Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Carson Fends Off All Challengers, Other Incumbents Advance in Congressional Primary Races

André Carson
Congressman André Carson took a big step towards returning to Congress with a resounding win over Destiny Wells, George Hornedo and Denise Paul-Hatch. 

In a race that many had circled as one to watch, Carson is leading with 62 percent of the vote with 97 percent of the precincts reporting. Wells (23 percent) and Hornedo (10 percent) combined for 33 percent of the vote. Hatch is tracking at around four percent.

Carson will face Patrick McAuley. McAuley leads his competition, Felipe Rios, 84-16 percent with 97 percent of precincts reporting. In November, Carson will be the heavy favorite to head back to Congress for his 10th term. 

In other U.S. House primaries around the state...

In the 1st District, Incumbent Frank Mrvan will take on Barb Regnitz in November. Mrvan, a Democrat is leading Lavetta Sparks-Wade, 80-20, with 99 percent of precincts reporting.

Staying in Northern Indiana, incumbent Republican Rudy Yakim and Democrat James Decio will square off in November. Decio has apparently defeated his primary opponent, Shaun Mayens, 71-29 with 89 percent of the precincts reporting. Yakim was unopposed.

Democrat Kelly Thompson was unopposed in the 3rd District Congressional Primary. She'll take on incumbent Republican Marlin Stutzman. With 66 percent of the precincts reporting, Stutzman roughly has a 2/3 advantage on his opponent, Jon Kenworthy.

Out in West Central Indiana, Congressman Jim Baird leaned heavily on his endorsement by President Donald Trump and leads fellow Republican Craig Haggard, 61-31, with 80 percent reporting. Jon Piper is a distant third with eight percent of the vote. This race was thought to have been one to watch, but Baird has apparently easily won the GOP nod. On the Democratic side, it was an eight-way battle royale. It appears Drew Cox has emerged from the jumble with 30 percent of the vote. 

In Indy's Northside suburbs, 5th District incumbent, Republican Victoria Spartz, leads her challenger, Scott King, 60-40. Indiana State Senator J.D. Ford will be her opponent in November. In a seven-way primary, Ford has around 43 percent of the vote with 96 percent of the precincts reporting.

The 6th Congressional District encompasses East Central Indiana as well as the Southside of Marion County and much of the city's southern suburbs. It will be a rematch from 2024 as Democrat Cinde Wirth goes up against incumbent Jefferson Shreve. Wirth easily advanced, but it's been very tight for Shreve. Shreve is up 53-47 over Sarah Brown.

In he 8th District, Republican Mark Messmer, the incumbent, will take on Democrat Mary Allen.

Finally, in Indiana's 9th District, Representative Erin Houchin will have to wait until the morning to find out her opponent. It's a race that's too close to call as of yet. Brad Meyer leads Tim Peck in the race for the Democratic nomination by roughly 1,600 votes with 92 percent of the precincts reporting.

Libertarians will name their candidates at their party convention later in the election season.


Kern Appears to Possibly Swing Marion County Clerk's Race

Bob Kern
Photo: Hoosier Enquirer
For the second time in his long political career, Bob Kern has sent some shockwaves through Central Indiana politics. 

This time, he's not here to see it.

Back in 1998, Kern defeated the Democratic Party-backed candidate and a handful of others in the May Primary to take on Dan Burton in the General Election. Kern lost that race with Burton claiming 72 percent of the vote to Kern's 17 percent. Libertarian Joe Hauptmann came in with 11 percent of the vote. 

Since then, Kern's run for a wide variety of offices including his choice this year, Marion County Clerk. Unfortunately, Kern had a stroke and passed in early April. It was too late to remove his name from the ballot.

It appears that, from the grave, Bob Kern certainly played a factor in the Marion County Clerk's race. It appears that former Marion County Democratic Party Chair, former Marion County Recorder and the incumbent Marion County Clerk, Kate Sweeney Bell just got past attorney Karla Lopez-Owens.

As I write this blog post at 10:30 pm. Lopez-Owens trails Sweeney Bell by 2,088 votes with 97 percent of the vote in. Kern has 4,564 votes. If just half of the people who voted for him voted for Lopez-Owens, the race would have flipped. 

Of course, there are still votes to count and things could change, but it does appear that Bob Kern swung a race from the Great Beyond. Ain't politics grand? 

Perhaps Kate Sweeney Bell should pour one out for Bob tonight.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

No Joe...No

Hogsett and Easter on the
campaign trail in 2015

Joe Hogsett is teasing a run for Mayor in 2027, and no one I've talked to on either side of the aisle can figure out why.

Listen, not everything that Joe Hogsett has done since he was sworn in as Mayor of Indianapolis and the Chief Executive of Marion County has been bad. He does have some wins he can point to on his resumé that show he's succeeded as Mayor. 

That said, the mishandling of multiple scandals and the perception of inpropriety within his administration has drawn widespread and bipartisan criticism that, frankly, has been warranted.

I could detail it all here, but I think most of the readers of this blog would understand the laundry list of things that have gone wrong under Joe Hogsett's occupancy of the 25th Floor of the City-County Building. Multiple city agencies have come under review. His own inner circle has been rocked by scandal. He rehired people like Thomas Cook after strong allegations of inappropriate and creepy behavior came to light. He, himself, has been accused of being inappropriate towards a female staffer in his administration.

All of these allegations and mistakes have some on all sides of the political aisle, including me, calling for the resignation of the Mayor. When confronted in public, the Mayor has little to say. He dodges the allegations, and he continues to do things that just make you scratch your head. 

I don't take joy in saying any of this. Joe, at one time, was a very good friend of mine. Without me even asking him, Joe Hogsett, then US Attorney, showed up at my mother's funeral viewing. He spoke with my brother and me about loss and his own personal feelings when his parents passed. Joe included me on campaign mailings when I ran for City-County Council without asking for anything in return. He campaigned with me here in Decatur Township, an area I was never likely to win. That's why the behavior I see now seems so foreign with the Joe Hogsett I knew before he was Mayor. Maybe I just didn't see the signs. 

The fact of the matter now is that a fourth term as Mayor is something only Joe Hogsett wants. While he may see a path to victory by being the incumbent, I see a humiliating defeat coming. A defeat where, quite possibly, he could finish behind two far superior candidates in a primary. Maybe he thinks that the anti-Hogsett vote will split and he will cruise to victory on the support of his loyal base. At this point, though, who is that base? Developers? I mean...who?

Some have speculated privately to me that Hogsett is waiting until later in the year to decline a run. They speculate that he's continuing to enrich his campaign coffers based upon the possibility he could run again for a fourth term and then play queenmaker or kingmaker in 2027. That seems possible, but I can think of nothing more destructive for the Democratic Party in Marion County in 2027 than a run by Joe Hogsett.

For these reasons, please, say it ain't so Joe. 

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