Trump-backed Republican defeated by Steve Bannon’s rebel

Steve Bannon-backed jurist Roy Moore has just defeated a Republican incumbent backed by both President Donald Trump and deep-pocketed allies of Sen. Mitch McConnell in the Alabama primary runoff for U.S. Senate.

In an upset certain to rock the GOP establishment, Moore clinched a nine-point victory over Sen. Luther Strange to take the GOP nomination for the seat previously held by Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Moore will face Democrat Doug Jones in a Dec. 12 special election.

It was a political resurrection for the 70-year-old former Alabama chief justice who was twice removed from those duties after taking stands for public display of the Ten Commandments and against gay marriage. 

 

Steve Bannon-backed jurist Roy Moore (pictured at his election party) has just defeated a Republican incumbent backed by both President Donald Trump and deep-pocketed allies of Sen. Mitch McConnell in the Alabama primary runoff for U.S. Senate

The race has pitted Trump against his former strategist Steve Bannon (pictured) who had argued Moore was a better fit for the 'populist' movement

The race has pitted Trump against his former strategist Steve Bannon (pictured) who had argued Moore was a better fit for the ‘populist’ movement

Moore clinched a nine-point victory over Sen. Luther Strange (pictured) to take the GOP nomination for the seat previously held by Attorney General Jeff Sessions

Moore clinched a nine-point victory over Sen. Luther Strange (pictured) to take the GOP nomination for the seat previously held by Attorney General Jeff Sessions

Moore, in his victory speech, returned to themes of God and government, saying that he had ‘never prayed to win this campaign’ but only that’s ‘God’s will be done.’

‘We have to return the knowledge of God and the Constitution of the United States to the United States Congress,’ Moore told a cheering crowd in his victory party in Montgomery.

Moore predicted the race could be a bellwether for the 2018 midterms, saying the victory tells the establishment in ‘Washington, D.C., that their wall has been cracked and will now fall.’

The race has pitted Trump against his former strategist Steve Bannon who had argued Moore was a better fit for the ‘populist’ movement.

After Strange’s defeat, Trump appears to be backtracking and seems to have deleted a number of tweets showing his support.

Conservative darling and former vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin also stumped for Moore, while current Vice President Mike Pence campaigned with Strange. The race has attracted millions of dollars in outside campaign funds.

Moore

Trump (right) had backed Moore’s (left, at his election party on Tuesday) rival in the race for the US Senate

Supporters of former Alabama Chief Justice and U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore wait for him to speak during his election party, Tuesday

Supporters of former Alabama Chief Justice and U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore wait for him to speak during his election party, Tuesday

Sen. Luther Strange speaks to supporters with his wife Melissa as he concedes the election to Roy Moore, Tuesday

Sen. Luther Strange speaks to supporters with his wife Melissa as he concedes the election to Roy Moore, Tuesday

Introducing Moore, Bannon told a frenzied crowd that the victory was a repudiation of the ‘fat cats’ of Washington who pumped millions into the Alabama race to boost Strange.

Bannon declared Moore’s win a victory for Trump, despite the president’s support for Strange. Moore said he supports the president and his agenda.

After the race, Trump tweeted his congratulations to Moore, noting that ‘Luther Strange started way back & ran a good race.’ Trump and Moore spoke by telephone later Tuesday night.

The Senate Leadership Fund, a group with ties to McConnell, had spent an estimated $9 million trying to secure the nomination for Strange.

SLF President and CEO Steven Law said Tuesday that Moore won the nomination ‘fair and square’ and the group will now back him. Law says Moore ‘has our support, as it is vital that we keep this seat in Republican hands.’

Roy Moore

Luther Strange

Steve Bannon-backed jurist Roy Moore (left) has just defeated a Republican incumbent backed by both President Donald Trump and deep-pocketed allies of Sen. Mitch McConnell in the Alabama primary runoff for U.S. Senate (right is incumbent Luther Strange)

In a statement, McConnell congratulated Moore and said Senate Republicans are committed to keeping the seat in GOP hands.

Even though Alabama has not sent a Democrat to the U.S. Senate in two decades, Democrats are hopeful they have an opening in the December election against Moore.

Jones is a former U.S. attorney best known for prosecuting the Klansmen who killed four girls in a 1963 church bombing. He said Tuesday that he wanted to focus the race on the ‘kitchen table issues’ that matter to all Alabamians, ‘health care, education for our kids, jobs and a living wage.’

Strange supporters were at least somewhat divided on how they will approach the general election in December.

‘It will be closer than if Luther had won’ the nomination, said Perry Hooper, a former state lawmaker who predicted some Republicans will stay home in December or even vote for Jones.

But Hooper, who served as Trump’s Alabama campaign chief, said he’s all in for Moore. ‘Ultimately, this is about helping the president,’ Hooper said. ‘This is a Republican state, and Roy will help the president.’

President Trump has endorse Strange and has been using his influential Twitter feed to encourage Alabama GOPers to support him

President Trump has endorse Strange and has been using his influential Twitter feed to encourage Alabama GOPers to support him

Trump spoke for an hour and 20 minutes at a Strange rally last Friday, making the candidate himself a second-tier draw

Trump spoke for an hour and 20 minutes at a Strange rally last Friday, making the candidate himself a second-tier draw

Moore is best known for being kicked off the Alabama Supreme Court ¿ twice ¿ for refusing to remove a Ten Commandments display from a courthouse and for refusing to rule against his fundamentalist Christian faith on gay rights issues

Moore is best known for being kicked off the Alabama Supreme Court – twice – for refusing to remove a Ten Commandments display from a courthouse and for refusing to rule against his fundamentalist Christian faith on gay rights issues

Moore was twice elected chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court and twice removed from those duties.

In 2003, he was removed from office for disobeying a federal judge’s order to remove a Ten Commandments monument from the state courthouse lobby. Last year, he was permanently suspended after a disciplinary panel ruled he had urged probate judges to defy federal court decisions on gay marriage and deny wedding licenses to same-sex couples. He denied that accusation.

Strange told his supporters that ‘we wish (Moore) well going forward.’ But he quickly shifted to his own bewilderment at the race he just finished.

‘We’re dealing with a political environment that I’ve never had any experience with,’ Strange said.

Strange also thanked Trump and Vice President Mike Pence for backing him. Trump, Strange said, may ‘be criticized’ for coming to Alabama on his behalf. ‘Sometimes it’s just about friendship … a common goal to make the country better,’ he said.

Full court press: Trump even sent Vice President Mike Pence to help Luther Strange get out the vote on Monday

Full court press: Trump even sent Vice President Mike Pence to help Luther Strange get out the vote on Monday

Moore, propelled by evangelical voters, consolidated support from a number of anti-establishment forces, including the pro-Trump Great America Alliance and Bannon.

Moore led Strange by about 25,000 votes in the crowded August primary, which went to a runoff between the two because neither topped 50 percent in the voting. The low-turnout election gave an advantage to Moore as his loyal supporters flooded the polls.

Strange, the state’s former attorney general, was appointed to Sessions’ seat in February by then-Gov. Robert Bentley, who resigned two months later as lawmakers opened impeachment hearings against him. Throughout the Senate race, Strange had been dogged by criticisms of accepting the appointment from a scandal-battered governor when his office was in charge of corruption investigations.

On the outskirts of Montgomery, 76-year-old Air Force retiree John Lauer said Trump’s endorsement swayed him to vote for Strange on Tuesday.

‘I voted for Strange. I’m a Trump voter. Either one is going to basically do the Trump agenda, but since Trump came out for Luther, I voted for Luther,’ said Lauer said.

Many at Moore’s victory party had supported the former chief justice through the years in his stands over the Ten Commandments and other issues.

‘I’m so happy. I prayed and God answered my prayers,’ Patricia Riley Jones of Abbeville said as she outstretched her arms to hold a Moore sign and America flags high aloft above her head. ‘He’s a great Christian man. He stood up for God.’

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