
Matchup set in Montana for Senate race key to deciding control of chamber
CNN
Democratic Sen. Jon Tester and Republican challenger Tim Sheehy will win their respective primaries in Montana, CNN projects, setting up what’s likely to be one of the hardest-fought races in the battle for control of the Senate.
Democratic Sen. Jon Tester and Republican challenger Tim Sheehy will win their respective primaries in Montana, CNN projects, setting up what’s likely to be one of the hardest-fought races in the battle for control of the Senate. Sheehy, a businessman and retired Navy SEAL, had the backing of former President Donald Trump and much of the GOP establishment, including Senate Republicans’ campaign arm. He is also pumping his personal wealth into the race – through May 15, he had loaned his campaign about $2 million. Sheehy effectively cemented the Republican nomination when hard-line Rep. Matt Rosendale ended his primary bid just days after entering the race in February. First elected in 2006, Tester is the last-remaining Democrat in nonjudicial statewide office in Montana. He has survived tough races before, but his bid for a third term is sure to be among the nation’s most competitive — particularly with Trump, who won the state by 16 points in 2020, at the top of the ticket. Since 2012, only one senator has won reelection in a presidential year from a state that voted for the opposite party’s White House nominee – Maine Republican Susan Collins in 2020. The advertising war between Tester and Sheehy has already heated up in Montana. Sheehy this week became the first Republican to go on the air with an ad linking his Democratic rival to Trump’s recent conviction in his New York hush money trial.

Hours after declaring from underneath the tented ceiling of Mar-a-Lago’s Tea Room that Venezuela’s leader was in American custody and the US was running the country on Saturday, President Donald Trump emerged victorious onto his club’s crowded patio as dinner-goers cheered the audacious mission he’d ordered from a few yards away.

President Donald Trump’s administration is working quickly to establish a pliant interim government in Venezuela following the dramatic capture of Nicolás Maduro, according to US officials, prioritizing administrative stability and repairing the country’s oil infrastructure over an immediate turn to democracy.











