Former Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore was
projected to soundly defeat Sen. Luther Strange in Tuesday's Senate
primary runoff, overcoming heavy GOP establishment support for the
incumbent, including from President Trump himself.
The hard-fought Alabama runoff battle
had pitted Trump against some of his most loyal supporters including
former chief strategist Steve Bannon, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and
a slew of House conservatives who all backed Moore. Despite his
outsider image, Moore seemed to have the edge over Strange from the
start.
With 92 percent of the precincts reporting, Moore led
Strange by 55 percent to 45 percent, a margin of more than 41,000 votes.
State officials estimated a low turnout of between 12 and 15 percent of
eligible voters.
The crowd at Moore's election party broke into loud
applause as media outlets called the race. Bannon took the stage to
introduce Moore as supporters waving flags cheered Tuesday night.
"We have to return the knowledge of God and the
Constitution of the United States to the United States Congress," Moore
told the crowd. He also said he supports the president and his agenda.
Bannon declared Moore's win a victory for Trump,
despite the president's support for Strange. Both Trump and Vice
President Mike Pence traveled to Alabama to make the case for the
incumbent in the final week of the race.
In his concession statement, Strange thanked Trump and
Pence for their support and vowed to "go back to work with President
Trump and do all I can to advance his agenda over the next few weeks."
Addressing supporters in Birmingham, Strange admitted
that "We're dealing with a political environment that I've never had any
experience with."
"I'm telling you, the political seas and winds in this
country right now are very hard to navigate," Strange added. "Very hard
to understand."
After Strange's concession, the president Tweeted his congratulations to Moore and implored him to "WIN in [December]!"
Moore is now the favorite in December's general
election against Democrat Doug Jones, a lawyer and former U.S. attorney
during President Bill Clinton's administration. The winner of that race
will complete the Senate term started by Attorney General Jeff Sessions
and be up for re-election in 2020.
At a rally in Huntsville Friday, Trump portrayed
Strange as loyal to him and said he appreciated how Strange agreed to
vote for ObamaCare replacement legislation this summer without asking
any favors from him. However, Trump’s endorsement was overshadowed
nationally by his attack on NFL players who kneel during the National
Anthem prior to games.
Trump also said at the Alabama rally that he would
campaign for Moore in the general election if he secured the nomination,
but he believed Moore would have a tougher time against Jones in the
general election.
Pence also flew to Birmingham on Monday evening to campaign for Strange.
The Senate Leadership Fund, a group with ties to Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., spent an estimated $9 million
trying to secure the nomination for Strange. That support played into
Moore's argument that the election was an opportunity to send a lesson
to what he called the "elite Washington establishment."
SLF President and CEO Steven Law said Tuesday that Moore won the nomination "fair and square" and the group will now back him.
Law said Moore "has our support, as it is vital that we keep this seat in Republican hands."
Moore, known in Alabama as the "Ten Commandments
Judge," has a colorful political history that has both fueled and
complicated his rise.
Moore first received national attention in the 1990s as
a county judge when he hung a wooden Ten Commandments plaque on the
wall of his courtroom. The ACLU filed a lawsuit against him.
Benefiting from his popularity after the episode, Moore
then ran and won a race for chief justice of the state’s Supreme Court
in 2000. But he was ousted after refusing to remove a 5,280-pound
granite Ten Commandments monument from the rotunda of the state judicial
building.
Moore resurrected his political career in 2012, when he
was elected chief justice again. But his second tenure was short-lived:
in 2016, Moore was suspended as chief justice after he directed probate
judges not to issue marriage certificates to gay couples.
Strange, the former attorney general in Alabama, was
temporarily appointed to the seat in April by then-Gov. Robert Bentley,
who has since resigned in disgrace. Opponents have used the appointment
against Strange, accusing Bentley of naming him to the seat so he could
install someone who might be more sympathetic to him in the state
attorney general’s office.
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.
Merlene Bohannon, a widow with three grown children,
said she had planned to vote for Strange until seeing Bannon stump for
Moore on Fox News on Monday night.
"Steve Bannon and God spoke to me, and this morning when I went in I voted for Moore," said Bohannon, 74.