A Brutal Injury Cut Short an NFL Preseason Game
Did the Mayor of Atlanta Take a Swipe at Trump During Presser About...
A Liberal Guest on CNN Said ICE Was Acting Like Gestapo Agents..and All...
Wait, That's How Many People Think Sydney Sweeney's Jeans Ad Promoted Nazism?
Here's the Tweet That Cooked This GOP Rep's Weak Sauce Take on Gerrymandering
Cuomo, Mamdani spar in Mayoral Race
Cuomo Calls Out Socialist Mayoral Hopeful Mamdani: 'Move Out of Your Rent-Controlled Apart...
23 AGs Say Financial Net-Zero Goals Raise Food, Energy Costs
Trump Slashes D.C. Security Funding Amid Rising Crime
Anti-ICE Rioter Who Hurled Cinderblocks at Border Patrol Indicted, Faces Up to 20...
CNN Analyst Slams Trump-Putin Meeting as a Failure, Days Before It Even Happens
McCarthy Drops Bombshell on Texas Democrat 'Diva' Banned for Life from Major Airline
Mexican President Rejects Trump’s Military Plan: 'No U.S. Troops on Our Soil' as...
Socialist Mamdani Hires Private Security Firm, Despite Pushing to Defund the Police
Protecting Our Leaders: The Essential Role of the MH-139 Grey Wolf
Tipsheet

Tea Party to Trump: Don't Endorse Sen. Wicker in Mississippi

In the Republican Primary run-off election in the Alabama Senate race, President Trump endorsed candidate Luther Strange over candidate Roy Moore. Moore, the former Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, won the Republican nomination for Senate and is now trying to lock up endorsements from current Republican senators. Sens. Rand Paul (R-KY), Mike Lee (R-UT), and Ted Cruz (R-TX), just to name a few, have endorsed Moore.

Advertisement

Though President Trump endorsed Strange, the anti-establishment voters in Alabama didn't embrace the endorsement as Moore won handily. The voters did not hold President Trump's endorsement of Strange against him, as they believed senators like Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, and other members of the "establishment," were manipulating him. An earlier Republican candidate who lost before the run-off, Mo Brooks, asked President Trump to reconsider his endorsement of Strange as he thought Strange was too close to McConnell.

Unlike Alabama, the Republican Primary in the state of Mississippi is going to be close. Due to how close it is going to be, Tea Party co-founder Jenny Beth Martin told Axios that President Trump should "stay out."

Martin told Axios:

I notice that the president has met with a few people, like [incumbent Sen.] Roger Wicker from Mississippi, I'm here to tell you that the grassroots in Mississippi have not forgotten what happened to them with Chris McDaniel in 2014, that election was really stolen from [him], and they remember. And I hope the president just stays out of that... for his sake... the grassroots don't like Wicker at all… the president liking him isn't going to make them like Wicker any more.

Advertisement

President Trump still has his grassroots base intact and, for the most part, they are still loyal to him through thick and thin. Even if the president makes a decision they may not like, they are willing to forgive him for the mistake or they will simply accuse members of the "establishment" of misleading him. However, if President Trump endorses Sen. Roger Wicker over his opponent, and if Sen. Wicker were to win, the Mississippi voters may not be so forgiving.

As Axios explains:

According to Martin, grassroots voters believed Trump's decision to back Luther Strange in the Alabama Senate race was a result of him getting "bad" information from McConnell and Ryan. That logic may not hold up in Mississippi, where Trump has more time to determine whom to endorse.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos