Alabama Republican who once spurned Trump
wins runoff election
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[July 18, 2018]
By John Whitesides
(Reuters) - U.S. Representative Martha
Roby, an Alabama Republican who spurned Donald Trump in the 2016
presidential race, has decisively won a runoff election against a former
Democrat-turned-Trump supporter.
With 65 of 67 counties reporting, the four-term incumbent in the House
of Representatives got 68 percent of the vote compared with 32 percent
for challenger Bobby Bright in the race to become the Republican
candidate for Alabama's 2nd Congressional District, according to the
state's own unofficial results.
Roby ran ahead of Bright in last month's five-way primary contest but
failed to reach the 50 percent majority needed to clinch an outright
victory, setting the stage for Tuesday's runoff.
She is now expected to run as a heavy favorite against Democratic
nominee Tabitha Isner in the Nov. 6 general election, when Democrats are
hoping to pick up the 23 seats they need to claim a House majority.
Roby faced a voter backlash in the conservative district after calling
Trump "unacceptable" and vowing not to vote for him in the November 2016
campaign when a 2005 recording surfaced in which the former reality TV
star boasted crudely about groping women and making unwanted sexual
advances.
Roby won re-election that year by a narrower margin than in previous
years, and has since become a reliable supporter of Trump's policies in
Congress.
PELOSI VOTE
During this year's nomination battle, Roby has reminded south Alabama
voters that Bright, who held the same congressional seat as a Democrat
before switching parties, did something they might consider even more
unacceptable: He voted for liberal Democrat Nancy Pelosi to be House
speaker.
That helped Roby win an endorsement last month from Trump, who wrote on
Twitter that she was a "consistent and reliable" vote for his agenda,
while Bright was "a recent Nancy Pelosi voting Democrat."
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A view of the seal from the Alabama Republican Party office in
Hoover, Alabama, U.S. November 11, 2017. REUTERS/Marvin Gentry/File
Photo
Vice President Mike Pence also backed the conservative Roby.
Bright has said his vote for Pelosi was a routine procedural tally
before she became a symbol of Democratic Party liberalism.
"Roby has suffered a lot of backlash from Trump loyalists, but
Bright is not the natural candidate to take advantage of that," said
David Hughes, a professor at Auburn University at Montgomery. "He
has a lot of baggage as a former Democrat."
In a Facebook post on Tuesday, Bright wrote that voters were "ready
for change."
Roby raised more than five times as much campaign money as Bright by
the end of last month, according to financial reports compiled by
the Center for Responsive Politics.
(Reporting by John Whitesides in Washington and Steve Gorman in Los
Angeles; Editing by Colleen Jenkins, Peter Cooney and Michael Perry)
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