(C) Iowa Capital Dispatch
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Iowa’s 3rd District race remains too close to call as Zach Nunn declares victory [1]
['Robin Opsahl', 'More From Author', '- November']
Date: 2022-11-09
Republican challenger Zach Nunn declared victory in his race against U.S. Rep. Cindy Axne in Iowa 3rd Congressional District race, though the race remained too close to call.
“This race changes the course of America,” Nunn said in a speech Tuesday night.
As of midnight, Nunn was leading with 50.3% of the vote to Axne’s 49.7%, with 94% of precincts reporting. The Associated Press had not called the race. The Iowa senator declared victory alongside fellow Republicans, including U.S. Sen. Chuck Grassley and U.S. Reps. Mariannette Miller-Meeks and Randy Feenstra.
Axne campaign officials said they are waiting for full results to be counted before making a statement.
The Democrat currently serves as the state’s sole elected Democrat in federal office. She first took the seat in 2018, defeating Republican incumbent David Young, and won again in 2020 despite former President Donald Trump winning the area.
National Democrats have invested heavily in keeping Axne in office. According to the most recent campaign finance reports, the candidates and outside groups have spent over $14 million in the race. Axne has raised raised about $5.7 million throughout the entire election cycle, and spent $2.3 million on ads in the most recent reporting period from July 1 to Sept. 30.
Nunn’s campaign has a smaller footprint, with the Republican challenger spending around $370,000 on ads in that same period. But political action committees and other Republican groups are making up some of that disparity: The National Republican Congressional Committee has put more than $2.1 million into the 3rd District race.
The candidates traded barbs in advertisements not just on policy differences, but one another’s stock trades and ties to foreign businesses. An October ad targeting Axne criticized her for failing to disclose stock trades; An ad targeting Nunn alleged he had taken money from a company owned by the Chinese government.
Many of Axne’s ads focus on Nunn’s views on abortion. The Democratic incumbent made defending access to abortion and reproductive health care a central piece of her strategy this year after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade this summer. Axne called for passing the Women’s Health Protection Act, which would codify Roe’s protections for abortion access at the federal level.
She said her opponent supports a total ban on abortions, running ads from a GOP 3rd District primary debate where Nunn raised his hand indicating he supported making abortions illegal without exception.
Nunn fired back alleging she supports abortions “up until the moment of birth,” which Axne denied. He also has said he supports exceptions for rape, incest and to protect the life of the mother.
Amber Castillo, a 24-year-old from Des Moines, said abortion was her top concern when voting in this year’s elections. Castillo said she supported Democrats like Axne to protect abortion access, but was worried economic concerns might push people toward voting Republican.
“It’s scary, I think, COVID kind of ruined the economy and that could overshadow some of these other issues,” she said.
Nunn has campaigned against Biden administration spending measures like the Inflation Reduction Act and the Build Back Better Act, which he said contributed to inflation and rising gas prices. The state senator said if elected, he would advocate for legislation like Iowa’s recent tax cuts at a federal level. Recent changes to Iowa’s tax system include phasing in a flat income tax rate, eliminating retirement income taxes and cuts to corporate taxes.
But Axne said spending measures like the Inflation Reduction Act and the American Rescue Plan are helping families make ends meet as costs of living rise.
“There’s more money in people’s pockets these days because of the support they received from the American Rescue Plan,” Axne said in a KCCI debate. “And because of the supply chain agenda that we’re putting forth, we’re improving every single day on those price fluctuations to get them back down to normal.”
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