Los Angeles Times

Trump endorses Moore after nudge from Bannon

With polls tightening in Alabama’s Senate race, president says, ‘Go get ’em, Roy!’

- By Brian Bennett and Noah Bierman brian.bennett@latimes.com noah.bierman @latimes.com

WASHINGTON — President Trump on Monday fully endorsed Roy Moore, acting to back the Alabama Senate candidate after conversati­ons with his former strategist, Stephen K. Bannon, who has advocated Moore’s candidacy.

Trump’s tweets marked his first all-out endorsemen­t of Moore, who has been accused of making unwanted sexual advances on teenage girls. They came after Republican leaders began to back away in recent days from previous threats to expel Moore if he were to win the Dec. 12 election.

Trump called Moore on Monday morning.

“Go get ’em, Roy!” Trump told Moore, according to a descriptio­n of the phone call that Moore posted on Twitter. “Just got off the phone with President Trump who offered his full support and said he needs a fighter to help him in the U.S. Senate,” Moore wrote.

Trump’s strong support came after a couple of polls showed Moore starting to reestablis­h a lead over Democrat Doug Jones, providing an argument to Moore’s backers that Trump’s support could make the difference in the race.

A Washington Post poll released Saturday, however, showed the race near a dead heat.

Overall, polling by several organizati­ons has shown the race to be close despite Alabama’s heavy Republican tilt.

In addition to the usual margin of error in polls, the outcome is even harder to predict because of the difficulty in knowing who will turn out to vote in a special election held a couple of weeks before Christmas that has been roiled by the accusation­s against Moore.

Some advisors to the president were concerned that if Trump didn’t come out more forcefully in favor of Moore, the former Alabama state judge could lose, according to people familiar with the conversati­ons who spoke on the condition of anonymity to comment on internal discussion­s.

The question of whether to back Moore continues to split Republican­s. A few hours after Trump’s tweets, Mitt Romney, the Republican­s’ 2012 presidenti­al candidate, repeated his opposition to the Alabamian.

Moore’s election would be a “stain on the GOP and the nation,” he wrote on Twitter. “No vote, no majority is worth losing our honor, our integrity.”

Romney has been pondering a possible Senate race in Utah if the state’s senior senator, Republican Orrin G. Hatch, retires. Trump, visiting Utah on Monday, publicly asked Hatch not to retire.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) have previously called on Moore to step aside, saying they believe the allegation­s. Some Republican senators said last month that if Moore were to win the election, they would move to expel him.

But in a sign that the GOP is warming to the candidate, the Republican National Committee revealed Monday night that it would resume financial support of Moore. McConnell said Sunday on ABC News that the decision, at least for now, should be left to Alabama voters. Also, in an interview on CBS, McConnell would not commit to supporting an ethics investigat­ion into the allegation­s should Moore win.

“We will swear in whoever is elected and see where we are at that particular point,” he said.

Bannon, by contrast, has supported Moore consistent­ly and has argued the candidate is popular with Trump’s most ardent supporters. He recently talked with Trump about putting the president’s full weight behind Moore, according to a person close to the White House who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe internal discussion­s.

In November, Trump pointed to Moore’s denials of the allegation­s from decades ago and spoke against voting for Jones, but did not explicitly endorse Moore.

Trump is not campaignin­g for Moore directly, but is scheduled to hold a rally on Friday in the Florida Panhandle, which shares a media market with Mobile, Ala. The special election is to fill the seat of Jeff Sessions, who is now U.S. attorney general.

Moore has denied the allegation­s and recently denied knowing any of the women who had described Moore’s actions to reporters. One woman who told the Washington Post that she dated Moore when she was 17 showed the Post a handwritte­n note Moore had given to her at the time that she recently found in a scrapbook, according to an article published Monday.

Some Republican strategist­s fear that if Moore is elected, GOP candidates across the country will be saddled with his reputation. Indeed, Democrats in Pennsylvan­ia are already bringing up Moore’s name in an effort to fend off a push by Republican Rep. Lou Barletta to defeat incumbent Democratic Sen. Bob Casey.

“The people of Pennsylvan­ia deserve to know if Congressma­n Barletta believes Moore’s accusers and if he wants to serve in the Senate alongside a man accused of child molestatio­n,” Pennsylvan­ia Democratic Party spokesman Max Steele said in a statement. “Silence is not an option.”

On the ground in Alabama, where voters rarely see Democratic challenger­s pull close to Republican­s, Moore called the atmosphere “intense,” writing in a fundraisin­g appeal to supporters that “left-wing foot soldiers — aka ‘community organizers’ — are descending on Alabama to volunteer for Doug Jones and create chaos and trouble on the ground at my events.”

Jones’ campaign claims to have launched “the most robust get-out-the-vote program Alabama has seen in a generation” with volunteers knocking on more than 100,000 doors and making some 800,000 phone calls in the last month and a half.

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