Voters in Arizona, Kansas, Michigan, Missouri, and Washington went to the polls Tue. to vote in several primary races.

Here's a rundown of who won and lost in the Aug. 2 primaries.

1. First: Kansans voted to reject an amendment removing the right to an abortion from the state constitution.

The AP called the race Tue. night. With 95% reporting, 58.8% voted against the proposed constitutional amendment.

What does this mean? It means that abortion will continue to be a protected constitutional right in the state of Kansas.

2. In Michigan, businesswoman Tudor Dixon won the Republican gubernatorial primary with 40.6% of the vote.

Dixon, a Trump endorsee, will face incumbent Gov. Grechen Whitmer this Nov..

Could Dixon win this Nov.? It's unlikely: per FiveThirtyEight, Dixon has a 5 in 100 chance of winning the race.

3. Elsewhere in Michigan, incumbent GOP Rep. Peter Meijer lost his primary to Trump-endorsed challenger John Gibbs.

Meijer is the second pro-impeachment Republican to lose his primary to a Trump-backed challenger this cycle. (AP)

Gibbs won the primary by 3.6 points with 51.8% of the vote. He will face Democrat Hillary Scholten this Nov.. (NYT)

Meijer conceded the race to Biggs Tue. night: "I want to thank everyone in West Michigan for their support."

4. In Arizona, former Thiel Foundation president Blake Masters won the GOP Senate primary by 10+ points.

Masters will face incumbent Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly this Nov. in this cycle's most competitive Senate race. (NYT)

Could Masters win this Nov.? Per FiveThirtyEight's election forcast, Kelly is "slightly favored" to win this Nov..

5. Elsewhere in Arizona, Secretary of State Katie Hobbs overwhelmingly won the Democratic gubernatorial primary.

Hobbs won her primary against Marco López by 50.6 points with 72.8% of the vote. (NYT)

Arizona's Republican gubernatorial primary is still undecided, as of Wed. morning.

With 80% of the vote reported, former news anchor Kari Lake is leading the race by 1.8 points with 46.2%.

AZ GOP gubernatorial primary, 80% reporting (NYT): 🗳️Lake: 46.2% 🗳️Karrin Taylor Robson: 44.4%

5. In Michigan's newly drawn 11th District, Rep. Haley Stevens defeated colleague Rep. Andy Levin with 59.9% of the vote.

Stevens and Levin were drawn into the same district due to redistricting this year. (NYT)

Stevens is favored to win the seat this Nov.. (Cook Political Report)