Cochran resigns effective April 1
Cochran resigns effective April 1
Mississippi will now hold two elections for Senate this year.

Sen.
Thad Cochran (R-Miss.) will resign from the Senate on April 1, his office
announced Monday, triggering a second Senate election in Mississippi this fall.
“I regret my health has become
an ongoing
challenge,”
Cochran said in a statement
released on Monday
afternoon.
Cochran
is the chairman of the
Senate Appropriations
Committee
.
Mississippi GOP Gov. Phil Bryant will select Cochran's replacement, who will
hold the seat until the special election. Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell has urged Bryant to appoint himself, according to a person familiar
with the discussions.
GOP
Sen. Roger Wicker is up for reelection in November. With Cochran's retirement,
a special election will take place the same day to fill out the rest of
Cochran's term, which runs until 2020.
Cochran's
health, mental acuity and future in the Senate have been a subject of intense
speculation for months in Washington and back home. GOP senators and party
leaders had privately been assumed that he would leave after work is completed
on a massive year-end omnibus spending bill this month. That legislation is
expected to include provisions benefiting Mississippi, which Cochran can help
push through from his post atop the Appropriations panel.
Sen.
Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) is next in line to take over the top appropriations
post
"My
top concern has always been my constituents in Mississippi. My hope is by
making this announcement now, a smooth transition can be ensured so their voice
will continue to be heard in Washington, D.C. My efforts, and those of my
staff, to assist them will continue and transfer to my successor," Cochran
said in his statement.
Cochran
was first elected to Congress in 1972, making him one of the longest serving
GOP lawmakers in history. His election to the Senate in Mississippi in 1978 was
a watershed moment for that state's Republican Party: Cochran was the first
Republican to win a statewide election in Mississippi since Reconstruction.
Cochran
has been a formidable inside player during his Senate tenure. He made a career
of steering federal dollars back home, working with former Senate Majority
Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.) for years to ensure their state benefited from
hundreds of “earmarks” inserted in annual appropriations bills.
“Today,
the Senate learned that one of our longest-serving colleagues, Senator Thad
Cochran, will retire on April 1st to focus on his health and enjoy more time
with his family," Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said in a
statement. "Thad’s well-earned reputation as a ‘quiet persuader’ has
endeared him to all his colleagues. Whatever the issue at hand, his allies and
adversaries have always admired his unfailingly even keel, sober expertise, and
respectful demeanor."
Cochran’s
resignation means Bryant, a popular Republican serving his second term, will
appoint his successor. It also triggers a special election in November, to be
conducted concurrently with Wicker’s reelection bid.
But
the special election comes with a twist: It’s a jungle primary, with no party
identification listed on the ballot. If no candidate breaks the 50 percent
margin, a runoff will be held.
Wicker
is facing a primary challenge from State Sen. Chris McDaniel, an
arch-conservative who nearly defeated Cochran four years ago. McDaniel entered
the race last week, shortly before the filing deadline, and said at the time he
would consider switching races if Cochran resigned.
“You
can't foreclose any possibility in politics,” he told Mississippi Today.
McConnell's
allies, including the deep-pocketed Senate Leadership Fund super PAC, have
signaled they were prepared to attack McDaniel to defend Wicker’s seat.
Mississippi
is typically a safe Republican state. Trump won there in 2016 with 58 percent
of the vote to Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton’s 40 percent. But after an
embarrassing loss in Alabama — a state even redder than Mississippi —
Republicans won’t want to take any chances in November.
Bryant
will have no shortage of Republicans to choose from when making the appointment.
Republicans have mentioned Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves, Secretary of State Delbert
Hosemann, Rep. Gregg Harper, state Agriculture and Commerce Commissioner Cindy
Hyde-Smith and even McDaniel as possible appointments. President Donald Trump
asked Bryant to consider appointing himself to the seat, though the governor
appears to have ruled that out.
"I
don’t think anything has solidified behind one person,” said a GOP Senator.
The
Democratic bench in the state is thin, though a favorable political environment
could help them with recruitment. The top prospective candidate is likely
Attorney General Jim Hood, one of just three statewide elected Democrats in the
Deep South. The party recruited Public Service Commissioner Brandon Presley, a
relative of Elvis, to run against Wicker before he turned down a bid.
Both
state House Minority Leader David Baria and venture capitalist Howard Sherman
entered the race last week, and one could switch to run for Cochran’s seat.
Bryant,
in a statement, didn’t mention picking a successor to Cochran, instead praising
the retiring senator's long service in the Senate.
"Sen.
Thad Cochran’s service ushered in an era of unprecedented influence for our
state and will benefit generations to come," Bryant said.
Daniel
Strauss contributed to this report.
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Source :https://www.politico.com/story/2018/03/05/cochran-to-resign-april-1-437126
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