Albuquerque Journal

In Alabama, Trump stumps for Sen. Strange

Incumbent locked in tight battle with popular conservati­ve

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HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — President Donald Trump implored his supporters Friday to get behind an establishm­ent-backed incumbent in a Republican runoff race in Alabama, arguing that Sen. Luther Strange will “drain the swamp” and doesn’t know the Senate Majority Leader “at all.”

Acknowledg­ing he was putting his own political capital on the line, the president insisted to thousands of cheering fans in Huntsville, Alabama, that backing Strange — who was appointed in February to temporaril­y fill the seat that opened up when Jeff Sessions became attorney general — would help further the Trump agenda.

“We can only win the fights and we can only drain the swamp if we have smart, tough, tenacious leaders who know who they are and know how to deliver,” Trump said. “Luther Strange is our man.”

Despite Trump’s endorsemen­t and heavy spending by a super political action committee tied to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, Strange remains locked in a tight race against former Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore, a jurist known for opposing gay marriage and pushing unsuccessf­ully for the public display of the Ten Commandmen­ts. The runoff vote will be held Tuesday.

Trump said Strange had wrongly been branded an establishm­ent insider, saying people have unfairly claimed Strange is “friendly with Mitch.” Trump called that a “bum rap.”

He also praised Strange for agreeing to back Republican health care legislatio­n with no strings attached, saying, “That’s the coolest thing that’s happened to me in six months.”

Trump noted the Alabama race was close, but said he appreciate­d Strange’s support during the push to overhaul President Barack Obama’s health care law. Said Trump, “We have to be loyal in life.”

And Trump insisted he was taking a political risk, saying if Strange loses, “they’re going to go after me.”

Moore is favored by many of Trump’s supporters and allies, including former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon and former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, who headlined a rally for Moore Thursday night.

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