Incumbent Mississippi Senator Thad Cochran bested tea party challenger Chris McDaniel in the state’s GOP runoff, ending an epically bizarre primary contest that began after McDaniel narrowly won the first round of voting in the weirdest, nastiest must-watch campaign of 2014.
Three weeks later, its title stands. In recent days, McDaniel’s campaign sparred with the senator’s daughter, Kate Cochran, over a Facebook post in which she said McDaniel “relies solely on Jesus, the Constitution, and common sense* — combined in the veneer of ‘goodness’” to determine his politics, mocking her complaints with a Twitter hashtag “#Who’sYaDaddy?”
Earlier this week, a county district attorney finished an investigation into how a McDaniel staffer and two supporters locked themselves in a courthouse where ballots were held on election night, concluding no crime was committed. On Monday, the Cochran campaign fired a staffer after they were arrested for allegedly stealing yard signs for McDaniel.
Still, all of these episodes pale in comparison to the campaign’s wild May, which saw four McDaniel supporters charged in an alleged conspiracy to break into a nursing home to film Cochran’s sick wife for an attack video.
McDaniel ran promising a more aggressive and ideologically pure war against the Democratic agenda. Cochran argued that his seniority has helped Mississippi secure critical federal dollars and that McDaniel is an extremist who would embarrass the state in Washington.
As the first round of voting made clear, Cochran was on his heels with Republican voters. A poll on Monday by Democratic firm Chism Strategies found McDaniel leading Cochran by eight points among GOP primary voters. To close the gap, Cochran and his allies invited Democrats and especially African-Americans to vote for him over McDaniel, who was accused of inflaming racial tensions in public statements and appearances.
A coalition of tea party groups, led by the Senate Conservatives Fund, tried to counter this crossover appeal by posting election observers at polling stations to watch for attempts by Democrats to influence the GOP race that they claim could be illegal.
“The Cochran campaign and its Establishment allies are now on notice: You and your Democrat-operative hired guns will not succeed in breaking the law to steal this election,” Jenny Beth Martin, chairman of the participating Tea Party Patriots Citizens Fund, said in a statement.
While it’s not uncommon for campaigns to dispatch supporters to look out for irregularities, the racial politics of Mississippi and vagueness of the state’s election laws make for a delicate situation.
Mississippi allows Democrats to vote in Republican primaries so long as they didn’t vote in their own party’s primary already. But tea party groups also invoked a statute that forbids voters from choosing a candidate that they do not intend to support in the general election.









