Thursday, July 25, 2019

Steve Flowers: Inside the Statehouse - 2020 U.S. Senate race

  The long, hot summer has brought some crystallization to the 2020 U.S. Senate race. This seat is the Senate seat held by Jeff Sessions for almost two decades. He unwittingly made a strange and probably very regrettable decision to join President Donald J. Trump’s administration as attorney general. Very few U. S. Senators with 20 years seniority would leave their permanent seat in the illustrious, powerful, and elite body for a temporary - four-year at best - tenure in a tumultuous and transient cabinet post. 

  Trump is tempestuous at the least and still likes to think of himself as the host of his TV reality show, The Apprentice, who famously says, “You’re fired!” Trump has recently tweeted that Sessions' appointment as U.S. Attorney General was the most regrettable appointment that he has made. You can more than likely ascertain that Jeff Sessions feels the same way about his decision to leave his safe Senate seat for a shot as Trump’s AG. However, you could safely bet that the reserved, squeaky clean, Dudley-Do-Right, Eagle Scout Sessions will not do any tweeting, or betting, on anything, much less his Trump controversy.

  Therefore, the biggest question regarding the 2020 Senate race in the Heart of Dixie was: Would Jeff Sessions run to get his seat back? The answer is that he considered it. He was encouraged to run by the Washington Republican establishment, including Mitch McConnell. However, he has decided that at 72, he will not seek his seat.

  My thoughts are that he could have and probably would have won. However, his departure from the race makes for some good theater.

  It is assumed that the winner of next year’s March 3rd GOP Primary will win the six-year Senate term. Alabama is one, if not the most, Republican states in America. With it being a presidential election year, Alabama will probably vote 65% to 35% for Donald Trump. The GOP Senate candidate can expect to mirror that landslide, or at least win by a 60/40 margin, with maybe one exception.

  That exception would be if Roy Moore for some reason were to be the Republican nominee, then that would give the Democrat, probably Doug Jones, a possible opening.

  Roy Moore begins the race with overwhelmingly negative name identification. He has 2 to 1 negative to positive polling numbers. Those numbers are not going to improve. Believe you me, the national Republican, Mitch McConnell, establishment money is going to pour in here to run negative ads against old Moore to make sure he is not the GOP standard-bearer in the fall of 2020. When they get through with him, his horse Sassy will even have negative numbers.

  My guess is that Moore’s best days are behind him and that he will not be the GOP nominee. However, he still has a hard core of support that will stay with him come hell or high water. He will probably get 18 percent of the primary vote and that will place him in a strong third-place finish.

  My early prediction is that First District Congressman, Bradley Byrne, and Alabama Secretary of State John Merrill will ultimately be in a runoff. Either would easily beat the Democrat in November 2020.

  Bradley Byrne dedicated himself to this race over a year ago. He jumped in and made a full commitment. He has been campaigning at full throttle for 15 months. There is a tried and true adage that applies in politics that the early bird gets the worm. Indeed, he has used his early dedication to the race to raise significant early money and secure some good commitments.

  However, Byrne’s initial polling numbers are not great. The surprising aspect to the internal polling reveals that his 2010 governor’s race does not give him adequate name identification. The good side for him is that his negatives are also low. Folks have obviously forgotten that he ran for governor in 2010.

  Most Alabama inside-observers believe that Secretary of State John Merrill is the man to beat in this race. He is simply the hardest working retail politician in the state. He has a grassroots organization in all 67 counties. He has gotten his traction the old fashioned way, with hard work and a love for one-on-one politicking. He will outwork and out-organize all the candidates in the race combined. Even though he has built his organization the old fashioned, hardworking way, he understands the new medium of networking and campaigning through social media.

  It will be fun to watch.

  About the author: Steve Flowers is Alabama’s leading political columnist. His weekly column appears in over 60 Alabama newspapers. He served 16 years in the state legislature. Steve may be reached at http://www.steveflowers.us/. He can also be found on Facebook and Twitter.

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