Three weeks ago today, White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany started her briefing by bragging about the primary elections held the day before. “President Trump has now endorsed candidates and has a 64-to-0 record in congressional, special, and primary election races since the midterms,” she said, “demonstrating the strength of and support for the president’s agenda across the country as evidenced in the 64 consecutive congressional, special, and primary elections over the past 13 months.”
A week later, in the wake of another round of GOP primaries, the Republican National Committee’s Steve Guest went a little further, boasting on Twitter that Donald Trump has an “undefeated 73-0 record of candidate endorsements in congressional primary and special elections this cycle.” Guest added that this record was “an emphatic reminder” of the “enthusiasm” surrounding the president.
As talking points go, this was a narrow one. Trump-backed candidates suffered plenty of defeats in 2018 and 2019, and his “undefeated 73-0 record” was built almost entirely on the results of primary elections.
Nevertheless, the streak has been snapped. A few days after Steve Guest’s online victory lap, Trump encouraged Republicans in Virginia’s 5th district to back Rep. Denver Riggleman’s (R) re-election, but locals ignored the president’s advice. Yesterday, it happened again — twice.
Voters rebuffed President Donald Trump and nominated two Republicans he opposed to House seats from North Carolina and Kentucky on Tuesday.
In North Carolina’s 11th congressional district — a seat that former Rep. Mark Meadows (R) held before becoming the White House chief of staff — Trump backed GOP activist Lynda Bennett. Local Republicans didn’t care, and instead nominated Madison Cawthorn, a 24-year-old motivational speaker.









