The Guardian (Charlottetown)

GOP’s not all that sad

Party grapples with Alabama fallout

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Weary national Republican­s breathed a collective sigh of relief on Wednesday, a day after voters knocked out their own party’s scandal-plagued candidate in deep-red Alabama. Yet all is not well in a party confronted with new rounds of infighting and a suddenly shrinking Senate majority heading into next year’s midterm elections.

A semi-humbled U.S. President Donald Trump conceded that Roy Moore’s loss was not his preferred outcome. He said he “would have liked to have had the seat” and an important Senate vote as he and GOP lawmakers scratch for legislativ­e victories.

But he also acknowledg­ed, “A lot of Republican­s feel differentl­y. They feel very happy about the way it turned out.”

Indeed, it was easy to find establishm­ent-minded Republican­s — in and out of Washington — who cheered Moore’s loss as the impact of the Alabama stunner echoed throughout the political world. The prospect of a high-profile Republican senator dogged by sexual misconduct accusation­s — and an all-butcertain ethics investigat­ion — unnerved a GOP that’s fearful of an albatross on its candidates in next year’s campaigns.

Republican Alabama Sen. Richard Shelby said that Moore, a fiery conservati­ve, would have brought a “radioactiv­e” element to the Senate GOP.

“I’m relieved and I believe a lot of Republican­s are relieved that Roy Moore and some of his people aren’t the face of the Republican Party that I know,” said Shelby, who cast a write-in vote for another Republican and never backed down in his opposition to Moore.

More than 22,000 write-in votes were cast Tuesday, more than the margin of difference between the winner and loser, suggesting many other voters refused to vote for a Democrat but couldn’t accept Moore.

Sen.-elect Doug Jones’ stunning Democratic victory marked a major setback for Trump and top political ally Steve Bannon. They had devoted time, resources and political capital to Moore in recent days, even as he faced the allegation­s of sexual misconduct and espoused views that alienated women, racial minorities, gays and Muslims.

Despite the outcome’s relief for the GOP’s pragmatic wing, the fight for the party’s soul was hardly decided with one Alabama special election.

Allies of Bannon, who declared war on the party’s establishm­ent after leaving the White House earlier in the year, dismissed the loss as little more than a temporary setback that would soon be forgotten. Republican­s cheering Moore’s loss, they said, would simply enrage Trump’s most loyal supporters nationwide, who already suspected some Republican leaders were trying to undermine the president’s agenda.

“They’re stomping on the very base they need to turn out for their candidates in the general election in 2018,” said Andy Surabian, a senior adviser to the Bannon-backed Great America PAC. He contended that “the average Republican voter across the country is pointing their finger at Mitch McConnell and the Republican establishm­ent.”

Conservati­ve activist Mark Meckler did just that.

“One hundred per cent of this I hang around Mitch McConnell’s neck,” said Meckler, an early tea party leader, referring to the mainstream Republican who is Senate majority leader.

At the same time, the Alabama contest sounded an undeniable alarm for Republican officials charged with defending the party’s majorities in the House and Senate next year. Under the weight of Trump’s historical­ly low approval ratings, Alabama put their concerns on steroids.

“This was a wake-up-and-smell-the-coffee moment,” said Steven Law, who leads the Senate Leadership Fund, which is aligned with Senate GOP leaders. He said Alabama’s election, like recent contests in Virginia and New Jersey, demonstrat­ed “skyhigh Democratic enthusiasm.”

“Republican­s are going to have to put forward top-quality candidates and run flawless campaigns to win next year even in states that trend Republican,” Law said.

In the shorter term, it’s unclear how the loss will affect the Republican­s’ governing agenda.

When Jones is sworn into office — likely in early January — the GOP’s Senate majority will shrink to pinhole-sized 51-49. That increases pressure on Republican­s to push their prized $1.5 trillion tax bill through Congress before lawmakers leave town late this month, a goal they seem likely to achieve.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? U.S. President Donald Trump speaks about tax reform in the Grand Foyer of the White House Wednesday.
AP PHOTO U.S. President Donald Trump speaks about tax reform in the Grand Foyer of the White House Wednesday.

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