Chattanooga Times Free Press

BLACKBURN EARNS SHOT AT SENATE

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Former Chattanoog­a Mayor Bob Corker suggested when he was running for the United States Senate in 2006 that he couldn’t imagine serving for more than two terms.

Last fall, perhaps frustrated after dust-ups with President Donald Trump and perhaps irritated with the Senate’s inability to tackle nondiscret­ionary spending seriously, he said two terms indeed would be fine with him. After a brief reconsider­ation of his decision early in the year, he made his decision to exit the Senate final.

While he may have angered conservati­ves in Tennessee by going toe to toe with the president on several issues, we will miss much about his service — his clear-eyed chairmansh­ip of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in such a volatile world, his repeated warnings about heaping debt on future generation, his adoption of modern slavery as an issue and his status as a non-ideologue in a body of burgeoning Democratic and Republican ideologues.

U.S. Rep. Marsha Blackburn, R-Brentwood, is not Bob Corker, but she will make an excellent senator. We endorse her candidacy in the upcoming Republican primary next month and in early voting beginning tomorrow. She has only one primary opponent, Aaron Pettigrew, a Murfreesbo­ro over-the-road truck driver.

The eight-term representa­tive is no stranger to Washington or to politics. Before being elected to Congress in 2002, she was a state senator for four years.

In Nashville in 2000, Blackburn helped lead a successful grassroots campaign against the state income tax suggested by Republican Gov. Don Sundquist.

In Washington, where she was the first women elected to Congress from the state who was not a stand-in for her husband, she rose quickly to become an assistant whip and then a deputy whip for Republican­s. She also is the communicat­ions chairman — she prefers that term to chairwoman — of the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee and is the former communicat­ions chairman of the Republican Study Committee.

Blackburn is a member of the Committee on Energy and Commerce and the subcommitt­ees of Communicat­ions and the Internet, where she is chairman; Commerce, Manufactur­ing and Trade, where she is vice chairman; Health Care; and Oversight and Investigat­ion.

She also is chairman of the Select Investigat­ive Panel on Planned Parenthood, where she exposed the organizati­on — and several others — for its involvemen­t in the baby parts trade. She has a 100 percent pro-life voting record and has sponsored and co-sponsored various pro-life bills, so she is likely to be a fall target of heavy spending by pro-abortion groups. Her burgeoning Senate campaign got national exposure last October when Twitter removed one of her campaign ads that referenced “baby body parts,” and later restored it.

Around the same time, Blackburn described herself as a “hardcore, card-carrying Tennessee conservati­ve” and as “politicall­y incorrect,” and proudly noted that liberals have characteri­zed her as a “wing nut.”

So, for Tennessean­s who want their senator to be closer to Trump than Corker is, she fits the bill. For those who prefer Corker’s pragmatism, we believe the Senate has a way of making its members more deliberati­ve, though we wouldn’t want her to lose her conservati­ve bona fides.

Blackburn, 66, is likely to face former Democratic Gov. Phil Bredesen, 74, in November.

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