The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Which Ala. candidate loves Trump more?

Senate race morphing into which candidate can ‘drain the swamp.’

- By Jonathan Krohn

WETUMPKA, ALA. — What was supposed to be a quiet election to determine who takes Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ place in the U.S. Senate has morphed into something that other parts of the country would find hard to imagine: A Republican contest to prove who loves President Donald Trump best.

And secondaril­y, who most hates Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

In the final days of what’s likely to be only a first round of Republican voting, the lines of loyalty are tangled and confused, as is often the case in Alabama politics.

Oddly enough, though Trump carried this state by 62 percent last November, the man with the fewest direct connection­s to Trump is likely to come out on top on Tuesday: Former state Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore.

If local polls are on target, Moore is expected to post ahead of two sitting members of Congress – never mind seven other lesser known Republican candidates.

“Drain the Swamp” is the banner stretched across the campaign bus of one of the pair, U.S. Rep. Mo Brooks of north Alabama. But its target isn’t the “Deep State” in Washington. It’s the Senate Republican leadership.

Brooks carries endorsemen­ts from Trump acolytes such as Sean Hannity and Ann Coulter. Brooks even has the backing of state Rep. Ed Henry, who chaired Trump’s Alabama campaign. But he is also a member of the House Freedom Caucus, and McConnell doesn’t want another hard-right senator in his chamber.

Brooks has found himself savaged by a well-funded opponent, accused of being an ally of House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi and worse, a “Never Trump” candidate.

Those accusation­s have come on behalf of the wellfunded Luther Strange, the former state attorney general who has been an incumbent senator from Alabama since February. Strange has run a high-altitude campaign, avoiding appearance­s with his two rivals.

“I wish he had showed,” groused a noticeably annoyed Brooks at a forum here last week, while Strange was in Washington. “Because I want to confront him head-to-head on the deceit, on the deception, and the false advertisin­g he’s been putting out.”

Strange was appointed to Sessions’ junior Senate seat by Gov. Robert Bentley, who would resign two months later when faced with impeachmen­t over ethical violations connected with an alleged affair.

Many Alabamans suspect collusion.

Even so, Strange has at least $2.4 million in financial backing from two political action committees, including one controlled by McConnell himself. And he has the backing of the White House. “He has my complete and total endorsemen­t!” Trump has said – via Twitter.

“No question but that the swamp in Washington is fighting back and trying to dictate to Alabama voters who they can consider during the Senate race,” Brooks said when the cash started flowing to Strange. “The [National Republican Senatorial Committee] is part of the swamp.”

Yet Strange has found these advantages undercut in the last week of the campaign, as Trump picked a Twitter feud with the majority leader over the failure by Senate Republic ans to repeal the Affordable Care Act. The president has even hinted that McConnell ought to be sacked as the leader of the Senate.

“[McConnell] had a couple of votes that turned on him and that should have been very easy to handle,” Trump said Friday. “Whether it’s through the fact you take away a committee chairmansh­ip, do whatever you have to do.”

But remember, this is Alabama. And Roy Moore, a twice-ousted member of the Alabama Supreme Court, has a potent evangelica­l following that long pre-dates Trump.

After the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2015 decision to strike down bans on samesex marriage, Moore gained national attention when he urged Alabamian probate judges to defy the ruling. He was suspended from the state’s high court last year.

“Civil liberties for sexual preference? No,” Moore said in May, a day after his Senate campaign. “That’s not a liberty, that’s a licentious­ness. You know the difference?”

Like Strange, Moore seldom shows up at large campaign events, instead preferring to play to small, intimate crowds of his evangelica­l supporters. But he showed up at the Wetumpka forum.

“[The U.S. Supreme Court] could have easily said [marriage] was between one man and five women or one woman and five men,” Moore said. “And that’s what’s coming. That’s what’s coming. They’ll say it’s between a man and his daughter or a woman and her son.”

Remarks like this have driven some Alabama Republican­s up a wall. But given the circumstan­ces of Strange’s appointmen­t to the Senate, and the fact that Brooks has trailed in recent surveys, many are anticipati­ng a runoff between “never Moore” and “never Strange” camps.

Many Brooks supporters say they’ll go to Moore. They include Ed Henry, who chaired the Trump campaign in Alabama last year.

State Senate President pro tem Del Marsh, who briefly considered this U.S. Senate race, says he, too, will back Moore if it comes down to a fight between the judge and Strange.

“I’m not going to be able to support Luther,” Marsh said in a phone interview. “So if it’s down to Luther and any other candidate, I’m going to support that other candidate, whoever that may be.”

How Strange came to his appointmen­t to the U.S. Senate is behind the hesitancy. At the time, Gov. Bentley was in the midst of an alleged sex scandal. As attorney general, Strange was investigat­ing Bentley for using state resources to cover up the scandal.

Nothing ever came of Strange’s inquiry, and an Alabama legislativ­e probe remained on hold until Strange was out of the picture. Faced with impeachmen­t, Bentley subsequent­ly resigned and pled guilty to two misdemeano­r counts of campaign finance violations.

“It has mostly become a secondary issue whether or not there was actual corruption involved in the appointmen­t of Sen. Strange,” said Angi Stalnaker, a prominent Republican campaign consultant. “The problem his campaign now faces is that the whole thing just looks bad.”

Worse, this special election that will test Strange wasn’t called by Bentley, who would have allowed Strange until 2018 to protect his seat. It was called by the woman who replaced him, Gov. Kay Ivey.

Strange has worked to change the narrative. He’s built up his pro-Trump credential­s. He’s focused on his support for Trump nominee Neil Gorsuch to the U.S. Supreme Court.

His campaign manager argues that voters are no longer focusing on what he thinks is “very, very inside baseball,” Michael “Joff ” Joffrion said.

Even if Strange makes it into the runoff, he won’t be able to put his troubles behind him.

On Wednesday, the day after the election, the Alabama Ethics Commission will have a hearing on allegation­s that challenge portions of Strange’s campaign spending.

A Republican runoff would be held Sept. 26. The GOP nominee would face the winner of the Democratic primary on Dec. 12. The top two candidates in that race are former U.S. attorney Doug Jones and Robert Kennedy Jr., who is no relationsh­ip to the Massachuse­tts dynasty, but nonetheles­s is polling in first place.

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