Incredible New Video Appears to Support Theory That Russians Shot Down Azerbaijan Airliner
The Grinch Busts Drug Dealers in Peru
Immigration Moratorium Now
Young Americans Shouldn’t Memory-Hole Soviet Horrors
Biden the Invisible President Lies Without Consequence
Time for Trump to Drop Lawsuits and for the Press to Apologize
Christmas Thanks for God’s Blessings
NERC’s Grid Assessment Should Be a Wake-Up Call
Da Bears and the Donald
The Case of Daniel Penny: Lessons on Self-Defense
Celebrating the Miracle of Protection
The German Christmas Market Attack Demonstrates Perils of Mass Migration Policies
Newsom's Housing Goal Falls Short As Homelessness Increases
High Levels of Radiation Detected Across the East Coast After Mysterious Drone Sightings
Why These Liberal Lawyers Think the Gov't Should Use 'Nuclear Option' to Prevent...
Tipsheet

Oregon Snapshot: Governor Race

Update: The race is officially called for Brown. The final results fluctuated only slightly from our first post. Brown ended up with 51.2 percent and Pierce got 43.7 percent.

Advertisement

---original post---

Oregon’s race for governor is shaping up to be a fight. Kate Brown currently has 51.7 percent of the vote with Bud Pierce seven points behind at 43.2 percent. Brown, the incumbent, was challenged by Pierce, who was relatively unknown before being nominated by the Republicans.

Check out more election results here.

Governor races are not isolated state-by-state issues. They are important for the performance of the parties in other races. The governor either stands or gives up in protecting states’ rights against federal overreach. NPR’s Jessica Taylor points out that, “some of the biggest policy battles in the country this year have originated on a state, not a federal, level. From environmental concerns to religious freedom laws to school choice to social issues and more, governors will be on those frontlines.”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement