Rep. Janelle Bynum secures Democratic nomination in Oregon’s 5th Congressional District
State Rep. Janelle Bynum won the Democratic nomination in Oregon’s 5th Congressional District Tuesday night, with 70% of votes tallied as of 8:20 p.m.Her opponent, state civil servant Jamie McLeod-Skinner held just 30% of the preliminary results.Bynum will face Republican incumbent Lori Chavez-DeRemer this fall in a race of national importance. Chavez-DeRemer’s victory over McLeod-Skinner in 2022 helped establish Republican control of the U.S. House, and national Democrats are eager to try to reclaim the seat.OREGON ELECTION 2024: Live Results Page | Election PageThe nonpartisan Center for Politics at the University of Virginia ranks the race as a “toss up” come November.McLeod-Skinner was hoping for a rematch with Chavez-DeRemer, who she lost to by 2 percentage points in 2022. Bynum, who has spent the last seven years in the Oregon House, was running for Congress for the first time. Bynum would make history as Oregon’s first Black member of Congress if she wins in November.A crowd of about 50 people gathered at the Bynum, who lives in Happy Valley, drew key endorsements and more financial support in the primary. She had raised more than $1.1 million by the end of April to McLeod-Skinner’s $707,000, federal filings show. By mid-May, Bynum had added another $145,000 to that tally and McLeod-Skinner had raised an additional $25,300.Bynum, a trained engineer who now runs several McDonald’s locations with her husband, touted her lawmaking experience. She emerged as a leading figure for police reform in Oregon’s 2021 legislative session and last year sponsored the Oregon CHIPS Act, a bill that put $200 million into the state’s semiconductor industry and is expected to help generate thousands of jobs. If elected to Congress, she said a top priority would be winning federal dollars to build up the state’s infrastructure, which would in turn help grow businesses and housing.She was endorsed by a wide swath of Oregon’s top Democratic leaders, including Gov. Tina Kotek and all of Oregon’s former female governors, as well as dozens of state lawmakers. The national Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which backed McLeod-Skinner in 2022 against Chavez-DeRemer, threw its support behind Bynum in the primary.McLeod-Skinner, who lives in Terrebonne, argued that as a rural Democrat she was best positioned to reflect the needs of voters in the 5,000-square-mile district that stretches from Lake Oswego across rural Marion and Clackamas counties and on to Bend. Her varied career includes international work rebuilding hospitals in post-war countries, environmental planning and emergency response. She serves on a state board that aims to conserve Oregon’s watersheds and works part-time for the state’s Office of Resilience and Emergency Management to establish community resilience networks in case of disaster.She drew some funding and endorsements from political action committees that support LGBTQ+ candidates for Congress and touted her grassroots support. About 95% of McLeod-Skinner’s donations before May came from individuals, not political action committees, compared to about 83% of Bynum’s money.Several outside groups spent advertising dollars on the race in an attempt to sway voters toward their preferred candidate.The 314 Action Fund, which aims to elect progressives with backgrounds in science to Congress, spent more than $473,000 to support Bynum.In the week prior to the race, McLeod-Skinner drew some $350,000 in support from a new group, Health Equity Now. Bynum’s campaign called the contribution “shady GOP election meddling,” and said the group appeared to be backed by Republicans. McLeod-Skinner told the Associated Press she had never heard of the group before it spent on her behalf.McLeod-Skinner was also the target of hundreds of thousands of dollars in opposition spending. The Congressional Leadership Fund, which supports Republicans, spent $10,000 against her. And the Mainstream Democrats PAC, which claims that it aims to defeat “extreme candidates” spent an equal amount of $379,500 to support Bynum and oppose McLeod-Skinner in the race. Top donors to that PAC include Reid Hoffman, co-founder of LinkedIn and Deborah Simon, a large Democratic party donor.While controversy over support from pro-Israel donors drew big attention in Oregon’s 3rd Congressional District, where doctor Maxine Dexter has received a wave of funds from donors who also gave to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee or affiliated groups, that dynamic did not dominate the primary in the 5th District.Bynum was endorsed by the Democratic Majority for Israel PAC, which favors pro-Israel Democrats, and received $3,000 from that group. McLeod-Skinner was endorsed by the JStreet PAC, which says it promotes “American leadership to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” and candidates who favor a “diplomacy-first” approach. She received about $1,550 in contributions earmarked for her through that political committee.Oregonian intern Andrew Miller contributed to this report. Sami Edge covers higher education and politics for The Oregonian. You can reach her at sedge@oregonian.com or (503) 260-3430.
The winner of the Democratic primary will face incumbent Republican Lori Chavez-DeRemer in Oregon's most closely watched federal race this fall.
State Rep. Janelle Bynum won the Democratic nomination in Oregon’s 5th Congressional District Tuesday night, with 70% of votes tallied as of 8:20 p.m.
Her opponent, state civil servant Jamie McLeod-Skinner held just 30% of the preliminary results.
Bynum will face Republican incumbent Lori Chavez-DeRemer this fall in a race of national importance. Chavez-DeRemer’s victory over McLeod-Skinner in 2022 helped establish Republican control of the U.S. House, and national Democrats are eager to try to reclaim the seat.
OREGON ELECTION 2024: Live Results Page | Election Page
The nonpartisan Center for Politics at the University of Virginia ranks the race as a “toss up” come November.
McLeod-Skinner was hoping for a rematch with Chavez-DeRemer, who she lost to by 2 percentage points in 2022. Bynum, who has spent the last seven years in the Oregon House, was running for Congress for the first time. Bynum would make history as Oregon’s first Black member of Congress if she wins in November.
A crowd of about 50 people gathered at the
Bynum, who lives in Happy Valley, drew key endorsements and more financial support in the primary. She had raised more than $1.1 million by the end of April to McLeod-Skinner’s $707,000, federal filings show. By mid-May, Bynum had added another $145,000 to that tally and McLeod-Skinner had raised an additional $25,300.
Bynum, a trained engineer who now runs several McDonald’s locations with her husband, touted her lawmaking experience. She emerged as a leading figure for police reform in Oregon’s 2021 legislative session and last year sponsored the Oregon CHIPS Act, a bill that put $200 million into the state’s semiconductor industry and is expected to help generate thousands of jobs. If elected to Congress, she said a top priority would be winning federal dollars to build up the state’s infrastructure, which would in turn help grow businesses and housing.
She was endorsed by a wide swath of Oregon’s top Democratic leaders, including Gov. Tina Kotek and all of Oregon’s former female governors, as well as dozens of state lawmakers. The national Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which backed McLeod-Skinner in 2022 against Chavez-DeRemer, threw its support behind Bynum in the primary.
McLeod-Skinner, who lives in Terrebonne, argued that as a rural Democrat she was best positioned to reflect the needs of voters in the 5,000-square-mile district that stretches from Lake Oswego across rural Marion and Clackamas counties and on to Bend. Her varied career includes international work rebuilding hospitals in post-war countries, environmental planning and emergency response. She serves on a state board that aims to conserve Oregon’s watersheds and works part-time for the state’s Office of Resilience and Emergency Management to establish community resilience networks in case of disaster.
She drew some funding and endorsements from political action committees that support LGBTQ+ candidates for Congress and touted her grassroots support. About 95% of McLeod-Skinner’s donations before May came from individuals, not political action committees, compared to about 83% of Bynum’s money.
Several outside groups spent advertising dollars on the race in an attempt to sway voters toward their preferred candidate.
The 314 Action Fund, which aims to elect progressives with backgrounds in science to Congress, spent more than $473,000 to support Bynum.
In the week prior to the race, McLeod-Skinner drew some $350,000 in support from a new group, Health Equity Now. Bynum’s campaign called the contribution “shady GOP election meddling,” and said the group appeared to be backed by Republicans. McLeod-Skinner told the Associated Press she had never heard of the group before it spent on her behalf.
McLeod-Skinner was also the target of hundreds of thousands of dollars in opposition spending. The Congressional Leadership Fund, which supports Republicans, spent $10,000 against her. And the Mainstream Democrats PAC, which claims that it aims to defeat “extreme candidates” spent an equal amount of $379,500 to support Bynum and oppose McLeod-Skinner in the race. Top donors to that PAC include Reid Hoffman, co-founder of LinkedIn and Deborah Simon, a large Democratic party donor.
While controversy over support from pro-Israel donors drew big attention in Oregon’s 3rd Congressional District, where doctor Maxine Dexter has received a wave of funds from donors who also gave to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee or affiliated groups, that dynamic did not dominate the primary in the 5th District.
Bynum was endorsed by the Democratic Majority for Israel PAC, which favors pro-Israel Democrats, and received $3,000 from that group. McLeod-Skinner was endorsed by the JStreet PAC, which says it promotes “American leadership to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” and candidates who favor a “diplomacy-first” approach. She received about $1,550 in contributions earmarked for her through that political committee.
Oregonian intern Andrew Miller contributed to this report.
Sami Edge covers higher education and politics for The Oregonian. You can reach her at sedge@oregonian.com or (503) 260-3430.