Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
Today is a big day in the United States. People in six states vote in a small election called a primary. A primary is when one party picks who will run for them later.
The biggest race is in Kentucky. A man named Thomas Massie has been in the U.S. Congress for many years. Now a new man named Ed Gallrein wants to take his job.
President Donald Trump does not like Massie any more, so he picked Gallrein and asks people to vote for him. Many other rich groups are helping Gallrein too.
This is the most costly small election for Congress ever in U.S. history. More than eighty million dollars has been spent on TV ads to help one man win.
- vote
- to pick who you want by putting a paper in a box or pressing a button
- election
- a time when people choose a leader
- primary
- a small election inside one party to pick who will run for them
- party
- a big group in politics with the same ideas
- Congress
- the place in the United States where laws are made
- race
- here, a fight between people to get the same job
- president
- the top leader of the United States
- ad
- a short message on TV that tries to make you do something
Level 2 — Elementary
Tuesday, May 19, 2026, was the busiest primary day so far of the United States midterm season. Voters in six states — Alabama, Georgia, Idaho, Kentucky, Oregon and Pennsylvania — chose who will represent each major party on the November ballot.
The most-watched race took place in Kentucky's 4th Congressional District, on the river border with Ohio. Rep. Thomas Massie, a libertarian Republican who has held the seat since 2012, is fighting to keep it against Ed Gallrein, a local farmer and former Navy SEAL. Mr. Gallrein was hand-picked by President Donald Trump after Massie repeatedly voted against the White House on the Iran war and on a major spending bill.
Outside groups poured huge amounts of money into the race. The MAGA Inc. super-PAC, which supports the president, and the Club for Growth Action group spent millions on television ads, mailers and door-to-door canvassing across the Cincinnati and Lexington media markets. By Election Day, total outside spending had passed $80 million, making this the most expensive House primary in U.S. history.
Polls also opened in Georgia, where Senate primaries on both sides drew a wide field, and in Pennsylvania, where several House districts in the Philadelphia suburbs are seen as central to control of the chamber. Results will be reported through the night across all six states.
- midterm
- an election in the middle of a president's four-year term, mostly for Congress
- ballot
- the paper or screen on which someone marks their vote
- Congressional district
- a region of a U.S. state that elects one member of the House of Representatives
- libertarian
- a political style that wants very small government and strong personal freedom
- super-PAC
- a U.S. political group that can raise and spend unlimited money on ads, but cannot directly give money to a candidate
- canvassing
- going door to door to talk to voters and ask for their support
- media market
- an area, usually around a big city, where the same TV stations and ads reach the same audience
- field
- here, the full group of candidates running for one job
Level 3 — Intermediate
Voters in six U.S. states cast ballots on Tuesday, May 19, 2026, in what is now the busiest single primary day of the 2026 midterm cycle. The marquee contest unfolded in Kentucky's 4th Congressional District, where eight-term Republican Rep. Thomas Massie faced a Trump-backed challenge from former Navy SEAL and Bracken County farmer Ed Gallrein in what national networks have been calling the most expensive House primary in American history.
Massie, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology-trained engineer and self-described constitutional libertarian, has repeatedly broken with his party leadership and the White House — most visibly by opposing the joint resolution that authorized the Iran war and by voting against the omnibus appropriations package that funded the spring military supplemental. Those breaks drew President Donald Trump's open ire; the president personally recruited Gallrein and headlined a tele-rally for him on the eve of the vote.
Outside groups have transformed a usually sleepy Ohio River-border district into a national proxy battle. By Election Day, the MAGA Inc. super-PAC, Club for Growth Action and a handful of newer crypto-aligned committees had pushed combined outside spending past $80 million, blanketing the Cincinnati and Lexington designated-market areas with cable, streaming and YouTube creative. The Massie campaign has countered with a heavily small-dollar fundraising base and on-the-ground volunteer canvassing across the district's eighteen counties.
Polls also opened Tuesday in Alabama, Georgia, Idaho, Oregon and Pennsylvania. Georgia hosted a particularly crowded Senate primary on both sides of the ballot, while Pennsylvania's Philadelphia-suburb House contests are widely seen as central to the November fight for chamber control. Results were due to be reported through the night, with Kentucky's 4th expected to be decided shortly after 7 p.m. Eastern when precincts in the district close.
- midterm cycle
- the two-year political period built around the midterm elections, including primaries, candidate filings and campaign fundraising
- marquee contest
- the headline race on a ballot or election night, attracting the most attention and money
- constitutional libertarian
- a political identity grounded in strict adherence to the U.S. Constitution combined with a strong preference for limited federal power and individual liberty
- omnibus appropriations
- a single, large piece of legislation that bundles many federal spending bills into one package, often used to keep the government funded
- tele-rally
- a campaign event held over the phone or video link to large audiences without travelling to the district
- proxy battle
- a struggle between larger political forces fought out through a local contest that becomes a stand-in for the broader fight
Level 4 — Advanced
Six states staged the busiest single ballot of the 2026 midterm primary calendar on Tuesday, May 19, with Alabama, Georgia, Idaho, Kentucky, Oregon and Pennsylvania returning down-ballot results expected to test how durable the post-Iran-war Republican coalition actually is. The marquee event unfolded in the rural-and-exurban Ohio River corridor of Kentucky's 4th Congressional District, where eight-term Rep. Thomas Massie, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology-trained engineer and the conference's leading constitutional libertarian, defended his seat against Ed Gallrein, a Bracken County row-crop farmer and former Navy SEAL recruited and endorsed by President Donald J. Trump.
What might once have read as a parochial House skirmish has become, on a combined-spending basis, the most expensive House primary in American history. By close of business Monday, MAGA Inc., the Club for Growth Action subsidiary Win It Back, the Trump-aligned AFPI Action and at least two newer crypto-funded vehicles had together passed the $80-million mark on broadcast, cable, connected-TV, programmatic display and direct mail, with the Cincinnati and Lexington designated-market areas effectively saturated with two months of negative creative attacking Massie's votes against the spring Iran-war authorization and the late-March omnibus appropriations supplemental. Massie's own campaign has leaned hard on a small-dollar online donor file built around his constitutional opposition to executive war powers and a county-level volunteer canvass operation across the district's eighteen counties.
Elsewhere on the slate, Georgia drew the second-most outside attention with two crowded U.S. Senate primaries: Lt. Gov. Burt Jones leads a six-way GOP field that includes Rep. Mike Collins and former football coach Derek Dooley, while on the Democratic side state Sen. Jason Esteves is favoured to advance against Wes Pinkston and Rep. Lucy McBath. Pennsylvania's PA-1 and PA-7 suburban Philadelphia House primaries are widely treated by both parties as bellwether contests for the November fight for chamber control, and Oregon's open governor-affiliated 5th Congressional District primary will signal whether national Democrats can field a competitive candidate against incumbent Republican Lori Chavez-DeRemer. Idaho and Alabama hosted lower-profile statewide and legislative-line races, including Alabama's hard-fought 2nd Congressional District rematch.
Polls in the bulk of Kentucky's 4th closed at 6 p.m. local time, with the Associated Press and the major networks expecting to call the Massie–Gallrein race shortly after 7 p.m. Eastern. Whatever the outcome, the contest is widely understood inside both parties as a referendum on whether Trump can purge intra-party dissent during a hot war and through the 2026 cycle, or whether ideologically distinctive Republicans — even ones polling in the high seventies on home-district favourability — can survive a presidential-grade onslaught.
- down-ballot
- races appearing below the most prominent contest on a ballot, such as House, state and local offices below the presidential or Senate line