State Rep. Josh Turek, a Paralympics gold medalist with a history of winning over voters who backed President Donald Trump, won the Democratic nomination for Iowa’s Senate race on Tuesday night, giving national Democrats the candidate they believe has the best chance of defeating Republican Ashley Hinson in November.

“His nomination tonight puts the Iowa Senate seat firmly in play, and in November, Iowans will reject Ashley Hinson’s self-serving politics and send Josh Turek to the U.S. Senate,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee Chair Kirsten Gillibrand said in a statement not long after Turek’s victory was announced.

Turek defeated state Sen. Zach Wahls to secure the nomination. While Wahls began the contest as the front-runner, the super PAC VoteVets spent $9.7 million on television, mail and digital ads boosting Turek. While the group normally only backs veterans, it justified its spending by noting Turek, who has been in a wheelchair since childhood, developed spina bifida because of his father’s exposure to Agent Orange in Vietnam.

The spending helped propel Turek to a massive advantage ― he was leading 63% to 37% over Wahls with about 40% of the vote in as of 10 p.m. on Tuesday.

National Democrats now feel they can seriously contest Iowa, which has shifted heavily toward the GOP in the past decade. The state’s sluggish economy has made GOP leaders there unpopular, and specific Trump policies ― including cuts to rural healthcare and the price of fertilizer spiking in the aftermath of the Iran war ― have only made the situation worse.

Democrats also have a star candidate, Auditor Rob Sand, already running for governor.

Turek will face Hinson, a Republican running as a close ally of Trump. The seat is open because GOP Sen. Joni Ernst opted to retire rather than run for reelection.

“Ashley Hinson has a proven record of taking on big fights and delivering real results for Iowa’s farmers and working families,” said Alex Latcham, the chair of Senate Leadership Fund, a super PAC run by allies of Senate Majority Leader John Thune. “Hinson’s opponent, Josh Turek, is a Far-Left politician who is bankrolled by Chuck Schumer, and Iowans can no doubt count on Turek to repay that debt by rubber-stamping the Democrat Party’s radical agenda.”

VoteVets’ intervention in the primary was massive, with the group outspending each campaign by large margins. Wahls and his allies have suggested Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer was behind the spending ― Schumer-aligned groups have worked with VoteVets in the past ― but the group was not required to reveal its donors before the primary. Wahls had emphasized his opposition to Schumer returning as party leader, saying on the first day of his campaign he would not support him.

Wahls was seen as the more progressive candidate, and had the endorsement of Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and many of the state’s labor unions. But many other Iowa Democrats, including former Sen. Tom Harkin and a number of former candidates in the race, lined up behind Turek as the more electable option: He has twice won a state house district won by Trump.

Turek, a longtime professional wheelchair basketball player, was part of the gold-medal winning U.S. teams at the 2016 and 2020 Paralympics.

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