Trump tweets final message of support for Luther Strange

Alabama state Republicans were voting Tuesday in a U.S. Senate primary that will test the extent of Donald Trump’s influence on his most passionate supporters, who will choose between the president’s pick and a populist local judge.

Trump is backing Luther Strange, who was appointed to fill the Senate seat vacated by Jeff Sessions early this year when the president nominated him to be the U.S. attorney general.

‘Finish the job – vote today for “Big Luther”,’ Trump tweeted early Tuesday as polls opened in Alabama. ‘He has proven to me that he will never let you down!’

But by all accounts Strange is the underdog. In all major recent polls he trails rival Roy Moore, a former state chief justice and Bible-quoting conservative who, in what may have been one of the more brazen campaign moments of 2017, waved a gun before a cheering crowd Monday night.

Roy Moore

Establishment pick Luther Strange (left) and conservative favorite Roy Moore, shown brandishing a gun during a Monday night campaign rally (right), are clashing Tuesday in a U.S. Senate primary that’s a proxy battle between Donald Trump and his former top aides

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

The president has said Strange will be with him on key policies, but conservative grassroots organizers in Alabama say Moore is better positioned to deliver on the issues that got the president elected

The president has said Strange will be with him on key policies, but conservative grassroots organizers in Alabama say Moore is better positioned to deliver on the issues that got the president elected

Alabama, in the heart of the Deep South, has become the latest political battleground over the direction that the Republican leadership is taking the party in Washington.

While Moore leads Strange by some 11 points according to a Real Clear Politics average of polls, Trump remains popular in the state. He won Alabama by 28 points last year.

His national approval rating percentage has dwelled in the thirties since mid-May, but there are large pockets of Republicans still deeply loyal to 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

In a political twist, the race is the stage for a proxy war of sorts between Trump and his recently ousted White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, who is backing Moore.

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

Trump is hoping to win a loyalist in Strange, 64, who has openly backed Trump’s agenda.

Fealty is no motivator for Moore, who has threatened to upend the Republican Party should he win the race and has branded his opponent an ‘establishment lackey’ to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

He is a fierce enemy of McConnell, accusing him of rejecting conservative efforts to pull the agenda further to the right.

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

Phil Robertson, the 'Duck Dynasty' patriarch, read from the Bible during the Moore rally on Monday night, urging attendees to ignore medical insurance and instead focus on the afterlife

Phil Robertson, the ‘Duck Dynasty’ patriarch, read from the Bible during the Moore rally on Monday night, urging attendees to ignore medical insurance and instead focus on the afterlife

Trump’s former senior strategist Steve Bannon (left) and ‘Brexit’ architect Nigel Farage (rght) both spoke at Moore’s election-eve rally 

Moore is the more Trump-like of the candidates: opinionated, unconcerned about whom he may offend, and desperate to upend the elite system that rules the US capital.

‘For whatever reason, God has put me in this election at this time, and all the nation is watching’ the Alabama race, Moore said Monday night in his final campaign rally before the primary election.

Bannon, who campaigned with Moore Monday, joined in the Washington bashing, saying party elites think Alabama voters are nothing but ‘a pack of morons’ who will follow the herd.

‘You’re going to get an opportunity to tell them what you think of the elites who run this country,’ Bannon 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

Alabama has not elected a Democrat to the Senate in a quarter century, so whoever prevails in Tuesday’s Republican run-off – which was necessary because neither candidate won an outright majority in the initial primary in August – will likely win the December 12 general election and head to Washington.

Moore, reveling in his populist appeal, rode his horse Sassy to the Gallant Fire Hall to cast his vote early Tuesday.

The 70-year-old was twice suspended from the Alabama Supreme Court, for refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples and fighting against orders to remove a Ten Commandments monument from the court house.

His defiance made him a local hero to many, and that anti-establishment streak was on display Monday, when Moore, wearing a cowboy hat and vest, pulled a small pistol from his pocket and showed it briefly to the crowd.

‘I believe in the Second Amendment’ that protects Americans’ gun rights, he boomed, to loud applause and cheers.

But it is rival Strange who has secured the cherished endorsement of the National Rifle Association, the leading pro-gun lobbying group which has reportedly dropped about $1 million in ads attacking Moore.

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk