Republicans in Indiana, North Carolina, and West Virginia hit the polls on Tuesday to have their say in the GOP nomination process. At this point, they’re voting for either Mitt Romney or Ron Paul but the primary is still ongoing nonetheless. Along with Romney’s victories, Republicans also ousted Senator Richard Lugar in Indiana which is considered a victory for the Tea Party who backed the more conservative leaning Indiana state Treasurer Richard Mourdock. North Carolina also voted overwhelmingly to amend their state constitution to outlaw gay marriage and defined marriage as between a man and a woman.
Complete results in Indiana, North Carolina and West Virginia: CNN Election Center
Report from WABC:
NORTH CAROLINA — Six-term Indiana Sen. Richard Lugar was routed by the right flank of his own Republican Party on Tuesday, and North Carolina voters decided overwhelmingly to strengthen their state’s gay marriage ban. It was a double-barreled show of conservative enthusiasm and strength six months before the nation chooses between Democratic President Barack Obama and GOP rival Mitt Romney.
Romney swept three Republican primaries, moving ever closer to sealing his nomination in an otherwise sharply polarized environment.
“We are experiencing deep political divisions in our society right now. These divisions have stalemated progress in critical areas,” Lugar, a Capitol Hill diplomat and a deal-maker, said as he conceded to the tea party-backed GOP opponent who ended his nearly four-decade career in the Senate. Lugar’s foe, state Treasurer Richard Mourdock, had painted the Republican senator as too moderate for the conservative state.
North Carolinians voted to amend their state constitution to define marriage as between one man and one woman, effectively outlawing gay unions through a ballot measure pursued by the right.
Also Tuesday, Democrats overwhelmingly picked Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett to challenge Republican Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker in a June recall election. The primary outcome set up a re-match; Barrett lost to Walker in 2010.
These results all around can be seen as a positive for Romney since it does show the Tea Party is still actively affecting the process and the voters in North Carolina may not have moved as purple as once thought following the 2008 election. President Obama won North Carolina in 2008 and it is considered a must-win this time around if he is to be re-elected.
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