Republican John Thune of South Dakota is elected the next Senate
majority leader
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[November 14, 2024]
By MARY CLARE JALONICK and STEPHEN GROVES
WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans have elected South Dakota Sen. John Thune
as the next Senate majority leader, completing a momentous shift in
their leadership that elevates a top deputy of Mitch McConnell into a
key position as President-elect Donald Trump returns to the White House.
Thune, 63, is in his fourth Senate term and has promised to work closely
with Trump, despite differences the two have had over the years, and
will be a crucial part of the incoming president’s efforts to push
through his policy agenda. The two spoke on the phone shortly after
Thune was elected, the senator posted on X Wednesday afternoon, adding
that “Senate Republicans are excited and ready to get to work” with the
incoming president.
Trump later congratulated Thune on his social media platform, Truth
Social. “He moves quickly, and will do an outstanding job," Trump wrote.
"I look forward to working with him.”
Thune beat out two other competitors, Sens. John Cornyn and Rick Scott,
by gaining majority support from GOP senators in two rounds of secret
ballots behind closed doors. Scott was eliminated on the first round and
the final vote between Thune and Cornyn was 29-24, according to several
people who requested anonymity to discuss the private meeting.
Republicans are replacing McConnell, the longest serving Senate party
leader, as they prepare to take majority control of the Senate with the
53 seats they won in last week’s elections. It was the first competitive
election for Republican leader in three decades and Senate Republicans'
first regime change since McConnell became GOP leader in 2007.
Thune's election represents a major shift in the upper chamber's GOP
conference as many senators have been eager to move on from McConnell's
long and powerful reign. But it will also be a complicated test for
Thune as he will have to manage a conference that is often divided over
policy, navigate Trump's demands of the legislative branch and secure
policy wins for the president as he begins his second term.
“It is a new day in the United States Senate,” Thune told reporters
immediately after he was elected. He said his majority will work to
toughen border security laws, lower energy costs and overturn
regulations they see as burdensome.
“We are excited to reclaim the majority and to get to work with our
colleagues in the House to enact President Trump’s agenda,” Thune said.
As the candidates tried to win over individual senators, all of their
pitches centered around how close they would be to Trump. That was a
more difficult task for Cornyn and Thune, who broke publicly with the
former president over his effort to overturn his defeat in the 2020
presidential election and the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol. At the
time, Thune called Trump's actions “inexcusable.”
In recent months, though, Thune has worked to smooth over that
relationship, visiting Trump at his Florida home and consulting with him
on how to implement the incoming president’s agenda. Thune told The
Associated Press over the summer that he views their potential
relationship as a professional one. If they both won their elections,
Thune said then, “we’ve got a job to do.”
As he made his case, Thune has made clear that he will listen to Trump's
demands. When Trump posted on X Sunday that the new leader “must agree”
to allow him to appoint Cabinet members and others when the Senate is on
recess, avoiding confirmation votes, Thune quickly responded in a
statement that the Senate must “quickly and decisively” act to get
nominees in place and that “all options are on the table to make that
happen, including recess appointments.”
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Speaking to reporters after he was elected, Thune noted that “the
Senate has an advise and consent rule in the Constitution" but that
they will do everything they can to get his nominees in place.
“How that happens remains to be seen,” Thune said.
Thune’s win is all the more extraordinary because of his 2004
election to the Senate – defeating then-Senate Majority Leader Tom
Daschle after arguing during the campaign that Daschle had lost his
South Dakota roots during his years in Democratic leadership. Twenty
years later, Thune will become majority leader himself.
Well liked and a respected communicator, Thune has been perceived as
a front-runner for much of the year. Like McConnell, he hails from
the Republican Party’s more traditional wing.
He is a former chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee and has
held the Republican whip position — no. 2 in party leadership —
since 2019. He took over for McConnell for several weeks last year
when he was on a medical leave, a move that was widely seen as an
audition of sorts as speculation surrounded McConnell's future.
As he geared up to run for leader, Thune spent much of the year
campaigning for his colleagues. According to his aides, he raised
more than $31 million to elect Senate Republicans this cycle,
including a $4 million transfer from his own campaign accounts to
the Senate’s main campaign arm.
The election was difficult for many in the conference who saw Thune
and Cornyn as similar choices. They are alike on policy, voting
generally in step with the conference but working with Democrats at
times. Cornyn is a longtime member of the Senate Judiciary Committee
who took a leading role on bipartisan gun legislation two years ago.
But the two differed on whether the leader should be term limited —
a key demand from some in the conservative wing. Cornyn pushed for
limits, while Thune did not.
Scott, the former governor of Florida, was elected to the Senate in
2018 and quickly positioned himself as a foil to McConnell, running
against him for leader in 2022 and aligning with Utah Sen. Mike Lee
and others who have been highly critical of the current leadership.
As Thune and Cornyn wooed their colleagues one by one all year,
Scott was tied up in his own reelection race. He handily defeated
Democrat Debbie Mucarsel-Powell by more than 10 points.
In the week since the election, Scott aggressively stepped up his
campaign for GOP leader, campaigning publicly as the candidate
closest to Trump and winning endorsements from people who are close
to the former and future president, such as billionaire Elon Musk.
But some questioned whether that strategy might backfire.
South Dakota Sen. Mike Rounds, Thune's home state colleague, said
that he prefers the way that Thune and Cornyn have “handled it
one-on-one with everybody,” but that he had talked to Scott as well.
“We’ve got three qualified individuals,” he said ahead of the race.
Still, both Thune and Cornyn adopted some of Scott's ideas as they
worked to win over voters. Thune told the conference in a candidate
forum Tuesday evening that he would allow more amendments on the
floor and improve communication from McConnell's regime, addressing
frequent complaints from that wing of the conference.
McConnell did not say who he was supporting, but said after the vote
that Thune’s victory was a “clear endorsement of a consummate
leader.”
“The American people elected Republicans to restore stability and
order after four years of Washington Democrats’ failure," McConnell
said. "John Thune will take the reins with a tremendous opportunity
to lead this transformation, and Senate Republicans stand behind
him, ready to get to work.”
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