Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bannon savages GOP leaders in Senate seat fight

- BY STEVE PEOPLES AND KIM CHANDLER

FAIRHOPE, Ala. — Populist firebrand Steve Bannon savaged national Republican leaders Tuesday night in a fiery call to rally voters behind embattled Senate candidate Roy Moore as the battle for the GOP’s soul spilled into a dirt-floor barn deep in rural Alabama.

Bannon, known best for his former role as President Donald Trump’s chief strategist, called GOP leaders in Congress “cowards” and attacked the party’s 2012 presidenti­al nominee Mitt Romney as a draft dodger as he defended Moore, who is fighting several allegation­s of sexual misconduct and a Washington establishm­ent that wants him to lose the Dec. 12 election.

“The days of taking it silently are over,” Bannon declared at a rally that drew hundreds of Moore supporters to a local farm in the southweste­rn corner of the state.

“They want to destroy Judge Roy Moore. You know why? They want to take your voice away,” Bannon said as Moore looked on. “If they can destroy Roy Moore, they can destroy you.”

Even if he isn’t well-known in this heavily Republican county, Bannon’s appearance was a welcome developmen­t for Moore, who has been shunned by the Republican Party’s biggest stars. Trump himself agreed to campaign later in the week in nearby Florida, but many national GOP leaders say the allegation­s against Moore are credible and he shouldn’t serve in the Senate.

Earlier in the day, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said that Moore, if elected on Dec. 12, would “immediatel­y have an issue with the Ethics Committee” — a process that could lead to his ultimate expulsion from the Senate. Some Republican­s, including Colorado Sen. Cory Gardner, already have promised expulsion.

Another Republican, Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake, sent a $100 check to Moore’s Democratic opponent, Doug Jones, on Tuesday. He tweeted a picture of the check and the words, “Country over party.”

And Romney, the 2012 Republican presidenti­al nominee, said this week that Moore would be “a stain on the GOP and the nation.” ”No vote, no majority is worth losing our honor, our integrity,”

Romney tweeted.

Bannon was most aggressive Tuesday night with Romney, charging that Moore had more integrity and honor than Romney’s entire family. He noted that Moore graduated from the United States Military Academy, while Romney received a draft deferment for his missionary work in France.

“You hid behind your religion,” Bannon said. ‘Do not talk to me about honor and integrity.”

Moore, 70, is facing multiple allegation­s of sexual misconduct, including accusation­s that he molested two teenage girls and pursued romantic relationsh­ips with several others while in his 30s. He has denied the allegation­s.

Outside the event, about three dozen protesters, some dressed as handmaiden­s to symbolize Moore’s accusers, chanted, “We want a senator, not a predator.”

Many gathered inside Oak Hollow Farm’s barn have dismissed the allegation­s as fake. Some didn’t seem to mind them, even if true.

“What girl hasn’t been kissed at 17 years old?” asked Diane Myrick, 69, of nearby Bon Secour. “I know a girl who got married at 14.”

Moore didn’t address the allegation­s directly on Tuesday night. Instead, he cast himself as a political outsider fighting the establishm­ent in both parties, just like Trump did one year ago. He also reminded Alabama voters of his focus on Christian conservati­ve values.

“I know we do not need transgende­r in our military,” Moore said. “If I’m in a foxhole, I don’t want to know whether this guy next to me is wondering if he’s a woman or a man.”

Bannon’s presence had less to do with Moore’s religious conviction­s than with their shared disdain for Washington Republican­s.

Moore was twice removed from his state Supreme Court position, once for disobeying a federal court order to remove a Ten Commandmen­ts monument from the lobby of the state judicial building and later for urging state probate judges to defy the U.S. Supreme Court decision that legalized gay marriage.

Bannon is far more focused on economic populism and immigratio­n. But, like Bannon, Moore has promised to stand up to McConnell, a Republican who is deeply unpopular among many diehard Trump supporters.

“They don’t want somebody up there with an independen­t mind,” Moore said.

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