(C) Daily Kos This story was originally published by Daily Kos and is unaltered. . . . . . . . . . . Where Republican election deniers are on the ballot near you [1] ['Adrian Blanco', 'Amy Gardner', 'Adrián Blanco Ramos Is A Graphic Reporter In The Graphics Department At The Washington Post.', 'He Previously Worked At Spanish Newspaper El Confidencial Focusing On Data Visualization', 'Data Analysis', 'Investigative Journalism. He Participated In The International Consortium Of Investigative Journalist S Paradise Papers Investigation.', 'Amy Gardner Has Worked At The Post Since', 'Currently Covers Voting On Its Democracy Team. She Is Part Of The Team That Won The Pulitzer Prize For Public Service For Coverage Of Jan.', 'Capitol Attack. She Is A Graduate Of The University Of Pennsylvania', 'Lives In Arlington'] Date: 2023-04 correction A previous version of this piece provided an incorrect count of the number of Republican nominees who have denied or questioned the outcome of the last presidential election. The correct number is 291, not 299. The error was caused by an incorrect application of the criteria The Post is using to identify election deniers. As a result, the following names have been removed from this list: U.S. House candidates Scott Baugh of California, George Logan of Connecticut, Amanda Adkins of Kansas, John James of Michigan, and Matt Larkin and Dan Matthews of Washington; Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, and U.S. Senate candidate Leora Levy of Connecticut. Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon was previously removed from this list because he did not meet the criteria. This piece has been revised. Election deniers will be on the ballot in 48 of 50 states and make up more than half of all Republicans running for congressional and state offices in the midterm elections. Nearly 300 Republicans seeking those offices this November have denied or questioned the outcome of the last presidential election, according to a Washington Post analysis. Story continues below advertisement Advertisement Story continues below advertisement Advertisement Many will win. More than 170 election deniers are running in districts or states where Republicans are expected to win, according to Cook Political Report race ratings and Partisan Voter Index. Another 46 are running in competitive races. [Tracking which 2020 election deniers are winning, losing in the midterms] Select your state below to see which election deniers will be on the ballot and how competitive their races are expected to be. Competitive Color indicates if Republicans are favored to win. Candidate name* Incumbent Office State Competitive Color indicates if Republicans are favored to win. Candidate name* Incumbent Office State Competitive Color indicates if Republicans are favored to win. Candidate name* Incumbent Office State State or district lean GOP favored GOP favored Competitive Competitive Not favored Filter by state Select... Filter by office Select... Story continues below advertisement Advertisement Story continues below advertisement Advertisement Update (Oct. 6): An earlier version of this graphic omitted from the list Virginia 2nd Congressional District candidate Jen Kiggans, who expressed support for a partisan post-election ballot review. That is among the criteria The Post uses for identifying candidates who denied or challenged election results. [END] --- [1] Url: https://www.washingtonpost.com/elections/interactive/2022/election-deniers-running-for-office-elections-2022/ Published and (C) by Daily Kos Content appears here under this condition or license: Site content may be used for any purpose without permission unless otherwise specified. via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds: gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/dailykos/