Former Auburn football coach Tommy Tuberville (File photo)
Alabama Republicans nominated political neophyte Tommy Tuberville, the choice of President Donald Trump, to run for the Senate in November as voters in three states picked candidates Tuesday in races that will help decide control of the chamber.
Maine Democrats nominated Sara Gideon, the speaker of the states House of Representatives, to face off against moderate Republican Senator Susan Collins, one of the Senates most at-risk Republicans.
But there was a close, ongoing battle in Texas between Air Force veteran MJ Hegar and Black state senator Royce West over the Democratic nomination to go up against Republican Senator John Cornyn in November.
In Alabama, Tuberville, 65, a former football coach, beat Jeff Sessions, a former US attorney general who was fired by the president. Tuberville had 62.1 percent to Sessions 37.9 percent, with 73 percent of precincts reporting, the New York Times said. He will take on Democrat Doug Jones in November.
Sessions had hoped to return to the Senate, where he had been a member for 20 years before joining the Trump administration. But Sessions told reporters he would support Tuberville in November.
While Republican stronghold Alabama went for Trumps choice of candidate, Trumps public approval across the country has dropped as the coronavirus pandemic surged through the United States, killing more than 130,000 people and throwing tens of millions out of work.
That is weighing on his fellow Republicans, dimming the re-election hopes of senators in Colorado, North Carolina and Arizona and leaving even senior Republicans in conservative stakes like Mitch McConnells Kentucky having to work harder than expected to defend their seats.
Republicans currently control the Senate, 53-47. Democrats would need to pick up four seats in the 100-member chamber for a majority if Trump is re-elected, or three if presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden wins the White House, giving the party a tie-breaking Senate vote.
"If the coronavirus continues to get worse and the economy doesnt improve, its hard to imagine any president ... getting re-elected very easily, and its hard to imagine that presidents party doing well," said Joshua Blank, research director of the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas at Austin.
Although the primary elections in all three states had been postponed from earlier this year because of the coronavirus, they were held Tuesday even as the number of new cases continued to surge in southern and western states. Texas saw a record 10,745 new cases on Tuesday, and Alabama reported a record daily number of 40 deaths from the coronavirus.
Top Democratic opportunity
Democrats see Collins Senate seat representing Maine as one of their top pick-up opportunities. Gideon had been leading Collins by a few percentage points in recent opinion polls even before Tuesdays primary.
Gideon had 71 percent of the primary tally, with Sweet and Kidman trailing far behind, after 26 percent of precincts reported, the New York Times said.
"We did it! Thank you to everyone who has supported our campaign to elect a senator who will fight for Mainers-not special interests. Onward to November!" Gideon wrote on Twitter.
The candidates for the Democratic Senate nomination in Texas were fighting neck-and-neck.
Hegar, a former helicopter pilot, had 52.3 percent to 47.7 percent for West, with 56 percent of the vote counted, the Times said. "We dont expect this to be over tonight," Vince Leibowitz, a spokesman for the West campaign, told reporters.
(Source: Reuters)
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