Chattanooga Times Free Press

Shelby, 4 House members eye re-election in Alabama

- BY JAY REEVES

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Five Republican members of Alabama’s congressio­nal delegation are seeking re-election against poorly financed Democrats, some of whom are trying to boost their campaigns by tying their opponents to GOP presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump.

Any anti-Trump strategy could be a gamble since a Democratic presidenti­al nominee hasn’t carried Alabama since 1976 and the New York businessma­n is likely to carry Alabama over Democrat Hillary Clinton. In a sign of the potential riskiness of such a move, one Democrat is saying he would be happy to work with a President Trump.

But with Republican­s viewed as prohibitiv­e favorites in the one Senate race and four House contests on the ballot, the fallout or gain from the race at the top of the ticket could be minimal.

Here is a look at the contested races:

U.S. SENATE

Incumbent Richard Shelby, 82, of Tuscaloosa is seeking his sixth six-year term, this time running against Democrat Ron Crumpton, 48, of Pelham.

Shelby, a one-time Democrat who has one of the most consistent records of voting against Democratic President Barack Obama in Congress, has said he will support the Republican ticket including Trump.

Crumpton, the executive director of the Alabama Medical Marijuana Coalition, argues on his campaign website that the bickering between the GOP and Trump will diminish Republican turnout and give Democrats their best chance ever of making gains in the state. Perhaps, but Shelby already has won the money race: The Federal Election Commission showed Shelby with $9.8 million in campaign funds as of June 30 to $3,910 for Crumpton.

HOUSE DISTRICT 2

Rep. Martha Roby of Montgomery is seeking her fourth two-year term representi­ng southeast Alabama after becoming one of the first national Republican­s to speak out against Trump after the release of sexually charged audio recordings from 11 years ago.

While some praised Roby, 40, for saying she wouldn’t support Trump, her stance angered some tea party supporters who began pushing a write-in campaign for tea party leader Becky Gerritson, who lost to Roby in the primary. Pro-Trump protesters showed up at a Roby appearance in Dothan last week.

Roby is opposed by Democrat Nathan Mathis, a 73-year-old former state legislator who has posted on his campaign’s Facebook site that he “will not say one negative word” about Trump.

HOUSE DISTRICT 3

Seeking his seventh term representi­ng eastern Alabama, Rep. Mike Rogers of Jacksonvil­le has pledged to vote for the Republican ticket. Democratic challenger Jesse Smith says Rogers’ support of a candidate like Trump “sets precedents.”

Some of the counties in the 3rd District still have Democratic leanings in local races, but Rogers, 53, hasn’t faced a substantia­l re-election race since first winning the seat in 2002.

Smith, of Phenix City, is a veteran who describes himself as a progressiv­e Democrat.

HOUSE DISTRICT 5

Rep. Mo Brooks, 62, of Huntsville, an outspoken member of the tea party caucus in Washington, is opposed by Democrat Will Boyd Jr. in Alabama’s northernmo­st congressio­nal district.

Brooks, who supported Sen. Ted Cruz in the GOP primary, was sharply critical of Trump in the primary campaign and hasn’t been enthusiast­ically supportive since the Republican National Convention. Brooks has called Trump a better choice than Clinton for president, but he’s mostly steered clear of the presidenti­al race.

Boyd is a businessma­n and pastor who once ran a write-in campaign for the U.S. Senate as an independen­t in Illinois, where he lived at the time.

HOUSE DISTRICT 6

Seeking re-election for the first time in heavily Republican central Alabama, Rep. Gary Palmer, 62, of Hoover has described both Trump and Clinton as “very imperfect candidates” while saying he will unfailingl­y support the Republican ticket. Palmer put out a statement criticizin­g the media following reports he was dropping his support of Trump following the release of the audio tapes.

Palmer is opposed by Democrat David J. Putman, a military veteran and retired Southern Co. employee from Vestavia Hills. The federal election agency showed Putman, 72, had a campaign debt of $39,183 as of Sept. 30 to a balance of $822,269 for Palmer, who previously ran a conservati­ve think tank in metro Birmingham.

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