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US Midterms 2026
29MAY

Letlow's 15-point lead collapses to a tie

3 min read
08:48UTC

A Rigamer poll taken 15 to 16 June put Julia Letlow at 40.2% and John Fleming at 38.2%, inside the margin, collapsing a lead that ran 52 to 37 two weeks earlier. Fleming is surging on almost no outside money.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Louisiana is the second straight test of whether outside money can still buy a low-turnout Republican runoff.

A Rigamer poll taken 15 to 16 June put Julia Letlow at 40.2% against John Fleming's 38.2%, inside the margin of error, after a Kaplan survey in early June had her ahead 52 to 37 1. Letlow's double-digit lead in the Louisiana Senate runoff has evaporated in a fortnight. Letlow then declined Fleming's challenge to three debates, citing time with voters. The runoff falls on 27 June, after this briefing publishes, so what follows is a trajectory rather than a result.

Louisiana runs an all-party primary, in which the top two finishers advance regardless of party. Bill Cassidy came third, leaving two Republicans and no Democrat in the runoff , so the contest pits money against insurgency rather than red against blue. The Accountability Project, a pro-Letlow super PAC reported to be aligned with Governor Jeff Landry, has now committed more than $6 million in independent expenditures, outside spending that the law bars from coordinating with a campaign, after its first $1 million filing on 5 June . Fleming has closed to a tie on almost nothing.

Texas produced the same shape last month. Ken Paxton beat John Cornyn by 28 points in the Texas Senate runoff despite a nine-to-one spending disadvantage , a result that pushed Cook and Sabato to move Texas Senate to Leans Republican the next day . Runoff electorates are tiny and motivation-driven, the exact terrain where an insurgent with intensity can erase a lead built on name recognition and endorsements. A Letlow win on $6 million of outside money would reassure committees that the cheque still clears; a Fleming win would mark two straight runoffs where it did not.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Louisiana held a primary election in May where the two top vote-getters advanced to a runoff, regardless of party. Julia Letlow, a Republican congresswoman backed by President Trump, got 45% of the vote. John Fleming, a former congressman and founding member of the House Freedom Caucus, got 28%. Incumbent Senator Bill Cassidy was eliminated with 25%. The 27 June runoff is now essentially a tie. Letlow had led by 15 points in early June. A Rigamer poll taken 15-16 June put Letlow at 40.2% and Fleming at 38.2%, which is within the survey's margin of error. Fleming achieved this despite a pro-Letlow super PAC committing over $6 million while Fleming had almost no outside money. Runoff elections in Louisiana attract very low turnout, typically under 15% of registered voters. That means a small, highly motivated base decides the outcome. Fleming's conservative movement credentials speak directly to that base.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Fleming's closing momentum traces to two structural factors the money cannot fix. First, Louisiana Republican runoff electorates self-select toward the most ideologically motivated voters; Fleming's House Freedom Caucus founding membership and his movement-conservative credentials appeal precisely to that slice. Second, Letlow's IE-saturation strategy assumes persuadable voters are responsive to paid media in a low-turnout environment where most remaining voters are already committed.

The Cassidy defeat reset the Louisiana Republican base's revealed preference: establishment incumbents with cross-partisan records lose to challengers who signal ideological purity, even from deep deficits. Letlow is the establishment candidate in an election cycle that has produced Paxton over Cornyn and Cassidy's elimination in less than 30 days.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    A Fleming win on 27 June would mark the third establishment-aligned Republican senator ousted or denied nomination by a movement-conservative challenger in four weeks, following Cassidy and Cornyn, signalling the Trump-era party purge is accelerating in primary runoffs.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    A Letlow win despite money-disadvantage polling would create a contested precedent: whether the Trump endorsement alone overcomes freedom-caucus ideological gravity in Southern Republican runoffs.

    Immediate · Suggested
  • Precedent

    If Fleming closes and wins from 15 points down with almost no outside money, the Paxton-Cornyn and Fleming-Letlow results together establish that IE spending above 30-to-1 does not reliably hold in intra-party Senate runoffs when the challenger carries Freedom Caucus credentials.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #10 · Wave or grind: the measure splits

The Times-Picayune / nola.com· 21 Jun 2026
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