GOP Sen. Ben Sasse (Neb.) is projected to win a second term on Tuesday night, easily defeating two Democratic candidates.
The Associated Press called the race at 9:01 p.m. ET.
Sasse, 48, won the red state despite recent high-profile spats with President Trump, whom he didn’t support in 2016. Sasse didn’t join Trump’s reelection committee this cycle.
Sasse, who is viewed as a potential 2024 presidential candidate, largely scaled back his criticism of Trump until he won his Senate primary in May, avoiding a nasty intraparty fight that many political handicappers had predicted at the start of the cycle.
But since then, he’s had headline-grabbing fights with the leader of his party, who is popular in Nebraska. Sasse criticized a round of executive orders in August, called the first presidential debate a “shitshow” and railed against him during a constituent call, including saying that Trump “flirted with white supremacists” and “sells out” allies.
Sasse’s remarks prompted public backlash from Trump, who called the GOP senator a “a liability to the Republican Party, and an embarrassment.” But Sasse was on a glide path once he entered the general election with his race rated as a “safe” Republican seat.
There was some drama on the Democratic side. Democratic nominee Chris Janicek lost the party’s support after he faced allegations about sending sexually inappropriate text messages to a female staffer and The New York Times reported that he used racist slurs at a party roughly 20 years ago. The Nebraska Democratic Party called on Janicek to withdraw after the text messages surfaced, but Janicek refused.
The party instead threw its support behind write-in candidate Preston Love Jr.