Nebraska
Tuesday’s primaries to set up key fall matchups in Nebraska
Tuesday’s primary elections in Nebraska will set the stage for November in a battleground House district, as well as a potentially competitive Senate contest, as Democrats try to win control of Congress.
Democrats will choose their nominee in the 2nd District, one of three House seats Republicans won in 2024 that former Vice President Kamala Harris carried in the presidential election. On the GOP side, Omaha City Council member Brinker Harding cleared the primary field to replace retiring Rep. Don Bacon.
And the outcome of Nebraska’s Democratic Senate primary could go a long way to determine just how much GOP Sen. Pete Ricketts will have to sweat his bid for a first full term in the red state in a race that will also feature independent Dan Osborn.
Voters in West Virginia will also decide general election matchups in Senate and House races Tuesday.
Polls in close in West Virginia at 7:30 p.m. ET and in Nebraska at 9 p.m. ET.
Here are the races to watch:
Nebraska’s battleground 2nd District
In the Omaha-based 2nd District, the Democratic primary has become “officially ugly,” Barry Rubin, a nonpartisan political operative in Nebraska who once was executive director of the state’s Democratic Party, told NBC News.
He said “the knives are out” between the two candidates leading the Democratic field: local political organizer Denise Powell and state Sen. John Cavanaugh.
The two campaigns and allied outside groups have spent over $5 million on the airwaves, according to the tracking firm AdImpact, with some ads labeling Powell as “dark money Denise” and other ads accusing Cavanaugh of endangering the future of Nebraska’s “blue dot” Electoral College vote with his campaign.
The district has long been competitive, but Bacon’s decision not to seek re-election has given Democrats renewed enthusiasm that they can flip it this year. President Donald Trump lost the district by 5 points in 2024 as Bacon won by 2 points.
Meanwhile, Harding is running unopposed in the Republican primary and has been endorsed by Bacon and both of the state’s GOP senators.
In interviews Friday, Powell and Cavanaugh dismissed concerns that whoever emerges from the primary will begin at a disadvantage after having faced bruising attacks from fellow Democrats for weeks.
Cavanaugh said that the ad campaigns have boosted his name recognition across the Omaha area and that when he knocks on doors to meet voters, “everyone knows who I am immediately.”
Powell, who has been endorsed by EMILY’s List, the Congressional Hispanic Caucus’ BOLD PAC, the Congressional Black Caucus PAC and Elect Democratic Women, has targeted Cavanaugh primarily over his decision to run while he occupies a key seat in Nebraska’s unicameral Legislature.
While Nebraska state lawmakers are technically nonpartisan, Cavanaugh represents a key vote in the Democratic minority. Powell and her allies say that if he wins in November, GOP Gov. Jim Pillen will appoint a hard-line Republican to replace him, cementing a GOP supermajority that could push Republican priorities like restricting abortion rights and changing the state’s Electoral College system to a “winner-take-all” format.
In presidential elections, Nebraska awards an electoral vote to the candidate who wins each of its three congressional districts and two votes to the candidate who wins the state. Democratic presidential nominees have historically carried one electoral vote from the 2nd District.
The issue is “particularly salient” right now, Powell told NBC News, saying voters are paying more attention to it in the wake of the ongoing national redistricting fight.
“This one electoral seat may be the thing that gets us across the finish line in 2028,” Powell added, saying that because it has become an issue in this Democratic primary, “everyone has their blue dots out” on lawn signs in the Omaha area.
Cavanaugh has pushed back against what he calls “MAGA Republican talking points” that he is endangering the “blue dot,” including by running a TV ad featuring other Democratic state senators telling voters, “We know Nebraska Democrats will pick up additional seats [in the Legislature] this election, securing the blue dot.”
Meanwhile, Cavanaugh’s allies have accused Powell’s backers of “trying to buy this election.” Powell dismissed the attacks as “a distraction from the biggest issue right now, which is the blue dot.”
Cavanaugh, who has been endorsed by the Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC, the state’s AFL-CIO and almost a dozen other local unions, told NBC News that it’s fair to question why groups based in Washington are spending so much money to elect Powell.
He said it’s leading voters to question “who is spending this money and why are they spending so much money.”
Democratic drama in Nebraska’s Senate race
Nebraska is also hosting statewide elections for the Senate and governor this year. Republicans are expected to be in a strong position in both in the state, which Trump won by 20 points in 2024.
But there has been some drama in the Senate race, in which the Democratic primary could determine whether Osborn, who lost to GOP Sen. Deb Fischer by 7 points in 2024, will be Ricketts’ lone challenger in November.
Two Democrats — Cindy Burbank, a pharmacy technician, and pastor William Forbes — are on the primary ballot. Forbes filed to run for the Senate just before the deadline, and Nebraska Democrats accused him of being a Republican plant, designed to siphon votes from Osborn in the fall.
Forbes, who voted for Trump and attended a training session for conservative candidates, told CNN that he is a lifelong Democrat and that he entered the race because his party hadn’t fielded a candidate. He denied being a Republican plant.
Burbank told NBC News that she filed to run out of concern that Forbes would pull votes from Osborn. She denied she launched her campaign with the intent to drop out after the primary to allow Osborn to face Ricketts head-on. But Burbank said that she would exit the race if it became clear she didn’t have a path to victory in November and that she would back Osborn in that scenario.
“I will drop out when and if the time comes that I cannot win in November. And I think anybody with any dignity should do that,” Burbank said.
Republicans tried to remove Burbank from the primary ballot, arguing she was planning to drop out after the primary. But the state Supreme Court ruled that those officials missed a key deadline to file an objection to her candidacy, allowing her to remain on the ballot.
Pillen, the first-term governor, is running for re-election after having defeated a Trump-backed candidate in his 2022 primary. This time, Pillen has Trump’s endorsement. Five other Republicans are on the primary ballot, but none have reported significant fundraising totals.
Two Democratic candidates — former state Sen. Lynne Walz (a distant cousin of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz through marriage) and Air Force veteran Larry Marvin — are on the primary ballot for governor. Walz, who represented a ruby red district in the state Senate, is the only candidate who has reported raising notable levels of campaign funds, although she still has far less money than Pillen.
Regardless of their nominee, Democrats will face an uphill climb against Pillen in November. The party hasn’t won a governor’s race in Nebraska since Ben Nelson won a second term in 1994.
West Virginia contests
In West Virginia, GOP Sen. Shelley Moore Capito is running for her third term. She has been touting Trump’s endorsement on the airwaves as she faces five other Republicans in the primary, including state Sen. Tom Willis, who has self-funded his campaign. Willis has argued that Capito has “lost her way,” suggesting she doesn’t reflect the state’s conservative values.
Five candidates are on the Democratic primary ballot. The top fundraiser is Marine veteran Zach Shrewsbury, who lost the 2024 Senate Democratic primary and has the endorsement of Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif.
On the House side, GOP Rep. Carol Miller faces a primary challenge from Derrick Evans, a former state lawmaker who pleaded guilty in 2024 to a felony related to entering the Capitol during the Jan. 6, 2021, riot. The race is a rematch of their 2024 primary, which Miller won with 63% of the vote to Evans’ 37%. But Evans has proven to be a strong fundraiser and has spent about $1.2 million on his bid.
Nebraska
Online sports betting petition heads to Nebraska ballot review as opposition mounts
OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) – Legalizing online sports betting has met with resistance in the Nebraska Legislature for years.
Tax Relief Nebraska, a group backed by Nebraska casinos and online sports betting groups, took the issue to the people of the state through a petition drive.
Those petitions are now in, and casino officials say they expect to have enough signatures to make the November ballot — but also expect pushback through Election Day.
The case for online betting
Currently, legal sports bets cannot be placed on a phone in Nebraska. Casino operators say people who choose to wager are finding other ways to do it.
“They’re just doing it illegally through a virtual private network, or they’re driving over to the first exit between Iowa and Nebraska, placing a bet and then driving back to their home,” said Lynne McNally of Warhorse Casino.
Nebraska casino operators say the state has already collected millions of dollars in state taxes and property tax relief from casino gambling, and that online sports betting would add to that total.
A majority of Nebraskans voted for casino gambling to enter the state in 2020, and casino operators expect similar support if the online betting petition makes the November ballot.
“As you know, we got 65% on the constitutional amendment and actually got nearly 70% on the tax portion of the statute when the casinos were legalized in 2020. I think that we’ll be in that area, if not maybe a little higher than that,” McNally said.
“There’s always going to be a sector of the public that doesn’t want to gamble. They don’t want to go to our facilities and that’s just fine. I guess I have an objection with trying to tell other people what to do,” McNally said.
The opposition
The Nebraska Family Alliance stands against online gambling and plans to campaign against the initiative across the state. The nonprofit group issued a statement that reads in part: “Online sports betting has been a massive public policy failure that benefits national sportsbooks at the expense of kids, student-athletes, families and businesses. While they have more money, they don’t have the truth.”
Pat Loontjer, director of Gambling with the Good Life, has opposed expanded gambling in Nebraska for 30 years.
“They’re telling the same lie — property tax relief. Well in Nebraska you say property tax relief and everybody says where do I sign,” Loontjer said.
Loontjer also raised concerns about the impact on young people.
“Sports betting on the phone is the most addictive thing for young people, young men especially. You’ve got kids that are going to lose their scholarships, lose their future,” Loontjer said.
What comes next
If enough signatures are verified and the issue is placed on the November ballot, Warhorse Casino officials say Nebraskans could be able to make sports bets on their phones by spring of next year.
Copyright 2026 WOWT. All rights reserved.
Nebraska
Two high schools will represent Nebraska in the National Independence Day Parade
Along with marching in the parade, the high schools will tour the U.S. Capitol, visit Mount Vernon and other monuments and museums.
Around 80 Grand Island students are making the trip. Lee said the students cover their own costs, with fundraising largely run though the school’s booster program helping offset the expense.
Bishop Neumann’s 53 students benefited from community donations, along with a holiday greenery sale and fundraisers, which Kellett said helped cover airfare and other costs.
For both directors, the trip carries extra weight tied to the nation’s 250th anniversary.
“That’s a pretty big milestone,” Lee said. “And to be able to be a part of that is pretty neat.”
Kellett said the moment will stay with students long after the parade ends.
“These kids, they’ll be around for the 300th anniversary of the country, and they’ll be able to look back and tell their grandkids, ‘you know, I was there at 250 and was able to march in the National Independence Day Parade,’” Kellett said.
Both bands have spent the summer preparing. Grand Island started working on its music after its final spring concert in May, rehearsing its marching and music together on Tuesday evenings.
Bishop Neumann has rehearsed continuously over the summer and marched in two parades to prepare, a 150th anniversary celebration in Weston and the Papillion Days parade.
Kellett said the band’s last rehearsal in Wahoo drew residents who lined the streets holding signs and cheering the students on.
“The students have come in, and they’ve worked really hard,” Kellett said. “They have their music memorized and they’ve worked on their marching skills, and so all that effort into this they’re ready to go for the parade.”
The parade starts at 9:30 a.m. CT Saturday at Third Street and Constitution Avenue.
Nebraska
Erstad joins Nebraska golf program
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – Like his father, Zack Erstad is a Husker. Erstad, the son of Hall of Fame baseball player Darin Erstad, joined the Nebraska men’s golf program on Tuesday.
Zack signed with the Huskers one month after winning a state championship at Lincoln East. With the Spartans, Erstad was a two-time NSAA champion. He was Class A’s individual runner-up in 2026. The previous year, Erstad claimed the Nebraska Junior PGA Championship title.
Erstad said joining the Huskers is a dream come true. The Nebraska newcomer grew up playing baseball and hockey. However, he focused solely on golf while in high school.
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Copyright 2026 KOLN. All rights reserved.
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