Chattanooga Times Free Press

Moore has few options as Jones’ win OK’d

- BY KIM CHANDLER

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — With Alabama officials certifying Doug Jones’ win in the U.S. Senate election, Republican Roy Moore has few options left to turn back a defeat he has yet to concede.

The state’s Republican governor, secretary of state and attorney general on Thursday certified Jones’ win by 21,924 votes, a margin of 1.6 percent, over Moore. Jones is set to be sworn in on Jan. 3, when Congress returns from break. Jones’ win came after Moore was dogged by accusation­s of sexual misconduct involving teenage girls that occurred decades ago.

In a Thursday statement, Moore seemed close to acknowledg­ing his loss but stood by his assertion of fraud in the election that saw him battling deep-pocketed Democrats and establishm­ent Republican­s.

“I have stood for the truth about God and the Constituti­on for the people of Alabama,” he said. “I have no regrets. To God be the glory.”

He filed a last-minute lawsuit Wednesday night claiming he was the victim of “systematic voter fraud” in an unsuccessf­ul bid to stop the election’s certificat­ion.

A judge dismissed the complaint. Alabama Secretary of State John Merrill, a Republican who said he voted for Moore, said his office has so far found no evidence of voter fraud in the election.

Merrill said Moore could pay for a recount at his own expense or launch another lawsuit seeking to toss out the result. He could also ask the Senate not to seat Jones, but that is unlikely because President Donald Trump and other Republican­s have said Moore should concede.

Moore’s attorney and campaign chairman did not return messages asking if Moore would pursue additional action.

Jones is a former U.S. attorney best known for prosecutin­g two Ku Klux Klansmen responsibl­e for Birmingham’s infamous 1963 church bombing. As he launched his campaign, he said he saw an opening for a rare Democratic win against Moore, a polarizing figure who was twice removed as the state’s chief justice after thwarting federal court orders about the public display of the Ten Commandmen­ts and same-sex marriage.

“As I said on election night, our victory marks a new chapter for our state and the nation,” Jones said Thursday. “I will be an independen­t voice and work to find common ground with my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to get Washington back on track and fight to make our country a better place for all.”

Angi Horn Stalnaker, a Republican strategist who ran previous campaigns against Moore, said it should not come as a surprise that Moore is not following the standard post-election script of conceding a loss and wishing his opponent well.

Moore previously blamed his two ousters from the court on those he said didn’t like his push to “acknowledg­e God” with a Ten Commandmen­ts monument and a “politicall­y motivated effort by radical homosexual and transgende­r groups,” who targeted him because of what he called his “outspoken opposition to their immoral agenda.”

“His whole shtick relies on martyrdom,” Stalnaker said. “The big fat Republican establishm­ent joined up with the big fat hippy dippy liberals, and ‘Once again look at me, crucified on the cross.’”

The ink was barely dried on certificat­ion papers before speculatio­n began on what Moore might do next — whether taking additional steps in a legal war or running for another state office, such as governor, in 2018. The Alabama Republican Party opens qualifying for the 2018 races on Jan. 8.

 ??  ?? Doug Jones Roy Moore
Doug Jones Roy Moore
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Alabama Secretary of State John Merrill, right, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey, center, and Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall look over documents Thursday before they certify the results of the 2017 special election for U.S. senator in Montgomery, Ala.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Alabama Secretary of State John Merrill, right, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey, center, and Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall look over documents Thursday before they certify the results of the 2017 special election for U.S. senator in Montgomery, Ala.

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