A fraternal battle among Arizona Republicans has ended, with Abe Hamadeh defeating Blake Masters in the primary for the GOP-friendly Eighth Congressional District.
While polls closed in Arizona on July 30 at 7 p.m. local time, the race wasn’t called by the Associated Press until 5:27 p.m. on July 31.
Former President Donald Trump, who previously endorsed Hamadeh in the race, backed both Masters and Hamadeh in a Truth Social post on July 27.
In 2022, the two pro-Trump Republicans effectively ran alongside each other and Kari Lake, another well-known Arizonan.
Both Hamadeh and Masters lost their 2022 races, two of many GOP casualties in the predicted “Red Wave” cycle that wasn’t. While Masters quickly conceded to Sen. Mark Kelly (R-Ariz.), Hamadeh and his allies challenged a much narrower loss to Attorney General Kris Mayes through the court system.
This time around, the seat currently occupied by Rep. Debbie Lesko (R-Ariz.), who is retiring, was hotly contested by the two Republican hopefuls, along with other influential Arizona politicos.
Arizona Speaker of the House Ben Toma was another GOP contender. He took 21.2 percent of the vote with 86 percent counted.
Trent Franks, who formerly represented the district in the House, also ran in the Republican race, as did Arizona state Sen. Anthony Kern and Patrick James Briody. Franks had 16.5 percent with 86 percent counted, while Kern had 4.7 percent and Briody had 2.3 percent at the same point.
At a rally for Lake in Goodyear, Arizona, on July 27, Bill Brettner registered his disapproval of that messaging in an interview with The Epoch Times.
Post-race, Masters wrote, “For me, now, it’s back to business, and helping in any way I can to get Donald J. Trump back in the White House.”