Republicans
win governor's races in Mississippi, Kentucky
Send a link to a friend
[November 04, 2015]
By Steve Bittenbender
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (Reuters) - Republican
businessman Matt Bevin was elected Kentucky's next governor on Tuesday,
marking a setback for Democrats who had controlled the office in every
election but one since 1971 and underscoring the party's decline in the
conservative U.S. South.
|
Bevin, who rode Tea Party support to a narrow victory in a
four-way Republican primary, soundly defeated State Attorney General
Jack Conway, whose late October lead in the polls evaporated on
election day.
"This is a chance for a fresh start," said Bevin at his victory
event, calling his candidacy an opportunity to change traditional
politics. "It truly is, and we desperately need it."
Republicans also were successful in securing a second term for
Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant, who easily defeated a little-known
opponent in the conservative Southern state.
Kentucky's more hotly contested race reflected the partisan divide
seen nationally over gay marriage and President Barack Obama's
signature healthcare law in a contest to replace Democratic Governor
Steve Beshear, who cannot run because of term limits.
Bevin, who has never before held elected office, won with 52.5
percent of the vote, compared to 43.8 percent for Conway, according
to unofficial results with all precincts reporting.
His path to victory included courting religious conservatives after
meeting with embattled Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis after she was
jailed for defying a federal judge's order to issue marriage
licenses to gay couples.
"I am ecstatic," Davis said in a statement released by her attorneys
at the conservative Liberty Counsel, adding that Bevin had prayed
for her. "I will be forever thankful that he came to visit me while
I was in jail."
While Tea Party leaders celebrated a win for Bevin, a conservative
known to challenge establishment Republicans, he also benefited from
a late infusion of cash from the Republican Governors Association.
The organization said it poured $2.5 million into the state during
the final two weeks of the campaign and spent a total of $6 million
on the race.
[to top of second column] |
Bevin had pledged to roll back the expansion of Medicaid to provide
health coverage to the poor under Obama's health plan as started by
the current governor, which Conway had supported.
Although Kentucky voters routinely send Republicans to Washington,
D.C., experts thought Conway had the advantage going into election
day, given Democrats' enduring state-level strength in recent
decades.
Bevin's lieutenant governor, Jenean Hampton, becomes the first
African American elected to statewide office in Kentucky.
In Mississippi, Republicans also celebrated widely expected
victories for party incumbents.
Gov. Bryant defeated truck driver Robert Gray, the surprise victor
of a Democratic primary in which he did not spend money or seriously
campaign. His low-budget campaign reflected the sorry state of the
Mississippi Democratic Party, observers said.
Still, Democrats held off a challenge to one of the party's last
statewide elected officers in the Deep South. Mississippi Attorney
General Jim Hood won a fourth term in office, with his opponent
conceding late Tuesday night.
(Writing and additional reporting by Letitia Stein in Tampa, Fla.;
Editing by Bill Trott and Eric Walsh)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|