the results are finalized as yet, but here are some takeaways from what is known:
1. Texas Republicans head for a runoff in the Senate primary. Will Trump get involved?
The three-way race between incumbent Sen. John Cornyn, state Attorney General Ken Paxton and Rep. Wesley Hunt meant that no one was able to get above 50% of the vote.
That means 12 more weeks of the Texas Senate GOP primary — until May 26. This has already been the most expensive Senate primary in history, and another $100 million could be spent on top of the nearly $100 million that was already spent on just the Republican side, mostly to buoy Cornyn.
Elections
Only a fraction of House seats are competitive. Redistricting is driving that lower
Cornyn vs. Paxton is really the old vestiges of the traditional GOP against the new MAGA pugilists. The question is whether President Trump will get involved and put his finger on the scale to pick the candidate he thinks can win.
Trump avoided making an endorsement in the lead-up, saying he liked all three candidates, but with the Democratic side decided — state Rep. James Talarico defeated U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett — does Trump change his mind? He may decide that the money that would be spent among the warring Republicans in a likely GOP seat would be better spent on races in swing
Continue/Read Original Article: 5 takeaways from the Texas and North Carolina 2026 primaries : NPR
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