2022 Indiana Secretary of State election

The 2022 Indiana Secretary of State election took place on November 8, 2022, to elect the next secretary of state of Indiana. Holli Sullivan, a Republican who was appointed to replace Connie Lawson as Secretary of State in 2021, ran for a full term in office but was defeated at the Republican convention by Diego Morales. The Democratic, Republican, and Libertarian parties chose their nominees for Secretary of State at a party convention on June 18, 2022.[1]

2022 Indiana Secretary of State election

 2018
November 8, 2022
2026 
 
Nominee Diego Morales Destiny Wells Jeff Maurer
Party Republican Democratic Libertarian
Popular vote 999,893 742,624 104,519
Percentage 54.13% 40.21% 5.66%

Morales:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%
Wells:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%

Secretary of State before election

Holli Sullivan
Republican

Elected Secretary of State

Diego Morales
Republican

Despite Indiana's strong Republican lean, polls showed a competitive race. Republican nominee Diego Morales faced numerous controversies, including the fact that he was previously fired from a position in the Secretary of State office; his echoing of Donald Trump's false accusations of fraud in the 2020 elections; his use of campaign funds to purchase a $43,000 Toyota RAV4; his description of himself as a "veteran" even though he only served in the military for three months and he was in the Indiana Army National Guard and never deployed on Active Duty (the federal definition of a "veteran" only includes active duty or guardsmen who have deployed on active duty orders); claims that portions of his resume are exaggerated or misleading; and two accusations of sexual harassment against him.[2][3][4][5][6] After winning the Republican nomination, he changed his stance on the 2020 presidential election, telling The Washington Post that he believed Biden won legitimately. WTHR commented that Morales received the most negative press of any statewide candidate in Indiana since Richard Mourdock in the 2012 Senate race.[7]

Despite Morales's controversies, he secured a decisive victory over Wells and Maurer. However, he underperformed all other statewide Republican nominees in Indiana by 5-7 percentage points.[8]

Republican convention

edit

Incumbent Secretary of State Connie Lawson resigned in 2021 due to health issues. Governor Eric Holcomb chose state representative Holli Sullivan to replace her, and Sullivan announced she would run for a full term. The Republican primary for Secretary of State was the most expensive in two decades, with challenger Diego Morales leading Sullivan in fundraising.[9] Morales was endorsed by the America First Secretary of State Coalition, a conservative group that supports a slate of candidates in the 2022 United States secretary of state elections.[10]

Candidates

edit

Nominee

edit

Eliminated at convention

edit

Did not file

edit

Endorsements

edit

Democratic convention

edit

Candidates

edit

Nominee

edit

Endorsements

edit

Libertarian convention

edit

Nominee

edit
  • Jeff Maurer, entrepreneur[22]

Write-in candidates

edit

General election

edit

Debate

edit

On October 10, a debate for the Secretary of State election was held by WFYI and the League of Women Voters. Democrat Destiny Wells and Libertarian Jeff Maurer participated in the debate, while Morales skipped it to attend a meeting of the Warrick County Republican Party. Wells and Maurer heavily criticized Morales for not attending the debate. While both agreed that Joe Biden won the 2020 presidential election, Maurer called for an election audit of every Indiana county, while Wells did not. When asked about the problem of low voter turnout, Wells proposed independent redistricting, keeping polling places open longer, and extending the window for early voting as ways to increase turnout, while Maurer blamed the two-party system for creating a lack of competition.[25]

2022 Indiana Secretary of State debate
No. Date Host Moderator Link Republican Democratic Libertarian
Key:
 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Not invited   I  Invited  W  Withdrawn
Diego Morales Destiny Wells Jeff Maurer
1 Oct. 25, 2022 WFYI
League of Women Voters
of Indiana
Laura Wilson PBS[26] A P P

Predictions

edit
Source Ranking As of
Sabato's Crystal Ball[27] Tossup November 3, 2022
Elections Daily[28] Likely R November 7, 2022

Polling

edit
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Diego
Morales (R)
Destiny
Wells (D)
Jeff
Maurer (L)
Undecided
Indy Politics/ARW Strategies (R)[29] September 25–26, 2022 600 (LV) ± 4.0% 32% 36% 7% 25%
Indy Politics/ARW Strategies (R)[30] July 19–21, 2022 800 (LV) ± 3.5% 28% 31% 7% 34%

Results

edit
2022 Indiana Secretary of State election[31]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Diego Morales 999,893 54.13% −2.09%
Democratic Destiny Wells 742,624 40.21% −0.36%
Libertarian Jeff Maurer 104,519 5.66% +2.49%
Green David Wetterer (write-in) 107 0.00% −0.02%
Disability Andrew Straw (write-in) 36 0.00% new
Total votes 1,847,179 100.00% N/A
Republican hold

By county

edit
County Diego Morales
Republican
Destiny Wells
Democratic
Jeff Maurer
Libertarian
Write-ins
Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes %
Adams 6,497 73.2% 2,081 23.4% 298 3.4% 0 0.00%
Allen 55,203 54.7% 41,911 41.5% 3,883 3.8% 2 0.0%
Bartholomew 12,544 56.0% 8,180 36.5% 1,665 7.4% 0 0.00%
Benton 1,884 76.4% 498 20.2% 85 3.4% 0 0.0%
Blackford 2,221 66.3% 896 26.8% 231 6.9% 0 0.0%
Boone 12,293 49.9% 9,953 40.4% 2,395 9.7% 0 0.0%
Brown 3,329 52.9% 2,276 36.1% 691 11.0% 1 0.0%
Carroll 4,353 70.3% 1,431 23.1% 411 6.6% 0 0.0%
Cass 5,611 65.7% 2,504 29.3% 417 4.9% 2 0.0%
Clark 20,826 57.9% 13,855 38.5% 1,306 3.6% 2 0.0%
Clay 5,393 71.2% 1,692 22.4% 485 6.4% 0 0.0%
Clinton 4,904 68.0% 1,820 25.2% 485 6.7% 0 0.0%
Crawford 2,296 64.2% 1,129 31.5% 154 4.3% 0 0.00%
Daviess 5,509 79.4% 1,190 17.1% 242 3.5% 0 0.0%
Dearborn 11,104 77.9% 2,720 19.1% 438 3.1% 0 0.0%
Decatur 5,437 68.4% 1,684 21.2% 833 10.5% 0 0.0%
DeKalb 8,022 69.1% 3,048 26.3% 540 4.7% 1 0.0%
Delaware 15,228 51.1% 12,850 43.1% 1,751 5.9% 0 0.0%
Dubois 8,956 66.7% 3,945 29.4% 526 3.9% 0 0.0%
Elkhart 29,354 65.9% 13,515 30.3% 1,700 3.8% 3 0.0%
Fayette 4,330 70.9% 1,484 24.3% 296 4.8% 0 0.0%
Floyd 14,926 56.0% 10,891 40.8% 852 3.2% 3 0.0%
Fountain 3,680 74.3% 1,039 21.0% 231 4.7% 0 0.0%
Franklin 5,638 77.2% 1,326 18.2% 340 4.7% 0 0.0%
Fulton 3,797 69.0% 1,522 27.7% 180 3.3% 0 0.0%
Gibson 7,162 71.0% 2,522 25.0% 410 4.1% 0 0.0%
Grant 10,575 67.5% 4,325 27.6% 766 4.9% 3 0.0%
Greene 6,554 70.3% 2,270 24.3% 505 5.4% 0 0.0%
Hamilton 61,478 47.9% 56,160 43.8% 10,715 8.3% 4 0.0%
Hancock 13,599 57.2% 7,378 31.0% 2,806 11.8% 2 0.0%
Harrison 9,603 69.8% 3,711 27.0% 450 3.3% 0 0.0%
Hendricks 25,454 52.6% 17,765 36.7% 5,129 10.6% 0 0.0%
Henry 8,220 61.4% 3,891 29.1% 1,283 9.6% 0 0.0%
Howard 15,126 61.3% 8,115 32.9% 1,427 5.8% 0 0.00%
Huntington 7,953 70.8% 2,824 25.1% 457 4.1% 0 0.0%
Jackson 7,974 71.4% 2,550 22.8% 646 5.8% 0 0.0%
Jasper 6,920 75.0% 2,019 21.9% 285 3.1% 0 0.0%
Jay 3,740 69.8% 1,366 25.5% 254 4.7% 1 0.0%
Jefferson 6,043 62.3% 3,290 33.9% 372 3.8% 0 0.0%
Jennings 5,429 69.2% 1,758 22.4% 663 8.4% 0 0.0%
Johnson 25,935 58.1% 14,340 32.1% 4,342 9.7% 3 0.0%
Knox 6,846 68.6% 2,683 26.9% 449 4.5% 0 0.0%
Kosciusko 16,553 73.6% 4,687 20.8% 1,250 5.6% 0 0.0%
LaGrange 4,884 74.6% 1,373 21.0% 288 4.4% 1 0.0%
Lake 58,356 44.0% 70,412 53.1% 3,793 2.9% 7 0.0%
LaPorte 16,486 52.0% 13,833 43.6% 1,405 4.4% 0 0.0%
Lawrence 9,030 71.5% 2,896 22.9% 703 5.6% 0 0.0%
Madison 18,740 52.7% 14,140 39.7% 2,693 7.6% 1 0.0%
Marion 66,021 29.6% 141,777 63.6% 15,160 6.8% 39 0.0%
Marshall 8,743 69.1% 3,378 26.7% 539 4.3% 1 0.0%
Martin 2,397 70.6% 801 23.6% 199 5.9% 0 0.00%
Miami 6,156 72.6% 1,923 22.7% 398 4.7% 0 0.0%
Monroe 12,706 31.9% 25,280 63.4% 1,887 4.7% 11 0.00%
Montgomery 6,443 66.4% 2,496 25.7% 757 7.8% 1 0.0%
Morgan 13,522 64.0% 5,096 24.1% 2,508 11.9% 1 0.0%
Newton 2,946 74.7% 825 20.9% 174 4.4% 0 0.0%
Noble 8,227 72.0% 2,696 23.6% 503 4.4% 0 0.0%
Ohio 1,448 73.8% 463 23.6% 50 2.6% 0 0.0%
Orange 3,896 72.8% 1,292 24.2% 160 3.0% 0 0.0%
Owen 3,849 62.9% 1,680 27.5% 587 9.6% 0 0.0%
Parke 3,212 72.5% 992 22.4% 226 5.1% 0 0.0%
Perry 3,424 55.6% 2,516 40.9% 219 3.6% 0 0.0%
Pike 2,618 72.1% 882 24.3% 131 3.6% 0 0.0%
Porter 29,969 51.9% 25,916 44.9% 1,880 3.3% 11 0.0%
Posey 5,854 67.8% 2,414 27.9% 366 4.2% 3 0.0%
Pulaski 2,633 71.4% 903 24.5% 151 4.1% 0 0.0%
Putnam 6,257 63.4% 2,583 26.2% 1,023 10.4% 0 0.0%
Randolph 4,830 70.8% 1,619 23.7% 371 5.4% 0 0.0%
Ripley 6,326 76.0% 1,573 18.9% 420 5.0% 0 0.0%
Rush 3,111 64.6% 1,164 24.2% 544 11.3% 0 0.0%
St. Joseph 33,748 47.4% 34,746 48.8% 2,654 3.7% 5 0.0%
Scott 4,155 62.2% 2,236 33.5% 287 4.3% 0 0.0%
Shelby 7,067 61.7% 3,109 27.1% 1,280 11.2% 0 0.0%
Spencer 4,900 65.1% 2,381 31.6% 245 3.3% 1 0.0%
Starke 4,579 67.5% 1,885 27.8% 317 4.7% 0 0.0%
Steuben 6,559 68.0% 2,692 27.9% 392 4.1% 0 0.0%
Sullivan 3,987 64.3% 1,837 29.6% 378 6.1% 0 0.0%
Switzerland 1,849 70.7% 666 25.5% 101 3.9% 0 0.0%
Tippecanoe 18,324 47.7% 18,485 48.1% 1,608 4.2% 10 0.0%
Tipton 3,331 64.3% 1,386 26.8% 462 8.9% 0 0.0%
Union 1,742 72.0% 532 22.0% 144 6.0% 0 0.0%
Vanderburgh 25,221 53.9% 19,899 42.6% 1,631 3.5% 2 0.0%
Vermillion 3,012 60.7% 1,705 34.4% 243 4.9% 0 0.0%
Vigo 13,444 50.9% 11,773 44.6% 1,205 4.6% 4 0.0%
Wabash 7,071 72.5% 2,253 23.1% 431 4.4% 2 0.0%
Warren 2,077 74.4% 596 21.4% 117 4.2% 0 0.0%
Warrick 12,722 63.7% 6,605 33.1% 630 3.2% 7 0.0%
Washington 5,739 72.4% 1,880 23.7% 309 3.9% 0 0.0%
Wayne 10,091 61.0% 5,465 33.0% 988 6.0% 5 0.0%
Wells 6,797 75.0% 1,882 20.8% 389 4.3% 0 0.0%
White 4,626 69.2% 1,778 26.6% 281 4.2% 1 0.0%
Whitley 8,055 70.4% 2,746 24.0% 632 5.5% 3 0.0%

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

By congressional district

edit

Morales won seven of nine congressional districts.[32]

District Morales Wells Maurer Representative
1st 47% 50% 3% Frank J. Mrvan
2nd 61% 35% 4% Rudy Yakym
3rd 63% 33% 4% Jim Banks
4th 58% 34% 8% Jim Baird
5th 52% 41% 7% Victoria Spartz
6th 57% 34% 9% Greg Pence
7th 24% 70% 6% André Carson
8th 63% 33% 4% Larry Bucshon
9th 60% 36% 5% Trey Hollingsworth (117th Congress)
Erin Houchin (118th Congress)

Notes

edit
  1. Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear

References

edit
  1. "Here's why secretary of state, auditor and treasurer are not on the primary ballot". WTHR. May 3, 2022. Retrieved June 1, 2022.
  2. "Ex-Pence aide seeks Indiana elections office that fired him". June 2, 2022.
  3. "Secretary of State candidate Diego Morales used campaign funds for $43,000 car".
  4. "Diego Morales responds to criticism of using "veteran" to describe himself".
  5. "Ex-Pence Indiana aide running for Congress defends resume".
  6. "Morales responds to sexual harassment accusations".
  7. "HOWEY: Diego Morales and the press".
  8. "Republicans win Indiana auditor, treasurer & secretary of state races".
  9. Cloutier, Jimmy (February 17, 2022). "Indiana's secretary of state race on track to be the most expensive in two decades". OpenSecrets News. Retrieved June 1, 2022.
  10. 1 2 "Candidates - America First Secretary of State Coalition". americafirstsos.com. November 26, 2018. Archived from the original on May 1, 2022. Retrieved June 5, 2022.
  11. 1 2 "Crowded GOP field for Indiana State Treasurer's Post". www.953mnc.com. August 2, 2021. Retrieved January 9, 2022.
  12. 1 2 Carden, Dan (April 26, 2021). "WATCH NOW: Indiana secretary of state launches campaign for full term in 2022". www.nwitimes.com. The Times of Northwest Indiana. Retrieved January 9, 2022.
  13. "Knox County Clerk to Enter SOS Race".
  14. "Newton County native announces run for Secretary of State". www.newsbug.info. December 2, 2021. Retrieved January 9, 2022.
  15. Carden, Dan (January 9, 2022). "Military veteran launches bid for Indiana secretary of state". www.shelbynews.com. Archived from the original on January 12, 2022. Retrieved January 12, 2022.
  16. "GOP delegates buck establishment, nominate Morales over Sullivan for secretary of state".
  17. 1 2 "Could Wells be first Democratic secretary of state in almost 30 years?". The Indiana Citizen. September 25, 2022. Retrieved September 27, 2022.
  18. "Labor 2022 | Indiana State AFL-CIO".
  19. "Indiana Primary Election Candidate Endorsements Announced". April 26, 2022.
  20. "VoteVets endorses Destiny Wells for Secretary of State". September 21, 2022. Retrieved September 27, 2022.
  21. "Our view editorial: Destiny Wells has the character to be secretary of state". The Herald Bulletin. October 31, 2022. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  22. "Carmel resident Jeff Maurer running for Indiana Secretary of State". August 21, 2021. Retrieved January 9, 2022.
  23. Longnecker, Emily (October 11, 2022). "Two Candidates for Indiana Secretary of State Take Part in a Debate". WTHR.
  24. Longnecker 2022.
  25. Lange, Kaitlin (October 10, 2022). "Secretary of State debate: Diego Morales is a no-show and other takeaways". The Indianapolis Star.
  26. PBS
  27. "Secretary of State and Attorney General: What to Watch for Next Week in Key Statewide Contests". Sabato's Crystal Ball. November 3, 2022. Retrieved November 3, 2022.
  28. Solomon, Zack (November 7, 2022). "Elections Daily Secretary of State Ratings". Elections Daily. Retrieved November 29, 2022.
  29. Indy Politics/ARW Strategies (R)
  30. Indy Politics/ARW Strategies (R)
  31. "Indiana Election Results November 8, 2022". Indiana Election Division.
  32. https://davesredistricting.org/maps#viewmap::c08c9df0-9756-4c5a-a7e7-01ff03bbb170
edit