An endorsement from President Donald Trump is worth a lot in Republican primaries. But is it worth more than $100 million in Georgia? Can it propel a congressman past an insurgent outsider in Alabama? Can it transform a candidate into a front-runner in Oklahoma?
Trump has been at the center of this year's midterm campaigns, and his influence will be tested in different ways Tuesday as four states and the District of Columbia hold primaries.
Among Democrats, the primaries will hinge on longstanding divides between progressives and moderates as the party tries to chart the best path forward to November.
Here's the latest:
Georgia's secretary of state election is open for the first time since the 2020 election, when President Donald Trump asked outgoing Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to "find 11,800 votes" to overtake Democrat Joe Biden. Raffensperger refused.
For his potential successor, Republicans are left to choose between an election denier, Vernon Jones, and a state lawmaker, Tim Fleming, who avoids explicitly disputing the president's 2020 election claims.
Democrats will choose between Dana Barrett, a Fulton County commissioner, and Penny Brown Reynolds, a former state judge in Fulton County who also served in the Biden administration as deputy assistant secretary for civil rights for the Department of Agriculture.
Retired software engineer James Haddad emigrated from Jordan and became a U.S. citizen in 1983. He backs Rep. Mike Collins in Georgia's GOP Senate runoff because of Collins' hardline approach on immigration.
"I'm an immigrant, but I'm a legal immigrant," Haddad said. "Just follow the law."
Collins hopes to defeat former football coach Derek Dooley and then draw contrasts on immigration with Democrat Sen. Jon Ossoff in November.
"The congressman is a good American who puts America first," said Haddad, a 66-year-old from Woodstock.
Collins sponsored the 2025 Laken Riley Act, named for a Georgia nursing student killed by a man in the U.S. illegally. The law requires immigrants charged with certain crimes to be held without bond.
Ossoff voted against an initial version but backed it after Trump returned to power.
"It's unfortunate that some immigrants have ruined it for others," Haddad said.
The outgoing Republican governor passed on a Senate bid and recruited his former football coach Derek Dooley. Kemp's spent months saying it'll take an "outsider" to defeat Democrat Sen. Jon Ossoff in November.
Meanwhile, until Sunday, Kemp sat out the Republican tussle to be his successor. That runoff pits the sitting lieutenant governor against a first-time candidate. Rick Jackson, a billionaire businessman, labels himself an "outsider" in his ads and plastered the word on his campaign tour bus.
Yet Kemp opted for Burt Jones, the Capitol insider. Campaigning with Jones on Monday, Kemp said there's no contradiction in his message.
His reasoning: Georgia state government has been run by Republicans for a generation and things are great, whereas in Washington, where Dooley would go, Congress is often deadlocked and has atrocious approval ratings. But Kemp did not note that Republicans have a trifecta with Trump as president and GOP majorities on Capitol Hill.
In Republican governor's races in South Carolina and Georgia, Sen. Ted Cruz finds himself on the opposing side from the president. The Texas senator has gotten more active on the Republican campaign circuit.
Cruz was in Georgia ahead of Tuesday's runoff to stump for billionaire Rick Jackson. Trump backs Jackson's rival, Georgia Lt. Gov. Burt Jones.
In the upcoming South Carolina runoff the GOP governor nomination, Cruz backs longtime state Attorney General Alan Wilson over Trump's pick, Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette.
Cruz, who finished second in Republicans 2016 presidential nominating fight, insisted he's not picking fights with Trump.
"Not remotely," Cruz said Monday. He noted he and Trump have both endorsed former New Hampshire Gov. John Sununu in his U.S. Senate bid.
"The president and I agree on the vast majority of races," Cruz said. "What I try to do in every race is endorse the strongest conservative who can win."
Georgia gubernatorial candidate Rick Jackson choked up a bit in the closing hours of his GOP runoff campaign explaining why he's spent nearly $100 million of his own money on the race.
Jackson called his wealth "God's money" that he directs "the best I can." And he compared his campaign spending to his years of philanthropy, especially to help children in foster care, where he spent part of his childhood.
"I want our kids, our foster kids and everybody else, to have hope, you know," he told a lunch crowd Monday.
"I have lived in poverty," Jackson continued. "When you, when you have not eaten, you never forget that you don't forget the people that are struggling."
It was a stark contrast to Jackson's tone in some of his television ads, including a promise that migrants who are in Georgia illegally and commit crimes will be "deported or departed."
Voters in the nation's capital are selecting party candidates for mayor and the district's delegate to Congress.
Mayor Muriel Bowser, who isn't seeking reelection, has walked a fine line between staying in Trump's good graces and responding to the concerns of constituents, many of whom said she didn't push back hard enough on Trump's actions.
The district's long-serving congressional delegate, Eleanor Holmes Norton, is also stepping down.
The election is taking place as Washington undergoes major change under the Trump administration.
Washington has limited autonomy and federal leaders retain significant control over local affairs, including the approval of the budget and laws passed by the D.C. Council.
A day earlier, Trump endorsed Rep. Mike Collins in a Senate runoff over former football coach Derek Dooley. The president chided Dooley for saying (months ago and not as a feature of his campaign) that Trump did indeed lose Georgia in 2020.
Collins, meanwhile, has consistently echoed Trump's claims of a "rigged" election.
The president's endorsed candidates have mostly done well so far in the midterm primaries. But the open U.S. Senate race in Alabama will be another test of his endorsement power.
U.S. Rep. Barry Moore, a three-term congressman, faces former Navy SEAL Jared Hudson in the GOP runoff. Trump endorsed Moore early in the campaign, but he's been forced into a heated race with Hudson, a political newcomer.
Hudson, borrowing a page from Trump's original playbook, has tried to depict Moore as a political insider and has urged voters to send an outsider to Washington.
Trump held a telephone rally for Moore last week.
The candidates are seeking the Senate seat being vacated by Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville, who's running for governor. The winner will face the Democratic nominee in November.
GOP Gov. Kevin Stitt is term-limited, and former U.S. Sen. Markwayne Mullin vacated his seat to replace Kristi Noem as Homeland Security secretary.
Republican Alan Armstrong, an energy executive, is filling the U.S. Senate seat for now, but state law prohibits him from seeking a full term as an interim appointee.
Oklahoma Rep. Kevin Hern, a four-term congressman endorsed by Trump, is running against four other candidates of lesser profile in the Republican Senate primary.