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Bob Good hopes final vote count will put him ahead of Trump-endorsed challenger

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Rep. Bob Good, left, a candidate in the Republican primary for the state's 5th Congressional District, greets family members at a watch party in Lynchburg, Va., Tuesday, June 18, 2024. (AP Photo/P. Kevin Morley)

RICHMOND, Va. – Conservative U.S. Rep. Bob Good, R-Va., is asking for “patience from the people of the 5th District over the coming weeks” as he hopes the final ballot count from Tuesday's primary will allow him to fend off a challenger endorsed by former President Donald Trump.

Good, who chairs the hard-right House Freedom Caucus, currently trails state Sen. John McGuire by a little over 300 votes as elections officials finalize their vote counts and mail-in ballots continue to trickle in.

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McGuire claimed victory late Tuesday, but The Associated Press has not called the race for either candidate.

McGuire’s lead has so far remained relatively stable, shrinking slightly to 313 votes Thursday afternoon from 327 votes at midnight Wednesday.

In an email, Good's campaign manager, Diana Shores, noted that mail-in ballots arriving at local election offices by noon Friday still must be counted. Provisional ballots are also still being counted.

“There is no way anyone can know for certain how many mail in ballots are pending for count,” she said.

The AP expects there to be more clarity in the race Friday afternoon, when many jurisdictions in the district plan to update their results.

If Good loses, he would be the first House incumbent to lose a primary challenge this year, with the exception of one race in which two incumbents faced off due to redistricting.

As one of the most conservative congressmen in the country, Good might be impervious to a primary challenge under normal circumstances. But he earned Trump's wrath when he endorsed Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for president. He switched back to Trump after DeSantis dropped out, but Trump endorsed McGuire and called Good a backstabber.

McGuire's lead translates to a margin of about half a percentage point out of more than 62,000 ballots cast. Once the results are certified, Virginia law allows for a recount if the margin of victory is less than a percentage point. If it's within half a percentage point, the recount can be conducted at the state's expense.

In a social media post Wednesday, Good said the race remained too close to call.

“We are asking for full transparency from the officials involved,” he said.

Both Good and McGuire are among Republicans who have raised concerns about election integrity in the wake of Trump's false claims of voter fraud in his 2020 reelection defeat. Good was among more than 100 GOP House members who voted in January 2021 to object to the Electoral College count from states that Trump disputed.

In a preelection telephone rally with Trump on Monday, McGuire urged supporters to deliver him a margin of victory "too big to rig.”