The battle for the House of Representatives took a break on Tuesday when Alaska and Wyoming voters went to the polls. Neither state has a competitive congressional race in the 2018 midterm elections — and each has only one member of Congress anyway.

But each of those states will elect new governors this year. The campaign for the governor’s mansion in Wyoming more or less ended with the Republican primary tonight, and Alaska’s race, one of 2018’s most unusual and a true three-way contest, is just getting started.

The clock is ticking: Alaska’s bizarre race could allow two center-to-left candidates to split the vote and hand the contest to the Republican — unless they join forces. They have until September 4, when ballots start printing, to decide.

In Wyoming, a crowded race that included Republican mega-donor Foster Friess — a.k.a. Rick Santorum’s favorite billionaire — allowed the generous spender to get a little skin in the game.

Winner: Alaska Republicans

Former Alaska state Sen. Mike Dunleavy won Tuesday’s Republican primary easily, as had been expected, and now his opponents have two weeks to figure out whether to team up and try to stop him or go their own way. Dunleavy received the support of former Gov. Sean Parnell — his winning outcome wasn’t really in doubt.

Two polls have already shown the nightmare scenario for Alaska Democrats: Dunleavy beating both Mark Begich, a former Democratic US senator, and Bill Walker, who is looking to serve a second term, by a few points. A split vote risks handing the governor’s mansion to Republicans.

Begich ran, in part, because of Walker’s weak standing. Morning Consult puts Walker’s approval rating at 29 percent and his disapproval at 54 percent, making him one of the most unpopular governors in the country. Begich has criticized him for dipping into the state’s unique’s economic welfare program — the Permanent Fund, the closest thing to a universal basic income in the United States — to avert a state budget crisis spurred by the recent drop in oil prices.

Walker is also under attack from both Begich and Dunleavy for the spike in property crime, which is linked to the state’s opioid crisis. Dunleavy, meanwhile, is running on a “Make Alaska Safe Again” message.

The campaigns have talked, at least preliminarily, about how to avoid a Dunleavy win. The presumed options would be one of Walker or Begich dropping out and endorsing the other, or perhaps some kind of a unity ticket. They now have two weeks to decide.

It has happened here before: Walker allied with Democrat Byron Mallott for a unity ticket to win his first election in 2014. Begich endorsed Walker then, while Walker did not return the favor. Walker’s strong ground game may have helped carry the senator to victory that year, even as he fell short in his own campaign.

Loser: Republican mega-donors as candidates

No longer content to fund Rick Santorum’s unsuccessful presidential campaigns, Foster Friess, who once famously declared the best form of birth control was for “gals” to put an aspirin “between their knees,” decided to take his millions and run for office himself.

His generous spending on his own behalf could end up making Wyoming’s Republican primary the most expensive campaign in the state’s history. Friess, who became very rich running a mutual fund in the 1990s, put more than $2 million of his own money into his gubernatorial campaign.

The primary was crowded, with at least four credible candidates to replace outgoing Gov. Matt Mead, who enjoys strong popularity in the state. Friess was running against State Treasurer Mark Gordon, business executive Sam Galeotos, and attorney Harriet Hageman, the only woman on the GOP ballot.

Those mega-donor dollars weren’t enough for Friess. Neither was a last-minute endorsement from President Donald Trump. Gordon narrowly prevailed in Tuesday’s primary.

To the incredible people of the Great State of Wyoming: Go VOTE TODAY for Foster Friess - He will be a fantastic Governor! Strong on Crime, Borders & 2nd Amendment. Loves our Military & our Vets. He has my complete and total Endorsement! — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 21, 2018

Not a good day for the 1 percent — or the president.

Winner: another Democratic woman

Mary Throne almost assuredly won’t win the Wyoming governor’s election against Gordon in November. The major election forecasters rate Wyoming’s race as solidly Republican; the state voted for Donald Trump by 50 points in 2016.

But Throne, the former state Senate leader, will still add her name to the list of Democratic women who have prevailed in primary elections for the 2018 midterms.

Throne joins a cast of Democratic women getting nominated in states around the country, from red to blue:

Gretchen Whitmer in Michigan and Janet Mills in Maine.

in Michigan and in Maine. Michelle Lujan Grisham , who would be the first Latina Democrat elected governor, in New Mexico.

, who would be the first Latina Democrat elected governor, in New Mexico. Stacey Abrams in Georgia, who would be America’s first female African American governor in America, if elected.

in Georgia, who would be America’s first female African American governor in America, if elected. Paulette Jordan , who is the first Native American woman to receive such a nomination, in Idaho.

, who is the first Native American woman to receive such a nomination, in Idaho. Christine Hallquist , who made history as the first transgender women to get on the gubernatorial ballot, in Vermont.

, who made history as the first transgender women to get on the gubernatorial ballot, in Vermont. And Lupe Valdez in Texas, who would be the first Latina governor in the state, if elected.

That’s not even counting Gwen Graham, who is in the lead for the Democratic nomination in Florida’s gubernatorial primary next week.

Each of these women has a varying chance of winning in November. But with just six women holding the top state-level executive offices in the country, nominating this many women in a year that’s favorable for Democrats all but assures those numbers will increase.