A voter arrives to cast their ballot on primary election day at a polling place in Boston Avenue United Methodist Church in Tulsa, Okla., on Tuesday, June 16, 2026. (Nick Oxford/The New York Times)
Share
|
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
|
President Donald Trump’s grip on the Republican Party in the South, where he has enjoyed perhaps his greatest success lifting his chosen candidates over those he has perceived as disloyal, will be tested Tuesday in three states featuring primary or runoff contests with candidates he backed.
The top race of the day is in Georgia, where Republican voters will pick a nominee in a primary runoff to challenge Sen. Jon Ossoff, who had been considered the most vulnerable Democratic incumbent going into the midterm elections but has proved to be a formidable fundraiser and popular candidate.
Georgia Republicans are still stung by losing Senate contests to Democrats in 2021 and 2022. Both candidates have pitched themselves as the more electable choice against Ossoff. The race has pitted Trump, who made a late endorsement Sunday, against Georgia’s most popular Republican, Gov. Brian Kemp.
In deeply Republican Alabama, the GOP primary runoff will almost certainly decide the contest to succeed Sen. Tommy Tuberville, a Republican who is running for governor. Trump’s chosen candidate is in a surprisingly tough race against a former Navy SEAL running as an antiestablishment outsider.
In the Oklahoma governor’s race, Trump backed Mike Mazzei, a wealthy outsider who has spent around $11 million of his own money on his campaign. The crowded race, which includes the state attorney general, Gentner Drummond, could go to a runoff.
Will any Trump-backed candidates lose in the South?
Trump’s endorsement has been imposing in primary contests across the country this year, but nowhere has that been more true than in the South, where he backed Republican challengers who defeated Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Sen. John Cornyn of Texas. Still, a couple of the president’s chosen candidates are in difficult races Tuesday.
In the Alabama Senate runoff, Trump has backed Rep. Barry Moore, a third-term member of Congress and longtime loyalist, since early in the campaign. But the outsider candidacy of Jared Hudson, a former Navy SEAL, caught on with Republican voters after Hudson’s surprise, second-place finish in the May primary.
A similar insider-versus-outsider dynamic is at play in Georgia, where Trump has long backed Lt. Gov. Burt Jones for governor. Jones has been locked in a hugely expensive campaign filled with negative TV ads against Rick Jackson, a wealthy healthcare executive who has embraced Trump and his policies, even without receiving the president’s endorsement.
The winner will take on Keisha Lance Bottoms in November. Bottoms is a former Atlanta mayor who won the Democratic nomination outright last month.
Will late Trump and Kemp endorsements matter in Georgia?
Trump made a late endorsement in the Georgia Senate runoff Sunday morning, backing Rep. Mike Collins, an immigration hard-liner, over Derek Dooley, a lawyer and former football coach, who is a longtime friend of Kemp. By the time the president’s endorsement arrived, Republican voters had been casting ballots early in Georgia for five days.
But Republicans expect most of their voters to go to the polls Tuesday. And Collins has styled himself throughout the race as the MAGA candidate, so Trump’s backing likely only sharpened the race’s existing contours.
It was a different story in the Georgia governor’s race, where Kemp, who is term-limited, made a surprising endorsement Sunday night for Jones over Jackson. Kemp had stayed neutral in the race, saying he was focused on campaigning for Dooley for Senate. The Jones campaign, which has touted Trump’s endorsement nonstop in TV ads, quickly cut an ad about the Kemp endorsement Monday.
Who will Oklahoma Republicans choose to succeed Markwayne Mullin in the Senate?
Trump picked Sen. Markwayne Mullin to be his homeland security secretary in March, creating a vacancy in the Senate in the solidly Republican state. Then, Trump endorsed Rep. Kevin Hern, giving him a clear advantage in a GOP primary with four other competitors.
Another member of Congress, Rep. Stephanie Bice, had been considering a run for Senate but said after Trump backed Hern that she would remain in the House.
Hern was first elected to the House in 2018 after a career as a McDonald’s franchisee. Gov. Kevin Stitt, who cannot seek a third term in office this year, also decided not to run for the seat.
Will Georgia voters choose an election denier to run state elections?
Both Republicans vying to become Georgia’s next secretary of state — and oversee the state’s elections — are aligned with the MAGA wing of the Republican Party. Vernon Jones, a former DeKalb County chief executive and ex-Democrat, has falsely claimed that the 2020 presidential election was stolen, while state Rep. Tim Fleming, a former aide to Kemp, has said there were irregularities.
The winner will compete in a November election that could become a referendum on the 2020 vote in Georgia, which both Kemp and the current secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger, have declared emphatically that Trump lost. Raffensperger ran for governor this year but did not make the runoff. Should Jones or Fleming succeed him, they are likely to take the management of Georgia’s election infrastructure in a very different direction.
—
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
By Patricia Mazzei/Nick Oxford
c. 2026 The New York Times Company





