Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Sessions touts loyalty to Trump in Senate run

GOP primary brimming with rivals for Ala. seat

- By Kim Chandler

VESTAVIA HILLS, Ala.— Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, giving a recent campaign speech to a suburban Republican club, recalled his 2016 decision to endorse then-presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump at a time when many party members were uncertain about the bellicose outsider.

“‘Jeff, are you sure?’ ” he said, recalling questions he got at the time. “But let me ask you: Was I right?” Sessions told the Mid Alabama Republican Club, which responded with loud applause and cheers.

Sessions is emphasizin­g his loyalty to Trump’s agenda and his record in office as he seeks to reclaim the U.S. Senate seat he held for 20 years before being tapped as the president’s first attorney general, a position he was forced to resign when his recusal from the Russia inquiry prompted blistering public criticism from Trump.

The former four-term U.S. senator, and the first to endorse Trump in 2016, faces a competitiv­e primary that will test how much Trump’s censure has damaged his support in deeply red Alabama.

Sessions is part of a crowded field competing in the March 3 GOP primary to challenge U.S. Sen. Doug Jones. Former Auburn University football coach Tommy Tuberville, U.S. Rep. Bradley Byrne, former Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore, state Rep. Arnold Mooney, businessma­n Stanley Adair and Ruth Page Nelson are also seeking the Republican nomination.

Sessions entered as the front-runner, but many observers expect the race could head to a two-person runoff, with Tuberville and Byrne frequently predicted to claim a runoff spot with Sessions.

In his campaign stops, Sessions praises the president’s policies on trade, energy, immigratio­n and foreign policies and derides Democrats’ impeachmen­t investigat­ion.

Trump, who last year called appointing Sessions the “biggest mistake” of his presidency, has said little about the Alabama primary.

“I saw he said very nice things about me last night, but we’ll have to see. I haven’t made a determinat­ion,” Trump said of Sessions in November, when asked if he would intervene in the race.

Trump on Thursday tweeted, “I LOVE ALABAMA!” along with a poll from early December of the Republican front-runners that showed Sessions narrowly leading the field over Tuberville.

Sessions said he doesn’t get asked that much about the recusal on the campaign of trail. At a lunch speech to the Opelika Rotary Club, audience members lobbed questions about the national debt and education instead of Trump.

Bill Armistead, a former chairman of the Alabama Republican Party, said Sessions has a long history with Alabama voters before Trump’s criticism, noting that Sessions didn’t even draw a challenger in his last election in 2014.

Wearing a Trump-Pence ’20 hat and a Vietnam veteran jacket, retired electrical lineman Winston Sides described himself as a “true Trumpster” after listening to other Senate candidates at a forum in Wetumpka. Sides said he has no problem with Sessions’ decision to recuse himself but remains undecided whether he’ll vote for him this time.

“Jeff Sessions, really, did he do anything wrong? No. … But is it going to hurt Jeff? Yes,” Sides said.

Sides said he voted for Sessions in the past but wants to look at other candidates, including Tuberville.

 ?? Kim Chandler The Associated Press ?? Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions speaks to supporters in Vestavia Hills, Ala., in mid-January. Sessions is trying to regain the U.S. Senate seat he held for 20 years.
Kim Chandler The Associated Press Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions speaks to supporters in Vestavia Hills, Ala., in mid-January. Sessions is trying to regain the U.S. Senate seat he held for 20 years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States