On Wednesday, state Sen. Chris McDaniel raised the specter of contesting Sen. Thad Cochran’s (R-Miss.) win in their Tuesday primary runoff, but it’s likely an empty threat.
{mosads}The second-place finisher, who was trailing Cochran by 6,693 votes after The Associated Press called the race, said his campaign is going to “look into the [voting] irregularities to determine whether a challenge is warranted.”
“After we’ve examined the data, we will make a decision about whether and how to proceed,” said McDaniel.
But that challenge will likely never materialize. For one, Mississippi has no statutes to force a recount because of a slim margin or other voting issues, meaning McDaniel will have to pursue such a challenge through legal avenues, on his own.
That’s an expensive endeavor — one that he’ll be hard-pressed to fund, with just over $60,000 cash on hand at the start of June.
The legal challenge he’d have to make is murky and hard to prove. Conservatives have alleged that some of Cochran’s vote came from Democrats who illegally voted in both the Democratic primary and the Republican runoff, and from voters who had no plans to support Cochran in the general, which they say is against Mississippi election law.
If McDaniel wants a future in state politics or elsewhere, it’s probably not in his best interest to engage in a messy, contentious legal fight at this point in his career. The chance that such a fight would reduce the comfortable lead Cochran holds are slim. And McDaniel is riding high — the new hero for Mississippi conservatives would likely turn out droves in his support if he were to run for statewide office next year, possibly challenging Gov. Phil Bryant (R), who backed Cochran.
McDaniel may have run an inept Senate campaign, but his future could be bright — if he handles this moment properly. And that means avoiding antagonizing the establishment, wasting money he doesn’t have and embarrassing the conservative movement with a wild goose chase in the coming weeks.
SENATE SHOWDOWN
CO-SEN (UDALL): Generation Opportunity debuted two new ads Wednesday slamming Sen. Mark Udall (D-Colo.) for supporting policies that are harmful to young voters. The spots mimic similar ads the group has put out for Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) and Sen. Kay Hagan (D-N.C.), accusing the three senators of a spending problem and criticizing them for their support of ObamaCare.
NH-SEN (SHAHEEN): Republican candidate Scott Brown released a longer version of the television ad featuring his sister LeeAnn on Wednesday. In the spot, Brown’s sister expands on the supportive role her older brother played in her emotional childhood, saying that without Brown she doesn’t think she would have gone to college or even graduated high school. “I love my brother,” she says at the ad’s close, “and I know he’ll be there for you like he has been for me.”
ME-SEN (COLLINS): Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) picked up the endorsement of the Human Rights Campaign on Wednesday. HRC President Chad Griffin praised Collins in a statement for her “pivotal role in advancing support for LGBT equality,” referencing her support for the repeal of “Don’t ask, don’t tell” and her critical vote for the Employment Non-Discrimination Act. However, unlike her challenger Shenna Bellows (D), Collins has not come out in favor of same-sex marriage.
MI-SEN (OPEN): Republican strategist Frank Luntz dubbed Michigan Senate candidate Terri Lynn Land’s (R) “Really” ad the “worst of the political process.” The ad mocks Land’s opponent Gary Peters’s charges that Land is waging a war on women with the simple defense that Land is a women herself. Luntz slammed the spot on “Fox and Friends” Tuesday night, saying “it doesn’t tell you anything about her, and it doesn’t communicate anything of substance.”
BATTLE FOR THE HOUSE
MI-3 (AMASH): Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) is hit hard by primary opponent businessman Brian Ellis in an attack ad released Wednesday. The ad features a former Marine repeating comments that Amash is “Al Qaeda’s best friend in Congress” and slamming the congressman for voting against measures that would aide troops.
VA-7 (OPEN): Cantor-slayer Dave Brat told The Washington Examiner that outgoing House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) “has been supportive in private and public” since the shocking primary upset. Following the primary, Cantor told CNN that “of course” he wants a Republican to fill the seat but did not indicate whether he would vote for Brat.
NY-13 (RANGEL): The Associated Press called the race for Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.), giving him a narrow win over New York state Sen. Adriano Espaillat (D), though Espaillat has yet to concede.
White House press secretary Josh Earnest, when asked if President Obama would now endorse Rangel after staying out of the primary, said “it is the policy of this White House that we typically support the Democratic candidate” but offered no indication as to whether Obama would support Rangel specifically.
MA-6 (TIERNEY): A new poll has Republican Richard Tisei leading Rep. John Tierney (D-Mass.) 45 to 40 percent, an increase in support for Tisei from an April survey that had the two candidates even at 44 percent of the vote. The poll also finds Tierney with a solid lead over his three primary competitors, holding 59 percent of the vote compared with closest challenger Seth Moulton’s 17 percent.
2016 WATCH
CLINTON: Team Clinton is doing damage control on a series of comments by Hillary Clinton about the former first couple’s wealth. Bill Clinton said Tuesday his wife is “not out of touch,” after she drew criticism for describing her and her husband as “dead broke” upon leaving the White House.
BIDEN: Vice President Biden took a selfie with pop singer Katy Perry at the White House Tuesday ahead of her concert at Washington, D.C.’s Verizon Center. Perry has offered to craft a campaign song for possible opponent Hillary Clinton if she runs in 2016.
CONVENTION CITIES DOWN TO TWO: Dallas or Cleveland will host the 2016 Republican National Convention, the party announced Wednesday.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
“I don’t know him. He’s a gay guy, he met a guy here, they got married, and so he’s here. I guess he’s got nothing better to do so he runs for mayor. Ok. I don’t know what he has ever done. He has no roots here.”
—Ex-con/former Providence Mayor Buddy Cianci (I), after announcing he’ll seek his former office, discussing one of his opponents