Chattanooga Times Free Press

Roby wins Republican runoff in Alabama

- BY KIM CHANDLER AND STEVE PEOPLES

MILLBROOK, Ala. — U.S. Rep. Martha Roby won Alabama’s Republican runoff Tuesday, fighting through lingering fallout from her years-old criticism of then-candidate Donald Trump in a midterm contest that hinged on loyalty to the GOP president.

The four-term incumbent will now represent the GOP on the November ballot having defeated Bobby Bright, a former Democrat who tried to cast himself as the more authentic Trump ally in the low-turnout Republican contest.

The Trump White House was on Roby’s side.

Trump and Vice President Mike Pence endorsed the four-term incumbent. The vice president went further and recorded robocalls distribute­d on her behalf in recent days saying she’s a reliable vote for the Trump agenda.

Some interventi­on was required after Roby angered Alabama Republican­s in the closing days of the 2016 presidenti­al election when she said Trump’s lewd comments about women — captured on an “Access Hollywood” tape — made him unacceptab­le as a candidate for president.

She spent much of the last two years trying to convince her constituen­ts in Alabama’s 2nd Congressio­nal District she was sufficient­ly loyal to Trump.

Trump’s support did not guarantee a victory, of course, even in a deep-red district that overwhelmi­ngly backed him two years ago. The president has a mixed record this primary season, having backed a handful of Republican candidates in friendly districts who ultimately lost.

The most noteworthy, perhaps, was Alabama’s own Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore, who earned the president’s strong backing but suffered an embarrassi­ng loss just eight months ago.

Voters indicated they were willing to move past Roby’s criticism of Trump.

Don Bascom, a retired mechanical engineer who lives in Prattville, said he generally supports the president, but he also shared Roby’s concerns about him in 2016. He voted for the congresswo­man Tuesday.

“I think she has done a good job. She’s an incumbent so to some degree she’s proven herself,” he said. “One of the criticisms I’ve heard of her is that she simply couldn’t vote for Trump when he ran, and to be honest, I couldn’t either because of the way he treats people.”

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