Roy Moore beat his preferred candidate in Alabama. Now the GOP must answer for Moore’s controversial past.
Obamacare repeal is in shambles. Tennessee Sen. Bob Corker ― a key GOP leader ― is calling it quits. And on Tuesday, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) got even more bad news: An anti-gay, Islamophobic former judge easily won the Senate GOP nomination in Alabama.
McConnell bet large against Roy Moore, a controversial conservative who trounced establishment favorite Sen. Luther Strange (R-Ala.) by repeatedly bashing McConnell’s leadership. Strange lost badly ― an outcome that that could threaten the GOP agenda and further erode party unity.
The majority leader was forced to praise Moore on Tuesday, crediting him for having run “a spirited campaign centered around a dissatisfaction with the progress made in Washington.”
“I share that frustration and believe that enacting the agenda the American people voted for last November requires us all to work together,” he added.
Republicans went all in for Strange in the final weeks of the race. President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence both campaigned for the incumbent senator in Alabama. A McConnell-aligned super PAC also spent millions of dollars to help Strange, who was appointed earlier this year to the seat vacated by U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions.
It was all for naught ― a stunning loss that threatened McConnell’s already-tenuous relationship with the president. Trump on Wednesday fumed about the Senate’s inability to repeal the Affordable Care Act, urging Republicans to scrap the filibuster to achieve the goal in the future.
“We will have the votes for Healthcare but not for the reconciliation deadline of Friday, after which we need 60. Get rid of Filibuster Rule!” Trump tweeted, a move that is opposed by McConnell and many other Republican senators.
Trump’s anger at McConnell reportedly reached new heights following the events this week. The president, for example, has taken to “physically mocking” the senator in private with “lethargic body language” and “slumped shoulders,” according to Axios. The White House is also planning on laying the blame on McConnell for the GOP losses, per The Daily Beast.
In a sign of his displeasure with the election result on Tuesday, Trump even went so far as to delete embarrassing tweets he’d written initially expressing support for Strange.
Senate Republicans, however, disputed the notion that the race put McConnell’s job as majority leader at risk, maintaining they would welcome Moore to the Senate if he is elected.
“The people of Alabama have spoken. I’m certainly not going to second-guess them,” Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) told reporters on Wednesday.
Still, Moore’s coup in the primary ― and likely eventual Senate victory in solidly Republican Alabama ― puts GOP lawmakers in the awkward position of having to defend his many controversial positions.
Republicans on Wednesday ducked and dodged repeated questions about Moore ― a candidate whom the Southern Poverty Law Center has described as “totally unhinged,” and who, among other things, once said “homosexual conduct should be illegal.”
“I’m not going to comment on his positions. He’s entitled to his opinion. This is America, you can believe what you want,” Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) told HuffPost on Wednesday.