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US Midterms 2026
17JUL

Letlow routs Fleming by 13.6 points

2 min read
13:49UTC

Julia Letlow beat John Fleming 56.8% to 43.2% in Louisiana's Republican Senate runoff on 27 June, a margin far wider than late polling had suggested.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

In Louisiana, unlike Texas, Trump's endorsement and the big money pulled together and produced a rout.

Julia Letlow beat John Fleming 56.8% to 43.2% in Louisiana's Republican Senate runoff on Saturday 27 June, a 13.6-point margin far wider than late polling had suggested 1. The runoff had been set for 27 June after Senator Bill Cassidy finished third in the primary . A mid-June Rigamer survey had shown Letlow's 15-point lead collapse to two points ; the result buried that reading. Turnout fell 21% from the May primary, to 316,538 ballots 2.

The money ran almost entirely one way. The Accountability Project Inc, a super PAC aligned with Governor Jeff Landry, reported $5.9m in independent expenditures against Fleming; Trump's own Securing American Greatness super PAC added $1m 3. Super PACs can spend unlimited sums on a race but are barred from coordinating with the candidate they support. Fleming drew essentially no outside support. Jamie Davis took the Democratic nomination 80-20 and advances to the general election.

Set the result against Texas. There a nine-to-one spending advantage for John Cornyn collapsed because Trump had endorsed Ken Paxton, who won by 28 points , . In Louisiana the endorsement and the money pointed the same way, and Fleming lost by more than 13 points. Across the cycle's two Senate primaries a Trump endorsement has predicted the winner better than cash has in either direction.

Two contests make a pattern, not a law, and this one cannot separate the endorsement from the spending. What Louisiana shows cleanly is money amplifying an endorsement it agrees with, rather than substituting for one.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Julia Letlow easily won the Republican runoff for Louisiana's open Senate seat, beating John Fleming by more than 13 points, a much bigger margin than polls just two weeks earlier had shown. Two things happened at once: fewer people voted than in the first round in May, and a pro-Letlow group spent nearly $6m attacking Fleming in the final stretch while he had no outside money helping him at all. Both favoured Letlow, and together they produced a landslide where the polls had shown a toss-up.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Turnout fell 21% from May's primary to June's runoff, a drop that concentrates the electorate around its highest-propensity, most contactable voters. Low-turnout runoffs reward whichever campaign can repeatedly reach that shrunken pool, which is exactly what a well-funded advertising and mail operation is built to do.

Fleming entered the runoff with almost no outside spending, while the Accountability Project committed $5.9m against him. That asymmetry compounds, rather than simply adds to, a turnout environment already tilted toward whoever can afford to keep reaching the remaining voters.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Louisiana's Senate seat, already expected to stay Republican after Cassidy's primary defeat, now heads to November with a nominee who has shown she can absorb a large late-money assault without her lead collapsing.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Money uncapped, ballot rules untouched

NBC News· 1 Jul 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Non-US foreign-policy commentary (Jerusalem Post)
Non-US foreign-policy commentary (Jerusalem Post)
Jerusalem Post coverage frames Graham's death chiefly as a foreign-policy loss, citing his role as the Senate's most vocal advocate for Ukraine and Russia sanctions and Israel-related security votes, distinct from Washington's floor-arithmetic framing. That reporting adds that South Carolina has not elected a Democrat to the Senate since 1998, so control of the seat itself was never genuinely contested.
Election-law and voting-rights critics
Election-law and voting-rights critics
Election-law critics point to South Carolina's own arithmetic: the federal 45-day overseas-ballot deadline for the 11 August primary fell on 27 June, a fortnight before Graham died, and Section 7-11-55 contains no voter-eligibility language despite grounding the June-primary voter bar. They read both as design gaps a state can exploit through inaction, not through any single deliberate violation.
South Carolina State Election Commission
South Carolina State Election Commission
Commission director Conway Belangia declared the eligibility review "completed" on 16 July, barring anyone who voted in June's Democratic primary from the 11 August Republican primary, citing only "the requirements of South Carolina election law". The commission is standing behind that ruling and its filing-to-runoff calendar without naming the statute either rests on.
Senate Democratic opposition
Senate Democratic opposition
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Senate Republican leadership
Senate Republican leadership
Majority Leader John Thune moved within two days of Graham's death to install Ron Johnson as Budget chair, whose office says he is "prepared to serve", though no conference vote has confirmed it. Leadership pushed the FY2027 resolution through committee 20-14 on 16 July, treating the vacancy as a gap to close, not a reason to pause the SAVE Act.
Labour-market economists
Labour-market economists
Economists note June payrolls rose just 57,000, about half the forecast 115,000, with April and May revised down further. They call it the only development this week bearing directly on how incumbents can run on the economy in November.