Last year, a handful of Republican state senators in Indiana told President Donald Trump no. They refused to redraw congressional maps to give the GOP two extra seats in the U.S. House.
On Tuesday, Trump delivered his answer.
Five of the seven Republican state senators who faced Trump-backed primary challengers lost their seats. A sixth race was too close to call. Only one incumbent survived.
The message to Republicans nationwide was unmistakable: Cross Trump, and he will spend whatever it takes to end your political career.
The Dispute That Started It All
The fight began in December 2025. Trump wanted Indiana Republicans to draw new congressional district maps mid-decade — a rare and aggressive move designed to help the GOP gain seats in the 2026 midterms. Several other Republican-led states complied, but Indiana did not.
The state Senate voted down Trump’s map. It was a rare public rebuke of the president from his own party. And Trump did not forget.
“I think there are going to be some primaries,” Trump said at the time. He was not bluffing.

The Revenge Campaign
Trump endorsed challengers against seven Republican state senators who had opposed his redistricting plan. Then the money started flowing.
Groups allied with the president spent more than $8.3 million on advertising in these races, according to The New York Times. NBC News put the total spending across the seven contests at roughly $12 million. That is an extraordinary sum for low-profile state legislative primaries — roughly $1.7 million per race.
The incumbents were not powerless. They had name recognition. They had local relationships. Some had served for decades.
None of it mattered.
Even 80-year-old State Sen. Jim Buck, who had served in the Legislature since 1994 and had the endorsement of former Vice President Mike Pence, was defeated. State Sen. Travis Holdman, the third-most powerful Republican in the chamber and a senator since 2008, lost to a real estate agent who briefly dropped out of the race before a White House visit persuaded him to restart his campaign.
State Sen. Greg Walker, who broke down in tears during the redistricting debate, speaking about his fear for the future of the party, lost. State Sen. Linda Rogers lost. State Sen. Dan Dernulc lost.
In total, five incumbents were defeated. A sixth race was separated by just three votes and too close to call. Only State Sen. Greg Goode survived.
Why This Matters Beyond Indiana
The Indiana primaries are being used to judge Trump’s hold on the Republican Party for several reasons.
First, Trump’s approval ratings are sagging nationally. Rising gas prices and the ongoing war in Iran have taken a toll. If Trump’s endorsements had failed in Indiana, it would have signaled that his political power was waning.
They did not fail. They succeeded decisively.
Second, the Indiana races were a pure test of Trump’s personal influence. The incumbents had not committed crimes or embraced Democratic policies. Their sin was specific and political: they defied the president on a strategic priority. Trump asked voters to punish them for that alone. They did.
Third, the money flooded into these races from outside groups aligned with Trump, not from the candidates themselves. That means the president and his network can raise and deploy massive sums to target any Republican who crosses him, anywhere in the country.
“Tonight was a lesson to Republican lawmakers throughout the nation,” said Sen. Jim Banks, an Indiana Republican who backed the challengers. “There are consequences for not representing your voters.”
The Limits of Trump’s Power
The Indiana results do not mean Trump is invincible. The incumbents he targeted all represented districts he had carried by 20 percentage points or more in 2024. He was playing on favorable turf.
And elsewhere on Tuesday night, there were warning signs for Republicans. In Michigan, a Democrat won a state Senate special election in a bellwether district that Harris carried by less than 1 point in 2024. Democrats have been overperforming in special elections across the country since Trump returned to office.
That trend, if it holds through November, could cost Republicans control of the U.S. House.
But for Republican lawmakers watching the Indiana results, the immediate lesson is not about November. It is about self-preservation. Trump may be unpopular with the general electorate. He is still dominant with the primary voters who decide who gets to keep their jobs.
The Bottom Line
Trump-backed challengers unseated five Republican state senators in Indiana who had voted against his redistricting plan. An additional race was too close to call. Only one incumbent survived. Trump’s allies spent between $8.3 million and $12 million on advertising in these low-profile races — an unprecedented sum that signals the president’s willingness to invest heavily in political revenge.
The Indiana primaries are being used to judge Trump’s hold on the Republican Party because they were a pure test of his endorsement power. His approval ratings are sagging nationally. His chosen candidates still won. The message to Republicans was: defy Trump at your own risk. He has the money, the voters, and the memory to destroy you.





