INDIANAPOLIS — Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb will lead Indiana for a second term.
Holcomb, while serving as lieutenant governor to former Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, took office when Pence left to serve as President Donald Trump’s running mate in 2016. He’s since led the state through the devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic and through several contentious debates around teacher pay and the state’s first hate crimes bill.
Holcomb is now poised to lead Indiana for another four years, including during the next legislative session in 2021. There, lawmakers will face the economic consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic and likely make tough choices about funding as they draft the state’s next two-year budget.
After several months marred by a challenging pandemic, Holcomb has faced criticism for his administration’s response to COVID-19. Indiana is now in Stage 5 of the reopening plan, the least restrictive toward business operations and public life.
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Indiana remains in Stage 5 despite the fact COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths have risen sharply in the month since moving into the new stage. The Indiana State Department of Health reported Tuesday a record number of hospitalizations related to the pandemic since the department began collecting data in March.
Holcomb won re-election by securing some 63% of the vote, according to the The Associated Press. Voters chose Holcomb over Democratic candidate Dr. Woody Myers, a physician and former state health commissioner who led Indiana’s approach to the AIDS epidemic, and Libertarian candidate Donald Rainwater, who ran a campaign on constitutional liberty that blasted many of the restrictions Holcomb introduced by executive order to slow the spread of COVID-19.
At a victory party in Carmel around 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Rainwater said he remains positive about the results and is waiting until all the ballots are counted to assess how he performed. At the time, the The Associated Press reported he had won 12% of the vote. He also said he believes Hoosiers across the state will carry on his campaign’s message far after Election Day.
“The citizens of Indiana are showing they are concerned about limited government and individual freedom,” Rainwater said. “I think that we’re going to see a much higher result than what people expect.”
Douglas McNaughton, the chair of the Libertarian Party’s Marion County branch who ran for Indianapolis mayor in 2019, praised Rainwater’s campaign and said he hopes, even without winning the office, it will show voters they can have confidence in independent parties.
“I think Donald did a good job, considering for us it’s always an uphill battle,” McNaughton said. “This shows the party is a viable option.”
Unlike his two opponents, Holcomb has not named who he would appoint as Indiana’s next secretary of education in 2021, the first time the governor will be able to do so. Indiana lawmakers changed the office from an elected post to one appointed in 2019, with support from Holcomb.