Categories: Politics

Hovde concedes 12 days after Wisconsin Senate race call, blames Dem-recruited 3rd-party candidate

Republican businessman Eric Hovde finally conceded defeat on Monday in a razor-thin race for a U.S. Senate seat in Wisconsin, claiming that a Democrat-recruited third-party candidate siphoned off the votes that would have secured him the victory.

Hovde, a multimillionaire bank owner and real estate developer, posted his concession video on social media 12 days after the race was called in favor of Democratic incumbent Tammy Baldwin.

Hovde could have requested a recount, which he would have had to pay for himself, because his margin of defeat was less than 1 percentage point at about 29,000 votes, though he said he did not want to “add to political strife through a contentious recount.”

The Republican candidate repeated claims in the video that he first made last week, saying there were “many troubling issues” related to absentee ballots in Milwaukee and when they were reported. Republicans, Democrats and nonpartisan election leaders all refuted the claims of impropriety Hovde made.

LEE THREATENS TO NOT SEAT CASEY IN SENATE IF HE CONTINUES REFUSAL TO CONCEDE

Republican Eric Hovde on Monday conceded defeat to Democratic incumbent Tammy Baldwin in a U.S. Senate race in Wisconsin. (Scott Olson/Getty Images, File)

“Without a detailed review of all the ballots and their legitimacy, which will be difficult to obtain in the courts, a request for a recount would serve no purpose because you will just be recounting the same ballots regardless of their integrity,” Hovde said in the video.

Baldwin defeated Hovde with a margin of less than 1 percentage point, at about 29,000 votes. (Reuters, File)

SCHUMER NOW PLEADS FOR BIPARTISANSHIP HAVING PROMISED TO RAILROAD DEMOCRAT AGENDA THROUGH

Hovde also repeated his complaint about the candidacy of Thomas Leager, who ran as a member of the America First Party. 

Video

Leager, a far-right candidate who was supported by Democratic donors as he ran as a conservative, finished a distant fourth, receiving about 400 fewer votes than the margin between Baldwin and Hovde. Hovde claimed that Democratic operatives were behind Leager’s candidacy. 

CLICK TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Hovde, who poured millions of dollars of his own money into his losing race this year, has not ruled out another political campaign in the future. Some Republicans have floated him as a potential candidate for governor in 2026.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Share

Recent Posts

GOP rep urges lawmakers to ‘right-size’ bloated bureaucracy, national debt: ‘Wheels are coming off the wagon’

Bloated bureaucracy and growing debt are holding back President Donald Trump’s economic "golden age," according…

4 minutes ago

Is there a New England serial killer? Former FBI agent with regional ties reveals his theory

close Video Mauro weighs in on New England serial killer theory Fox News contributor and…

2 hours ago

Father whose son died from fentanyl warns overdoses ‘can happen to anyone’ as states fight deadly crisis

close Video Grieving father shares story of his son's fatal drug overdose Steve Muth speaks…

2 hours ago

Former Vice President Mike Pence honored by Kennedy family in receiving the JFK ‘Profile in Courage Award’

BOSTON, Mass. – Former Vice President Mike Pence was honored on Sunday night for his…

4 hours ago

Trump to tap new national security advisor in 6 months; calls Waltz move ‘upgrade’

President Donald Trump said Sunday that he plans to appoint a new national security advisor…

7 hours ago

American tourist reportedly impaled on Rome’s Colosseum fence as dozens watch in horror

close Video Pope Francis' tomb opens to visitors at Rome's St. Mary Major Basilica The…

8 hours ago