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Could Jeff Sessions still get his old job in the Senate back?

  • July 26, 2017
  • Washington

Since President Trump has been making Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ life miserable recently, we wondered: Is it too late for Sessions to get his old job back as U.S. senator from Alabama?

Legally, it’s not out of the realm of possibility — but it’s highly unlikely.

Alabama’s primary to replace Sessions in the Senate is on Aug. 15. If nobody gets 50% in that race, it goes to a primary runoff between the top two candidates at the end of September. The general election will be held in December; it’s considered a safe Republican seat.

There are currently nine candidates in the GOP primary, including Sen. Luther Strange, the former attorney general of Alabama, as the incumbent. Strange was appointed by Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley to take Sessions’ seat until the special election.

Trump in the past week has ridiculed Sessions for recusing himself from the Russia investigation, calling him “beleaguered” in a tweet.

Sessions said he intends to remain in the position “as long as it is appropriate.”

The filing deadline for the special election has already passed, so Sessions cannot get on the ballot at this point. But he could run as a write-in candidate.

Under Alabama law, in order to win by a write-in election, voters would have to spell his name correctly on ballots. In 1986, after losing the Democratic gubernatorial primary, Charles Graddick attempted to launch a write-in campaign but withdrew after concluding his name was too hard to spell, said Bill Stewart, professor emeritus of politics at the University of Alabama. Stewart said since Sessions is so well-known and easy to spell, it shouldn’t be an issue.

“The name Jeff Sessions is not quite so difficult as Graddick,” Stewart said. “He doesn’t generally go by Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III, just Jeff Sessions.”

Given that the election is three weeks away and Sessions is still the attorney general, the chances of him campaigning as a write-in candidate are nearly zero. Nevertheless, were he to leave his current position, he is still so popular in the state – he held the Senate seat from 1996 until January — that it’s not impossible, Stewart said.

“He could’ve had the Senate seat for the rest of his life if he wanted,” Stewart said.

There is some precedent for write-in U.S. Senate campaigns. Strom Thurmond, the former governor of South Carolina, won his first Senate race as a write-in in 1954 and served nearly 50 years in the Senate, first as a Democrat and later as a Republican. More recently, Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, won her 2010 Senate election as a write-in candidate after losing the primary to a Tea Party-backed insurgent.

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  • Sessions speaks at the U.S. Attorney's Office in Philadelphia1 of 35
  • Sessions picks up his remarks as acting FBI Director2 of 35
  • Sessions meets with families of victims killed by illegal3 of 35
  • Sessions appears in an open hearing before the Senate4 of 35
  • Sessions appears before the Senate Intelligence Committee5 of 35
  • Sessions speaks at the National Law Enforcement Training6 of 35
  • Sessions talks to President Trump during the 36th annual7 of 35
  • Sessions delivers remarks at an event where he received8 of 35
  • Sessions takes his seat before a meeting of the Attorney9 of 35
  • Sessions shakes hands with U.S. Customs and Border10 of 35
  • Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Sessions take11 of 35
  • Sessions takes questions during a press conference12 of 35
  • Sessions delivers remarks at the Justice Department's13 of 35
  • President Trump puts his hand Sessions' shoulder before14 of 35
  • Sessions waits for the beginning of a Senate Environment15 of 35
  • Sessions arrives on the west front of the U.S. Capitol16 of 35
  • Sessions is sworn in on Capitol Hill on Jan. 10, 2017,17 of 35
  • Sessions, accompanied by former Arizona senator Jon18 of 35
  • Sessions cheers on the crowd during a rally for President-elect19 of 35
  • Sessions attends a meeting with Senate Judiciary Chairman20 of 35
  • Sessions talks to the media at Trump Tower in New York21 of 35
  • Sessions speaks during the Republican National Convention22 of 35
  • Sessions leaves after speaking at a news conference23 of 35
  • Donald Trump stands next to Sessions during a rally24 of 35
  • Sessions leaves a polling place after voting at Hillcrest25 of 35
  • Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, chats with Sessions as the26 of 35
  • Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and Sessions deliver the GOP27 of 35
  • Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and Sessions begin the third28 of 35
  • Sessions, accompanied by Sens. Mitch McConnell of Ky.,29 of 35
  • President George W. Bush waves with Sessions during30 of 35
  • Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Sessions confer during31 of 35
  • Alabama Gov. Bob Riley listens as Sessions makes remarks32 of 35
  • Sessions speaks during a news conference on Capitol33 of 35
  • Sessions questions witness Jack Quinn at a Senate Judiciary34 of 35
  • Sessions claims victory in his Senate race over Democratic35 of 35

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