JEFFERSON CITY— In a legacy-sealing night for Gov. Mike Parson, two of his appointees to statewide office won their down-ballot Republican primary races by large margins in unofficial returns Tuesday.
Parson, who is leaving in January because of term limits, appointed two political unknowns to office to fill vacancies in 2023, including Attorney General Andrew Bailey and Treasurer Vivek Malek.
Despite both having well-heeled opponents, the duo were leading as votes were being tallied.
Here’s a rundown:
Attorney general
In the Republican primary for Attorney General, Andrew Bailey cruised to victory after his well-financed opponent, Will Scharf, conceded the race at about 8:30 p.m.
With 70% of precincts reporting, Bailey led by a 64-36 margin.
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The former combat veteran used military terms when he spoke to supporters after Scharf bowed out.
"Tomorrow when reveille sounds, Andrew Bailey will grab his ruck sack and his rifle and will stand in formation with other conservative leadersas we march on to victory in November," Bailey said.
Bailey was appointed to the post to fill the vacancy left by U.S. Sen. Eric Schmitt. Scharf is the former policy director for former ex-Gov. Eric Greitens and served as a federal prosecutor in St. Louis.
Scharf raked in nearly $6.9 million over the final stretch of the campaign from just two donors: Club for Growth Action — Missouri Federal Committee and the Concord Fund.
Bailey had Missouri megadonor Rex Sinquefield in his corner, receiving $1.7 million in contributions this year from the retired St. Louis entrepreneur.
Bailey also used his office to help generate culture war news stories to keep him in front of voters, including a failed effort to sue New York in response to the prosecution of Trump in his hush money case involving a porn star.
Scharf served on Trump’s legal team through his series of court cases, but the former president endorsed both candidates in the race.
Scharf called Bailey after the race was called and said their conversation was cordial.
"He has my unqualified support in the general election, and I hope that he will do Missouri proud in the coming years," Scharf said in a social media post.
On the Democratic side, attorney Elad Gross is unopposed.
Libertarian Ryan Munroe of St. Louis also is running.
Lieutenant governor
In the Republican race for lieutenant governor, Trump-backed St. Louis County attorney Dave Wasinger appeared poised to beat Sen. Lincoln Hough in a razor close race.
Both were hovering in at the 30% level with no other candidate close enough to make a run at them before Wasinger showed a slight advantage with 95% reporting.
Hough's campaign said they would not make a statement Tuesday while the results remained close. Wasinger's campaign did not respond to a request for comment.
Wasinger, who made an unsuccessful bid for state auditor in 2018, raised his profile with a slew of advertising in the final weeks of the campaign.
Both Sen. Holly Rehder of Scott City and Wasinger received late endorsements Monday from Trump, but the move did not translate into enough votes for Rehder.
If the race is close, a recount can be requested within seven days once final results are certified if the the margin is one-half of 1% of the votes cast for the office.
Hough of Springfield, the chairman of the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee, amassed an array of endorsements from influential lobbying groups as he attempted to fend off two Trump-endorsed candidates to be next in line for governor.
Franklin County Clerk Tim Baker of Robertsville and Paul Berry of Maryland Heights also are seeking the nomination.
On the Democrat side, Rep. Richard Brown of Kansas City was leading Anastasia Syes of St. Louis.
Libertarian Ken Iverson of Lake Saint Louis also is on the ballot.
Secretary of state
Sen. Denny Hoskins, a member of the Senate's obstructionist Freedom Caucus, held a commanding lead in Tuesday to replace Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft as the state's top election official.
With more than 90% of the precincts reporting, Hoskins was leading with 24% of the vote.
The wide-open battle includes St. Louis resident Valentina Gomez, state Sen. Mary Elizabeth Coleman, political strategist Jamie Corley, House Speaker Dean Plocher, Wentzville Municipal Judge Mike Carter, Greene County Clerk Shane Schoeller and Rep. Adam Schwadron of St. Charles County.
The office, which administers the state's elections, has been in the cross-hairs by Republicans after Trump falsley claimed the 2020 election was stolen.
Hoskins and Gomez took up the Trump mantle, calling for the end of machine-counted ballots in favor of hand-counting, which has been shown to be time consuming and less reliable.
Most of their opponents scoffed at the idea.
Plocher, despite having a healthy campaign account, was hamstrung by an ethics probe that began last year after he allegedly attempted tosteer an $800,000 software contractfor the House around the standard bidding process and then repaid a series of travel bills that he had charged to taxpayers.
The probe was dismissed, but not after Plocher's brand was damaged.
Among Democrats seeking the post, Rep. Barbara Phifer, a former church pastor from Kirkwood, was winning over two St. Louis opponents, Monique Williams and Haley Jacobson.
Libertarian Carl Herman Freese of Foristell also is on the ballot.
Treasurer
Missouri Treasurer Vivek Malek was declared winner Tuesday in the four-way Republican race to serve as the state’s chief bookkeeper.
Malek, an appointee of Parson and the first person of color to hold statewide office, focused on his support of Trump and a crackdown on immigration as he amassed a war chest in pursuit of a full, four-year term.
“I want to thank my family and everyone who gave their time and energy to this campaign,” Malek said in a statement posted on social media. “I am humbled to receive the Republican nomination for state treasurer."
Malek, who immigrated to the US to attend school at Southeast Missouri State University, collected about 42% of the vote with 81% of the precincts reporting.
Of his opponents, only Sen. Andrew Koenig was polling above 20%, followed by Springfield attorney Lori Rook and House Budget Committee Chairman Cody Smith of Carthage.
Malek was a political unknown until Parson chose him to replace outgoing Treasurer Scott Fitzpatrick. He triumphed in the fundraising category, taking advantage of contributions from a former business he owned that has links to his native India.
But he also made some missteps, including partnering with a gas station slot machine company to help market the treasurer's office on their games. He dropped the plan amid outrage from lawmakers.
Democrat Mark Osmack of Manchester and Libertarian John Hartwig Jr. of Clayton also are on the ballot.
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In this Series
Bell defeats Bush, Kehoe is Republican governor candidate: Catch up on election results
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Wesley Bell beats Cori Bush in 1st Congressional District after heated, expensive race
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Republican Mike Kehoe, Democrat Crystal Quade win primaries for Missouri governor
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Missouri incumbents Andrew Bailey and Vivek Malek win Republican contests
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Kurt Erickson
Jefferson City reporter
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