Thad Cochran needed to be rescued. The incumbent Republican Senator from Mississippi looked likely to lose Tuesday’s runoff to Chris McDaniel, a tea party challenger who castigated Cochran for being too chummy with Democrats despite a decades-long conservative record.
Cochran’s last resort was to plead with Mississippi’s black voters to carry him over the line. And it may have worked.
The extent to which Cochran owes his narrow primary victory to Democrats or black voters has yet to be hashed out, but it’s clear from early analysis that black voting played some role. Mississippi law states you can’t vote in a runoff for one party if you voted in the primary of another.
Conservative groups recruited an army of poll watchers to send to the polls in the state. When McDaniel lost, it was certainly Cochran’s appeal to the state’s mostly black Democratic voters that was on his mind.
“There is something a bit strange, there is something a bit unusual about a Republican primary that’s decided by liberal Democrats,” McDaniel barked Tuesday night after refusing to concede.
“Today the conservative movement took a backseat to liberal Democrats in Mississippi,” he added,.
Conservatives may cry foul over McDaniel’s loss, whether or not it’s proven that Democrats made the difference. But there’s nothing wrong with crossing over to vote for the lesser of two evils in a primary in a place like Mississippi, where the result of the Republican primary for statewide office usually determines the outcome of the general election. It’s not even unique to Mississippi or this election — those of us who live in Washington, D.C. are quite familiar with the concept. The Democratic primary almost always determines who will win the general election of citywide office in D.C., people who would be Republicans anywhere else register as Democrats so as to have a voice in the process. McDaniel himself voted Democratic a decade ago.









