2022 Indiana Secretary of State election


The 2022 Indiana Secretary of State election took place on November 8, 2022, to elect the next secretary of state of Indiana. Holli Sullivan, a Republican who was appointed to replace Connie Lawson as Secretary of State in 2021, ran for a full term in office but was defeated in the Republican primary by Diego Morales. The Democratic, Republican, and Libertarian parties chose their nominees for Secretary of State at a party convention on June 18, 2022.
Despite Indiana's strong Republican lean, polls showed a competitive race. Republican nominee Diego Morales faced numerous controversies, including the fact that he was previously fired from a position in the Secretary of State office; his echoing of Donald Trump's false accusations of fraud in the 2020 elections; his use of campaign funds to purchase a $43,000 Toyota RAV4; his description of himself as a "veteran" even though he only served in the military for three months and he was in the Indiana Army National Guard and never deployed on Active Duty ; claims that portions of his resume are exaggerated or misleading; and two accusations of sexual harassment against him. After winning the Republican nomination, he changed his stance on the 2020 presidential election, telling The Washington Post that he believed Biden won legitimately. WTHR commented that Morales received the most negative press of any statewide candidate in Indiana since Richard Mourdock in the 2012 Senate race.
Despite Morales's controversies, he secured a decisive victory over Wells and Maurer. However, he underperformed all other statewide Republican nominees in Indiana by 5-7 percentage points.

Republican convention

Incumbent Secretary of State Connie Lawson resigned in 2021 due to health issues. Governor Eric Holcomb chose state representative Holli Sullivan to replace her, and Sullivan announced she would run for a full term. The Republican primary for Secretary of State was the most expensive in two decades, with challenger Diego Morales leading Sullivan in fundraising. Morales was endorsed by the America First Secretary of State Coalition, a conservative group that supports a slate of candidates in the secretary of state elections.

Candidates

Nominee

Eliminated at convention

Did not file

Democratic convention

Candidates

Nominee

Libertarian convention

Nominee

  • Jeff Maurer, entrepreneur

Write-in candidates

  • David Wetterer, Green Party
  • Andrew Straw, Disability Party

General election

Debate

On October 10, a debate for the Secretary of State election was held by WFYI and the League of Women Voters. Democrat Destiny Wells and Libertarian Jeff Maurer participated in the debate, while Morales skipped it to attend a meeting of the Warrick County Republican Party. Wells and Maurer heavily criticized Morales for not attending the debate. While both agreed that Joe Biden won the 2020 presidential election, Maurer called for an election audit of every Indiana county, while Wells did not. When asked about the problem of low voter turnout, Wells proposed independent redistricting, keeping polling places open longer, and extending the window for early voting as ways to increase turnout, while Maurer blamed the two-party system for creating a lack of competition.

Results

By congressional district

Morales won seven of nine congressional districts.
DistrictMoralesWellsMaurerRepresentative
47%50%3%Frank J. Mrvan
61%35%4%Rudy Yakym
63%33%4%Jim Banks
58%34%8%Jim Baird
52%41%7%Victoria Spartz
57%34%9%Greg Pence
24%70%6%André Carson
63%33%4%Larry Bucshon
60%36%5%Trey Hollingsworth
60%36%5%Erin Houchin