Blake Fiechter Secures GOP Senate Nomination in Indiana’s 19th District
Blake Fiechter clinches the Republican nomination for Indiana Senate District 19 as finance reports reveal campaign spending; Judge Wendy Davis denies ethics violations.

*TL;DR: Blake Fiechter won the Republican primary for Indiana’s 19th Senate district; newly released finance reports detail the money behind the race, while senior Judge Wendy Davis rebuts a ethics complaint and former Senator Mike Braun backs a different GOP candidate.
Context The May 5, 2026 primary marked the final step before the general election for Indiana’s state Senate seats. District 19, covering parts of central Indiana, has been a focal point for GOP fundraising and endorsements. Simultaneously, a judicial ethics complaint against senior Judge Wendy Davis surfaced, and former U.S. Senator Mike Braun announced an endorsement in a separate GOP primary.
Key Facts - Blake Fiechter secured the Republican nomination for the Indiana State Senate seat in District 19, defeating his primary opponents by a margin of roughly 12 percentage points. - Campaign finance disclosures filed on April 21 show Fiechter’s campaign raised $1.2 million, with $450,000 contributed by three local business entities and $300,000 from a statewide Republican committee. The filings also list $150,000 in independent expenditures supporting his candidacy. - Senior Judge Wendy Davis, who faced a judicial ethics complaint filed by Democratic activists, issued a statement asserting she “did nothing wrong” and that the complaint lacks merit. - Former Senator Mike Braun, a prominent figure in Indiana GOP politics, announced his endorsement of Brown’s re‑election campaign in the District 15 Republican primary, signaling his continued influence in state races. - Finance reports for the District 15 primary, released a day earlier, reveal $800,000 in total spending, highlighting the competitive nature of GOP contests across the state.
What It Means Fiechter’s victory positions him as the GOP’s standard‑bearer in a district that leans heavily Republican, making the general election a formality for the party. The disclosed funding sources suggest strong backing from both local business interests and the state party apparatus, a pattern mirrored in other Indiana primaries.
Judge Davis’s denial of wrongdoing may limit further legal scrutiny, but the episode underscores growing partisan involvement in judicial oversight. Meanwhile, Braun’s endorsement of Brown could consolidate establishment support in District 15, potentially shaping the GOP’s legislative agenda if both candidates win their general elections.
Looking Ahead Watch for the November general election results in District 19 and District 15, and monitor any follow‑up actions on the ethics complaint against Judge Davis as the state’s political landscape solidifies.
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