Las Vegas Review-Journal

Senate hopeful seeks to unite Missouri GOP

Hawley will try to oust Democrat Mccaskill

- By Jim Salter and Summer Ballentine The Associated Press

ST. LOUIS — Republican Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley will have to walk a tightrope between warring factions of the Republican party if he wants to unite the GOP and oust Democratic U.S. Sen. Claire Mccaskill from office in 2018.

Hawley, a 37-year-old in his first year of elected office, released a video Tuesday morning officially announcing his candidacy, although he signaled his intent months ago. Mccaskill is among 10 Senate Democrats running in states won by Trump and is considered one of the most vulnerable incumbents.

Hawley’s earliest supporters include Missouri’s moderate former U.S. Sen. John Danforth, 81, a scion of the state Republican establishm­ent and a strong critic of Trump.

So it raised eyebrows when The Kansas City Star reported last week that Hawley also spoke with Trump’s former White House strategist Steve Bannon, a nationalis­t firebrand who once declared that his news site, Breitbart, was “the platform for the alt-right.”

Bannon has vowed to destroy Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell by running insurgent candidates in Senate races across the country. Hawley doesn’t appear to neatly fit the insurgent resume.

But so far, Missouri Republican­s appear more worried about avoiding the mistakes of the past than their internal battles, in order to oust Mccaskill.

Danforth told The Associated

Press that Hawley’s communicat­ion with Bannon is “important for him to get elected.”

Ryan Johnson, the former president of the conservati­ve advocacy group Missouri Alliance for Freedom, said Hawley has seems to have united the party.

“When you have everybody from former Sen. John Danforth to conservati­ve activist and strategist Steve Bannon supporting the man, he’s managed to pull off what many others have not,” he said.

Mccaskill, 64, is in her second term in the Senate, but Missouri voters have increasing­ly favored Republican­s in recent years. Just one Jefferson City statewide officehold­er, Auditor Nicole Galloway, is a Democrat, and she was appointed to her seat.

Mccaskill has admitted to meddling in the 2012 GOP primary and during her re-election bid succeeded in getting the challenger she considered the weakest, former U.S. Rep. Todd Akin. After he won the Republican primary, Akin told a TV interviewe­r that women’s bodies have ways of preventing pregnancy in cases of “legitimate rape,” a comment that drew a national backlash. Akin lost the election badly.

“They want desperatel­y to avoid that sort of failure again, and Hawley certainly promises to be much more articulate and much less likely to step on land mines the way that Akin did,” University of Missouri political scientist Peverill Squire said. “Every faction of the Republican Party looks at Hawley and sees what they want to see.”

Hawley spokesman Scott Paradise said voters across the political spectrum are behind ousting Mccaskill.

“Attorney General Hawley appreciate­s the support he gets from Republican­s of all stripes - and Democrats and Independen­ts too,” he said.

 ?? Charlie Riedel ?? The Associated Press Democratic Sen. Claire Mccaskill, left, talks with Republican Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley on Aug. 17 during the Governor’s Ham Breakfast at the Missouri State Fair in Sedalia, Mo. Hawley announced Tuesday that he will run...
Charlie Riedel The Associated Press Democratic Sen. Claire Mccaskill, left, talks with Republican Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley on Aug. 17 during the Governor’s Ham Breakfast at the Missouri State Fair in Sedalia, Mo. Hawley announced Tuesday that he will run...

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