Two Republican firms are out with new polls from Alabama of the March 3 GOP primary to take on Democratic Sen. Doug Jones, and they both show former U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions and former Auburn University football coach Tommy Tuberville advancing to a runoff.
WT&S Consulting, which tells us that their poll was not done for any client, gives Sessions the lead with 32% as Tuberville leads Rep. Bradley Byrne 30-22 for the second spot in a likely March 31 runoff. Roy Moore, who lost this seat to Jones in 2017, is a distant fourth with 7%, while state Rep. Arnold Mooney takes 3%. This is the first poll that WT&S, which is run by state party official John Wahl, has released of this contest.
The anti-tax Club for Growth, which has been running ads against Byrne, is also out with another survey from WPA Intelligence that shows the congressman failing to advance to a second round. WPA gives Tuberville the lead with 32%, which makes this the first time we’ve seen him in first place since Sessions entered the race for his old seat in November. Sessions outpaces Byrne 29-17 for second, while Moore barely registers with 5% and no one else breaks 1%.
These results show some small improvements for Tuberville at Sessions’ expense from the poll the Club released one week ago. That WPA survey found Sessions edging Tuberville 34-29, while Byrne was in third place with the same 17% he takes in the new poll.
The new numbers come as Sessions, Tuberville, and Byrne and their allies have been launching negative ad after negative ad at one another while ignoring the other contenders. Sessions’ new spot declares that Tuberville and Byrne “are desperate, telling lies about Jeff Sessions.” The narrator then reminds the audience that Sessions was the one senator to back Donald Trump in the 2016 primaries, which is true.
The ad glosses over Sessions’ miserable tenure as Trump’s attorney general, which ended with Trump unceremoniously firing him, and instead continues to rehash the 2016 election. The narrator argues, “Byrne stood with the liberals, said Trump was ‘not fit’ to be president and stabbed Trump in the back right before the election.”
Byrne did indeed say after the Access Hollywood tape was released a month before Election Day that Trump, who was recorded bragging about sexually assaulting women, was “not fit to be president of the United States and cannot defeat Hillary Clinton.” The congressman also called for Trump to “step aside” and allow Mike Pence to lead the GOP ticket.
Byrne, like almost everyone in the Republican Party, fell in line right after Trump won a month later, though, and like all of his primary opponents, he’s been emphasizing his unquestioning loyalty to the White House. Byrne recently addressed his 2016 remarks in an interview with the New York Times Magazine’s Jason Zengerle by saying that Trump has never mentioned them because, “He just doesn’t care. He’s more interested in what we’re doing now.” Sessions cares, though, and he’s betting that GOP primary voters do too.
Sessions is also hoping that his party will care about some of Tuberville’s non-Trump issues. His ad continues by calling the former Auburn coach “a tourist in Alabama. He lives, votes, and pays taxes in Florida.” Tuberville is originally from Arkansas, and he coached at the University of Mississippi until he arrived at Auburn in 1998. Tuberville had a mostly successful tenure, but he resigned in 2008 after a bad season and went on to coach out of state at Texas Tech and Cincinnati. During those years he unsuccessfully tried to sell his home near Auburn multiple times.
Tuberville later moved to Florida as the Sessions’ ad alleges. The former coach did say that he’d relocated to Alabama in August 2018 as he considered a Senate run, though he remained registered to vote in the Sunshine State that year and cast his ballot in Florida’s elections.
Sessions also released a new TV ad on Wednesday that targets just Tuberville. After declaring that the former coach is “shameful” for lying about Sessions, the narrator says, “Tuberville is trying to trick you, hiding his support for immigration amnesty.” An audio clip then plays where Tuberville is heard saying, “There are people coming across the border that need jobs … And we want them to come over here.” He continues, “And we let ‘em come in and become citizens like we all became citizens.” The rest of the commercial again casts Tuberville as a Floridian who is in Alabama as a tourist.
Tuberville, meanwhile, is out with his own ad attacking both Sessions and Byrne. The commercial begins by going after Byrne for calling Trump “not fit” to serve before the narrator declares that Sessions “deserted President Trump, sticking us with the Russian witch hunt.” The spot then throws in a shot at Sen. Mitt Romney, who is … not running for Senate in Alabama, by saying he “voted for the liberal impeachment sham.” Tuberville appears and promises he’ll be a Trump ally while “weak-kneed career politicians aren’t tough enough to stand with President Trump.”
Tuberville’s allies at GRIT PAC are also running a commercial that casts both of his intra-party adversaries as “two career politicians who are out of touch with Alabama.” The narrator also declares that Sessions decision to recuse himself from the Russia investigation while serving as attorney general was a betrayal of Trump, while Byrne “didn’t even want Trump in the White House.”
Two cows then appear on screen along with a picture of Romney in the shape of manure as the narrator explains, “In a place where Mitt happens, we need to watch our step.” Perhaps fearing that that joke was too subtle, the narrator declares, “No bull,” which is followed by a censor’s beep, “no weak knees. It’s Tommy Tuberville time for U.S. Senate.”
Byrne, it will not shock you to learn, is also out with an ad that hits both Sessions and Tuberville. The commercial features a trio of actors interviewing the Senate candidates, and they begin by giving this negative rating: “Tommy Tuberville? Says he wants illegals here. Paid him not to work. He can’t keep a job.” An actor portraying Tuberville then angrily slams down his clipboard and walks out, and the committee stamps his resume with the word “Fired.”
A Sessions lookalike then arrives sporting a red cap without anything written on it. The committee is no more impressed with him than they were with Tuberville and says, “He let the president down and got fired. And Hillary still ain’t in jail.” The committee, which apparently believes that Sessions’ refusal to send political adversaries to prison without a trial is a massive character flaw, also delivers the dreaded failure stamp to his file.
The rest of the ad shows Byrne, whom the committee actually allows to talk, talking about his conservative pro-Trump record. The trio is pleased, though his resume goes unstamped. Byrne is also the only one in any of these commercials to mention Jones, saying that he should be the next one to get fired.
Byrne’s allies at Fighting for Alabama Fund also are up on the air with a spot that ignores Sessions and just tears into Tuberville. After showing clips of Trump thanking Byrne, the narrator argues that Tuberville “attacked Trump’s agenda. Even attacked Trump’s immigration plan.” The same audio of Tuberville from the Sessions commercial then plays where Tuberville sounds happy to welcome “people coming from across the border that need jobs.”
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