Chattanooga Times Free Press

Republican Tuberville won’t commit to debate

- BY KIM CHANDLER

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Republican Tommy Tuberville on Friday declined to commit to debating incumbent Sen. Doug Jones in Alabama’s U.S. Senate race, while Jones suggested that Tuberville is scared to do so.

Republican­s are seeking to reclaim the Senate seat from Jones, who won a 2017 special election. Tuberville on Tuesday handily defeated Jeff Sessions to win the Republican nomination and enters the race as a strong challenger in the once reliably red state.

“We’ll sort through the invitation­s and then we’ll decide,” Tuberville said in a telephone interview, before suggesting that party labels and loyalty tell voters all they need to know, a sign of the partisan frame his camp will put on the race over the next 100 days.

“The difference is, he takes his marching orders from the Democratic side … and I stand with President Trump. So, you know, if you think about it, that pretty much tells most of the people in Alabama, all the voters, what they need to know,” Tuberville said.

Jones said in a separate interview that voters deserve a debate.

“Look, he didn’t debate Jeff Sessions and so I’m confident he’s going to be too afraid to debate me, because I do have a record that he can’t just slap a label on when he’s on the debate stage,” Jones said.

The Alabama election is shaping up to be a rollicking race with partisan control of the U.S. Senate at stake and Jones is signaling he will not cede without an aggressive fight.

Tuberville on Friday credited his primary runoff win over Sessions, who held the seat for 20 years, to being a political outsider.

“I’m here to represent them and not Washington, D.C. I’m an outsider. I’ve got a great work ethic. I’ve got a lot of energy and I want to go help the people of the state,” Tuberville said.

A centerpiec­e of his primary runoff campaign was his endorsemen­t by President Donald Trump, a message he will continue into the fall. Trump won Alabama in 2016 with 62% of the vote.

“There’s a total difference. You know, he believes in abortion. … He voted against Brett Kavanaugh. He voted to impeach President Trump,” Tuberville said, contrastin­g himself with his opponent.

Jones is emphasizin­g his bipartisan record, describing himself as someone who both works with the president — noting he has had 17 bipartisan bills signed into law by Trump — and stands up to him.

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