Chattanooga Times Free Press

Sen. Bob Corker will say soon if he will seek re-election,

- Contact Andy Sher at asher@timesfreep­ress.com or 615-255-0550. BY ANDY SHER

NASHVILLE — U.S. Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., said Thursday he will make his intentions known “very soon” on whether he will seek re-election and insisted he continues to have a “very strong relationsh­ip” with President Donald Trump despite his recent criticisms of Trump and the president’s response.

The Chattanoog­an downplayed the announceme­nt earlier Thursday morning that conservati­ve activist Andy Ogles, executive director of the Tennessee chapter of the Koch brothers-funded Americans for Prosperity, will run in the Republican primary.

“Very soon I’ll make my plans known,” Corker said. “I realize just as a responsibi­lity to the citizens back home and people who may be considerin­g running … and actually to people here, I need to be clear about what my intentions are. And that will happen very, very soon.”

He said, “no one should expect they’re going to run in this environmen­t, with the frustratio­ns that people share — that I share — without having people who are going to be interested in primaries.”

“That’s where we are, and I think anyone who thinks differentl­y is not thinking the way things are actually going to turn out,” the senator said.

State Sen. Mark Green, whom Trump had nominated to be U.S. Army secretary, and former state Rep. Joe Carr said in interviews they are seriously considerin­g running whether Corker runs or not.

Corker has refused to state whether he will seek a third term or not and maintains he is going through his usual evaluation process despite the primary being less than a year off.

Despite difference­s with Trump, Corker said Thursday “I have a one-on-one meeting with the president tomorrow at 1 p.m.”

Corker said, “We’re two people who communicat­e with each other in a unique way.”

The event was live-streamed on Corker’s Facebook page.

He called his and Trump’s relationsh­ip “very strong,” adding, “I know there are reports that say otherwise.” But Corker said there’s no “daylight” between them.

“I’m a blunt person,” said Corker, a former constructi­on contractor. “I grew up in a world of buildings all around the country. For people to act as if there’s daylight between us is simply not true.”

He said he spoke with Trump’s daughter Ivanka, who is an adviser to her father, on Wednesday and U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Thursday.

The former Chattanoog­a mayor drew Trump’s ire last month after Corker sharply criticized Trump’s comments on the death of a woman after a white supremacis­t in Charlottes­ville, Va., drove into a group of demonstrat­ors protesting a white nationalis­t march.

Trump, Corker said, “has not yet been able to demonstrat­e the stability nor some of the competence that he needs to demonstrat­e in order to be successful.” And he declared Trump “has not demonstrat­ed he understand­s the character of this nation.”

White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders called Corker’s comments “ridiculous.”

The president himself took a Twitter crack at Corker, calling the senator’s statement “strange considerin­g that he is constantly asking me whether or not he should run again in ‘18. Tennessee not happy!”

Meanwhile, former White House strategist Steve Bannon, who has returned to run the ultra-conservati­ve Breitbart News, has been reported to be looking for someone to challenge Corker in 2018 as Bannon seeks to take out GOP senators he views as being insufficie­ntly loyal to the president.

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