Los Angeles Times

Alabama Senate race splits those loyal to president

- By Lisa Mascaro

FLORENCE, Ala. — President Trump will swoop into Alabama on Friday to bolster the campaign of Sen. Luther Strange, a soft-spoken former state attorney general in danger of losing the seat he was tapped to fill just months ago after Jeff Sessions joined the administra­tion.

But in this conservati­ve state that overwhelmi­ngly supported Trump and prides itself as the heart of Old Dixie, some think the president is backing the wrong man. And they’re not sure his visit will help.

Voter enthusiasm instead runs high for the more Trump-like candidate, Roy Moore, the state’s polarizing former chief justice. His farright, Bible-quoting views twice resulted in him being forced off the bench for defying higher court decisions, including the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in favor of gay marriage. Die-hard supporters have no doubt he will be just as unwavering if they send him to Washington.

The GOP establishm­ent has poured millions of dollars into Strange’s campaign, much from Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s aligned Senate Leadership Fund.

But a rival group, run by allies of former Trump

advisor Stephen K. Bannon, backs Moore, turning Tuesday’s GOP runoff into a trial run for several outsider-versus-establishm­ent contests to be waged in Arizona, Nevada and other states ahead of the 2018 midterm election.

The race also marks a new kind of power struggle for the hearts and minds of Trump voters — one that pits Bannon, an influentia­l figure in the president’s campaign, against Trump himself.

Trump’s endorsemen­t was once seen as making Strange a shoo-in for the job. But now it’s unclear whether voter loyalty to the president can overcome skepticism about “Big Luther,” as Alabamans call the 6-foot-9 senator.

“I was a big Trump supporter — and still am — but he’s wrong on this one,” said Jeff Hopper, a gun rights activist who brought his family to hear Moore speak at a Christian high school in Florence, Ala.

“Quite frankly I’m a little bit disappoint­ed that Donald Trump has decided to come out on his side,” Hopper added.

Despite Trump’s endorsemen­t, which Strange has made a central part of his campaign, many voters here view him as an uninspirin­g mainstream politician being forced on them by McConnell and others.

It didn’t help that Strange was appointed by former Gov. Robert J. Bentley, a fellow Republican who at the time was embroiled in an ethics scandal that many believed Strange’s public integrity unit was investigat­ing. Bentley avoided impeachmen­t by resigning soon after Strange’s appointmen­t.

The temporary appointmen­t to Sessions’ old Senate seat was intended to give Strange a head start in the race. Instead it has tarnished his image.

Moore, on the other hand, appeals to Bannon’s preference for disrupters like Trump. Now that Bannon has left the White House and resumed his war on the Washington establishm­ent via the Breitbart News website, helping Moore also gives Bannon another opportunit­y to frustrate McConnell and other GOP leaders. Bannon and Moore met recently in Washington.

“This is a real opportunit­y to set the tone for the Trump coalition of candidates,” said Eric Beach, a California­n who runs the pro-Trump Great America Alliance and its PAC.

The group recently hired a top Bannon aide as a senior advisor and is running TV ads supporting Moore and bashing Strange. It is launching a Sarah Palinheadl­ined bus tour ahead of Tuesday’s vote.

Strategist­s say the bruising battle may create an opening for Democrat Doug Jones, the former U.S. attorney in Birmingham who reinvestig­ated the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in 1963 and won conviction­s against two former KKK members decades after that pivotal moment in the civil rights movement. It would be a stunning turn of events in red-state Alabama.

“Anything’s possible,” said Sen. Richard C. Shelby, who in 1992 was the last Democrat Alabama elected to the Senate, before he switched to the Republican Party.

At a Saturday morning meeting of the Baldwin County GOP, Strange noted his work as lead counsel for the Gulf states after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill and his creation of a public integrity unit that toppled state leaders.

Strange is warm on a personal level, but as a candidate he’s sometimes what Trump might mock as “lowenergy,” particular­ly in comparison with the firebrand Moore. He’s more passionate talking about his grandkids than about his support of legislatio­n to make it easier to purchase firearm silencers.

Trump’s blessing is seen as Strange’s main hope of winning, though polling shows the race has narrowed amid attack ads on Moore about the handling of funds related to a religious-liberties charity he ran.

“I cannot be more proud of the endorsemen­t of our president,” Strange told the small crowd. “Every time I see him he asks about how are my great friends in Mobile doing .... He just loves Alabama.”

In a tweet Wednesday, Trump said he looked forward to Friday’s rally and added, “I am supporting ‘Big’ Luther Strange because he was so loyal & helpful to me!”

Strange said backlash over his appointmen­t comes mainly from allies of elected officials that his corruption unit booted from office.

“Clearly there was no impropriet­y ... The facts just kind of speak for themselves,” he said in an interview.

Where Strange has often failed to excite voters, Moore has proved too controvers­ial for many. For some Republican­s, almost anyone would be better than Moore.

“I go back to that line in the movie with Marlon Brando on the ship: ‘Let’s just throw the Bible-thumping SOB overboard,’” said Dan Benton, 78, a retired lawyer in Fairhope.

At Moore’s Florence rally, he outlined the wrongs he sees in Washington and “spiritual wickedness in high places.” He warned of “the awful calamity of abortion and sodomy and perverse behavior and murders and shootings and road rage” as “a punishment inflicted upon us for our presumptuo­us sins.”

In response to a question from one of the only African Americans in the audience — who asked when Moore thought America was last “great” — Moore acknowledg­ed the nation’s history of racial divisions, but said: “I think it was great ... when families were united — even though we had slavery — they cared for one another…. Our families were strong; our country had a direction.”

At the same event, Moore referred to Native Americans and Asian Americans as “reds and yellows,” and earlier this year he suggested the Sept. 11 attacks were divine punishment.

Moore tends to prefer his interpreta­tion of Christian Scripture to laws and court orders, which has twice put him out of a job for defying federal court rulings.

After he was removed from the Alabama Supreme Court in 2003 for refusing to abide by a federal order to remove a Ten Commandmen­ts monument from a state courthouse, voters elected him chief justice again in 2012. Then he was suspended for defying the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2015 ruling legalizing same-sex marriage, and resigned.

“If they can make it between two men, they can make it between five men,” he reasoned Sunday.

Jim and Anne Bevis, semi-retired ministers, see Moore’s rise as an example of a “silent majority” bucking the establishm­ent as it did by backing Trump.

“We trust him,” agreed Angela Broyles, who runs a small publishing house.

Some forgive Trump’s endorsemen­t of Strange and hope he’ll change his mind. But that doesn’t seem likely.

Democrats predict the bitter GOP primary, fueled by vicious ad campaigns funded by outside groups, will work in their favor in the December general election.

“Our campaign is right on track,” Jones said in an interview. “As people have seen what has happened in this state, I think they want someone who is not going to embarrass them.”

Moore, though, sees his race as the start of a revival in GOP politics.

“People ask, ‘Well, if you go to Congress are you going to say these things?’ ” he said. “If I go to Congress why wouldn’t I say these things? ... If they don’t want that in Washington, then they better not get me up there.”

 ?? Butch Dill Associated Press ?? SEN. LUTHER STRANGE has Trump’s backing in his run against former state Chief Justice Roy Moore.
Butch Dill Associated Press SEN. LUTHER STRANGE has Trump’s backing in his run against former state Chief Justice Roy Moore.

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