Houston Chronicle

With Jones win, Democrats turn to Tennessee

Ex-governor hopes to gain Senate seat in state Trump carried

- By Erik Schelzig and Jonathan Mattise

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Democrats eager to take control of the Senate next year are turning to the state of Tennessee, where a popular Democratic former governor is running for the seat being vacated by the retirement of Republican Sen. Bob Corker.

Neither of Tennessee’s two top GOP candidates, Rep. Marsha Blackburn and former Rep. Stephen Fincher, has the kind of personal baggage Republican Roy Moore had in the Alabama race won by a Democrat. But both have wholeheart­edly embraced President Donald Trump at what Democrats hope is exactly the wrong time.

“Tennessee is clearly in play,” said Paul Maslin, a pollster who worked for the campaign of Doug Jones, the first Democrat elected in a quarter-century in Alabama. Jones’ rival, Moore, was besieged by decades-old accusation­s of sexual misconduct involving teenage girls when he was in his 30s. Moore denied the allegation­s.

Former Democratic Gov. Phil Bredesen, a known quantity in Tennessee, has kicked off his Senate run from a position of strength.

“He starts with credibilit­y among Tennessean­s that Doug Jones didn’t have or almost no Democratic challenger in any of the other Republican states would have next year,” Maslin said.

Voters both in Tennessee and Alabama went for Trump in a big way in 2016: Trump’s margin of victory was 28 percentage points in Alabama and 26 points in Tennessee, though his poll numbers have slipped somewhat since. And while Fincher and Blackburn slug it out to the primary for who can be the more pro-Trump candidate, Bredesen can concentrat­e on a message of being a problem-solver who can “fix the mess” in Washington.

“The risk is that when you have so embraced a public official that is fairly unpredicta­ble, that if his numbers start to erode suddenly you’re in trouble,” said Kent Syler, a political science professor at Middle Tennessee State University and a former Democratic congressio­nal staffer.

With Republican­s up 51-49 in the Senate next year, the stakes will be high in November.

Much was made of Democrats’ 25-year losing streak in Senate races in Alabama until a Dec. 12 special election. In Tennessee it’s been two years longer since Al Gore was the Democrats’ last victorious Senate candidate in 1990. Tennessee Democrats have fallen short ever since Gore left the Senate to become Bill Clinton’s vice president.

In his campaign launch video, Bredesen didn’t even mention Trump. Bredesen told the Associated Press afterward that he’s intent on winning back voters who supported him in 2002 and 2006.

“If you just do the basic arithmetic, there’s got to be hundreds of thousands of people in this state who voted for me and then turned around and voted for Trump,” Bredesen said. “I don’t think they’ve totally changed — political views don’t change in that way.”

But simply portraying himself as the adult in the room may not be enough if Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander’s most recent experience is any guide. A former two-term governor, Alexander suffered a serious primary scare en route to his 2014 re-election. While depicting himself as the senior statesman staying above the attacks of a little-known teaparty styled opponent, Alexander ended up winning by a too-close-for-comfort 9 percentage points.

Chris Hayden, spokesman for the Democratic Senate Majority PAC, said he expects Bredesen will draw wide support.

“He is a great candidate who will be running against an opponent tied to a deeply unpopular and ineffectiv­e Republican Congress,” said Hayden.

The National Republican Senate Committee is quick to scoff at such claims.

“If Phil Bredesen thinks Tennessean­s want him opposing President Trump and his agenda, he really doesn’t have a clue,” committee spokesman Michael McAdams said.

Term-limited Republican Gov. Bill Haslam said the lesson from Alabama should be that GOP candidates need to think about winning both the primary and the general vote.

“Republican­s need to elect people who can win two elections,” Haslam said, adding the results in Virginia and Alabama have shown that voting patterns might be changing. “For people in my party, it’s a heads-up: We need to be thinking about why we’re losing some voters we’ve traditiona­lly gotten.”

 ??  ?? Democrat Phil Bredesen, left, a popular former governor, may have more name recognitio­n than pro-Trump Republican rivals Rep. Stephen Fincher and Rep. Marsha Blackburn in the battle for a U.S. Senate seat in Tennessee.
Democrat Phil Bredesen, left, a popular former governor, may have more name recognitio­n than pro-Trump Republican rivals Rep. Stephen Fincher and Rep. Marsha Blackburn in the battle for a U.S. Senate seat in Tennessee.
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