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At 4:52 p.m. Wednesday, with only minutes left before Montana’s candidate filing deadline, Montana U.S. Attorney Kurt Alme filed paperwork to run for the U.S. Senate seat currently held by Republican Sen. Steve Daines. Eight minutes later, the filing window closed. Montana law requires candidates to submit their paperwork before the 5 p.m. filing deadline in order to appear on the ballot, making the final minutes of the filing period one of the last opportunities for campaigns to enter or exit a race. By then, Daines was no longer in the race. State
candidate records show the senator, who had previously filed to seek
another term, withdrew his name from the ballot shortly before the 5
p.m. deadline, reshaping the Republican field in the final minutes
before filings closed. Reporters tracking the state filing system quickly spotted the change. Shortly afterward, Daines’s chief of staff confirmed the senator had withdrawn from the race. But the senator himself had not yet addressed the move publicly. Read More: Elon Lifts Steve Daines' Suspension - Announces New Policy Liberals Hate Energy Dept. Now Betting $134M on Recycling Rare Earth Minerals to Shore Up Domestic Reserves At 8:02 p.m. Eastern, more than three hours after the filing deadline had passed, Daines posted a video message confirming that he will not seek reelection, bringing an end to a congressional career that has lasted more than a decade. In the video statement, Daines said the decision followed months of consideration about his future after 13 years in Congress.
Daines first entered Congress after winning Montana’s at-large House seat in 2012 before successfully running for the Senate in 2014. Over time, he became a prominent figure within the Senate GOP conference and later served as chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee from 2023 through 2025, helping oversee the party’s Senate campaign strategy during a pivotal election cycle. In Wednesday night’s statement, the retiring senator also made clear who he believes should succeed him.
Alme later confirmed he will run for the Senate seat, seeking the Republican nomination to represent Montana in Washington.
By the time Daines spoke publicly on Wednesday night, the race had already been reshaped. The filing deadline had passed. His name was off the ballot. And Montana’s Senate race had a fresh new face. |
Thursday, March 5, 2026
A 4:52 Filing; a 5:00 Withdrawal - Hours Later Steve Daines Confirms He’s Done
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