Saturday, April 18, 2026

Ugorachin to challenge Traetori in Roddenshire

COLCICHUTT, Rodd. -- After losing her Senate seat in 2024 by a sliver, former Sen. Anita Ugorachin (N) is seeking a comeback, and this time she'll be running against her former Conservative colleague Sen. Frank Traetori.

Ugorachin, who was known as one of the most progressive senators in the chamber, formally entered the Roddenshire senate race yesterday, filing papers to seek Traetori's seat.

Ugorachin starts her race with a few advantages. She's well-known in the small state, after serving for two terms. She's a prolific fundraiser, especially among women's and minority rights groups. And Roddenshire is a blue state, which tips the race in her favor.

Traetori, a staunch law-and-order conservative, is seeking a third term. Though deeply unpopular with left-wing voters, Traetori has a strong following among conservative voters, and in recent years has appealed more to independent and and moderate voters.

Both candidates have high name recognition and strong support from their national and state parties.

The fate of the race may well come down to voter turnout. If Conservative voters show up in large numbers to back Traetori, he may win. If Conservative voters stay home and NAT voters flood the polls, Ugorachin may be swept back into office.

Ugorachin beat Traetori once back in 2012. Traetori made a comeback in 2014 by beating then Sen. Vince Montimado (N). He beat Montimado again in 2020. Ugorachin won a second term in 2018 against a little-known Conservative opponent.

But her run for a third term in 2024 ran into a roadblock when Hong Kong-born Chinese Grassadellian and political newcomer Victoria Kejung (C) challenged her. Riding a nationwide Conservative tide, Kejung narrowly topped Ugorachin by a 51-48% margin.

But now Ugorachin, the first Vietnamese-Grassadellian senator, will face another tough race against Traetori, who already has $4.3 million in the bank.

Ugorachin has $1.1 million left over from her 2024 campaign, so she won't start from scratch. But both candidates and parties will have to raise a hefty amount of cash for the race, as Roddenshire has three media markets, including the Grassadellia City and Mavocke markets, which are two fo the most expensive for advertisements.

In her campaign announcement, Ugorachin said she is running "to finish the work we started." She railed against Traetori and his "ultra-right-wing billionaire friends" whom "he constantly votes to protect."

"Frank Traetori has no idea what it's like to be a normal person who has a normal life and normal bills. He doesn't know what it's like to struggle to pay rent. He doesn't know what it's like to struggle to pay a surprise medical bill or to pay for kids sport equipment or summer camp. Or how hard it is for a single mother or father trying to pay the bills and raise a kid at the same time. All Frank Traetori knows is how to get bigger returns on corporate stocks and how to expand one's stock portfolio," she said.

Traetori shot back on X, formerly Twitter, saying "Ugorachin is in bed with the national NAT party. She's raised millions from these left-wing groups. For someone who rails against rich people, she sure has raised a lot of money and hob-knobbed with a lot of these same rich people she claims to fight against."

A iVote poll released Thursday found Traetori leading Ugorachin by nearly six points, 52.8% to 46.2 percent, respectively, with a little over one percent choosing other candidates or write-ins.

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