Republican wins Senate runoff in Louisiana, giving party 52 seats

Reuters

Published Dec 11, 2016 12:44AM ET

Republican wins Senate runoff in Louisiana, giving party 52 seats

By Bryn Stole

BATON ROUGE, La. (Reuters) - Republican John Neely Kennedy, a candidate for the U.S. Senate, won a runoff election in Louisiana on Saturday against Democrat Foster Campbell in a race that gives the Republicans a 52-seat majority in the chamber.

Campbell told his supporters in the state capital of Baton Rouge that he had called Kennedy to congratulate him on his victory.

Kennedy, the state treasurer and the favorite going into the runoff, had slightly less than 61 percent of the vote with all 3,904 precincts reporting, according to the state Secretary of State's office. Turnout was relatively low.

Kennedy, who said he will not move to Washington D.C. after a campaign spent railing against "insiders," told supporters "I'd rather drink weed-killer than be anywhere else tonight," a reference to a widely reported campaign quote in which he said he "would rather drink weed-killer than support Obamacare."

Kennedy will fill the seat held by outgoing Republican Senator David Vitter, who is retiring.

In conceding, Campbell vowed "I'll never stop fighting for working families, I'll never stop working for what's right."

Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, congratulated Kennedy on his victory.

"I look forward to working with him to secure additional funding for flood relief, to make long term investments in our infrastructure and to bring Louisiana’s federal tax dollars home to help our people," Edwards said in a statement.

With Kennedy's victory, the Republicans will have a 52-seat majority in the 100-seat U.S. Senate. Going into the general election on Nov. 8, Republicans had a 54-seat majority.

Kennedy had campaigned on the popularity in his state of President-elect Donald Trump, who easily won Louisiana.

Trump flew to Baton Rouge for an election-eve rally on Kennedy's behalf, and Vice President-elect Mike Pence earlier stumped for Kennedy as well.

Kennedy, 65, was a Democrat until he switched party affiliation in the conservative-leaning state in 2007.

He had consistently polled well ahead of Campbell since placing first in the state's 24-candidate free-for-all primary, which included former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke.

Celebrities including Patton Oswalt and John Leguizamo both actively supported Campbell's losing bid.

Under Louisiana law, all candidates are pitted against each other in the November general election. If no candidate claims a majority, the top two candidates move to a runoff.