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Trump-Backed Katie Britt Defeats Mo Brooks

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MONTGOMERY, Ala. – The race is set for Alabama voters to decide this November who will be their next U.S. senator following Katie Britt’s victory over Rep. Mo Brooks, R‑Ala., in Tuesday’s GOP primary runoff election.In her first interview following her election victory, Britt described the “surreal moment” to Fox News Digital and said she is unsure of whether it has “quite sunk in” that she will represent the Republican Party in the general election in the Yellowhammer State on November 8.
Katie Britt, US Republican Senate candidate for Alabama, speaks during an election night watch event in Montgomery, Alabama, on Tuesday, May 24, 2022.
(Andi Rice/Bloomberg via Getty Images)“I’m so excited,” she said, adding that Alabamians “want new blood.“Asked about former President Trump’s endorsement of her candidacy and whether she believed it impacted her chances of winning, Britt said, “absolutely!“TRUMP-ENDORSED KATIE BRITT WINS ALABAMA GOP SENATE PRIMARY RUNOFF ELECTION AGAINST REP. MO BROOKS“We were so proud to earn that endorsement and also know that people know – and obviously the president said – that we’re the best to fight for the America first agenda,” she said. “That’s what I’m hearing all over the state. People miss those policies.“Ahead of the general election, Britt said she and her team would “continue our grassroots campaign, we’re gonna continue to criss cross the state, meeting with voters and spreading our message.“Britt said she believes it is important to “earn the vote” of Alabamians and said she hopes to be elected because she is the “best person for the job.“The newly elected Republican nominee from the state also touted the significance of her victory as it relates to inspiration for other conservative women who aspire to run for office.“It is so exciting to see so many young conservatives and young women step up and say, ‘It’s time,’ ” Britt said. “What it boils down to, is we look at this country under Joe Biden’s leadership and every single thing is moving in the wrong direction. As mamas, we know if we don’t step up and fight, there’s not going to be anything left for our children to fight for.”
Alabama Senate candidate Katie Britt stands alongside her son and daughter as she speaks to members of the media after voting in Montgomery on May 24, 2022.
(Britt Campaign)Britt said the Republican Party is “no longer the party of big business” and instead said it is the party of “working Americans.“Britt, who served as retiring Sen. Richard Shelby’s chief of staff but has never held public office, will face off against Democratic nominee and pastor Will Boyd, who easily won his primary last month with more than 60% of the vote.She is expected to sail to victory in November, and will become the first woman to represent the state of Alabama in the U.S. Senate.The largely Republican state has only elected one Democratic senator in the last 30 years when it elected Doug Jones in a 2017 special election over Republican and former state …

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