BATON ROUGE, La. – Louisiana voters
chose Saturday to send Republican state Treasurer John Kennedy to the
U.S. Senate, filling the nation's last Senate seat and giving the GOP a
52-48 edge in the chamber when the new term begins in January.
Kennedy had always been the runoff election's
front-runner in a state that overwhelmingly supported Donald Trump. He
defeated Democrat Foster Campbell, a state utility regulator whose
chances were seen as such a long-shot that national Democratic
organizations offered little assistance to Campbell's campaign.
As he celebrated the victory, Kennedy said he represented change in Washington.
"I believe that our future can be better than our
present, but not if we keep going in the direction the Washington
insiders have taken us the last eight years," he said. "That's about to
change, folks."
Voters also filled two open U.S. House seats
Saturday, choosing Republican Clay Higgins, a former sheriff's captain
known as the "Cajun John Wayne," in the 3rd District representing
southwest and south central Louisiana and Republican state Rep. Mike
Johnson in the 4th District covering northwest Louisiana.
Louisiana has an open primary system in which all
candidates run against each other. In the contests for the open
congressional seats, the November primary ballots were packed with
contenders, so the top two vote-getters advanced to Saturday's runoff.
The Senate runoff drew national attention, with
President-elect Trump and Vice President-elect Mike Pence each traveling
to Louisiana to rally for Kennedy. The national GOP provided resources
and staff to assist Kennedy's campaign, while national Democratic
organizations largely abandoned Campbell, assuming an easy Republican
win.
Though Campbell's chance appeared slim, donations had
poured in from around the country, and several Hollywood celebrities
championed his candidacy aiming to bolster resistance to the Trump
presidency. Campbell said the support he received across the country was
"phenomenal."
"We worked as hard as possible. We left no stone
unturned," Campbell said in his concession speech. "I make no excuses.
We did everything humanly possible."
The co-chair of the Republican National Committee,
Sharon Day, described Kennedy's win as capping "a year of historic
Republican wins up and down the ballot.
"With 52 seats in the U.S. Senate, we are excited for
Republicans to confirm a conservative Supreme Court justice and begin
working with President-elect Trump to pass an agenda of change for the
American people," Day said in a statement.
Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat and
ardent Campbell supporter, congratulated Kennedy and pledged to work
with him to "deliver great things for the people of Louisiana."
The Senate seat was open because Republican David
Vitter decided against running for a third term after losing the
governor's race last year. Both men vying for the seat are well-known
figures, involved in Louisiana politics for decades.
Kennedy, an Oxford-educated lawyer from south
Louisiana, is in his fifth term as treasurer, a role in which he
repeatedly drew headlines for his financial clashes with Louisiana's
governors.
He sprinkled speeches with examples of
government-financed contracts he considered outrageous, like money "to
study the effects of Swedish massage on bunny rabbits." In the runoff,
he ran a safe, TV-focused effort highlighting his support for Trump and
his opposition to the federal health overhaul.
Campbell, a cattle farmer and former state senator
from north Louisiana, is a populist who railed against "Big Oil," wanted
to increase the minimum wage and talked openly about man-made climate
change. He pledged that in Washington he wouldn't "be in anybody's shirt
pocket."
He also ran as a Louisiana Democrat — strongly opposed to abortion and supportive of gun rights.
Kennedy hit Campbell for supporting Clinton. Campbell
called Kennedy a flip-flopper during prior Senate bids, because the
treasurer ran in 2004 as a liberal Democrat and the most recent two
times as a conservative Republican.
In the 3rd District race, Higgins traded blistering
attacks with his fellow Republican opponent, Scott Angelle, a member of
the Public Service Commission and well-known public official for nearly
30 years.
Angelle had been the presumed front-runner. But
Higgins — a local celebrity known for attention-grabbing Crime Stoppers
videos he filmed when he was a sheriff's captain — capitalized on
disenchantment with career politicians to defeat Angelle with only a
fraction of his money and a bare-bones organization.
In the 4th District, Johnson defeated Democrat Marshall Jones in a competition that was less attack-laden.
Johnson focused on his work on conservative issues as
a constitutional attorney and on his two years as a state lawmaker.
Jones, also a lawyer, downplayed his party affiliation, running as an
anti-abortion, gun-rights Democrat who could work with Trump.
The House seats were open because Republicans Charles
Boustany and John Fleming unsuccessfully sought the Senate seat instead
of re-election.