Campaign

Blackburn pushes back on potential Corker bid: ‘I’m going to win’

Tennessee Republican Rep. Marsha Blackburn is holding firm amid rumors that Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) might run for reelection after all, saying that she’s running for the Senate seat no matter what Corker decides. 

Corker’s office said this week that he’s considering calls from some Republicans to return to the race. But when asked by Republican radio host Hugh Hewitt on his radio show if she still plans to run no matter what, Blackburn stayed firm on her bid.
 
“I am running, and I’m going to win. I think what Tennesseans want to see, Hugh, is a true conservative in the U.S. Senate. They want to see somebody there that is going to back Donald Trump and his agenda,” Blackburn said. 
 
When asked by Hewitt if she thinks she’d beat Corker if he jumped into the race, she replied “I certainly do.” 
 
Corker, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and one of President Trump’s foreign affairs confidantes, has had a turbulent relationship with the president. 
 
The two initially had a strong relationship, but relations collapsed after Corker delivered strong criticisms of Trump over Trump’s equivocating statement about violence at a white supremacist rally in Virginia and comments that seemed to undermine negotiations with North Korea. 
 
Trump eventually chided the senator as “Liddle Bob Corker,” while the senator responded by blasting the White House as an “adult day care center.” 
 
The frost has appeared to thaw somewhat this year — Corker accompanied Trump on a trip to Tennessee earlier this year and later praised Trump. 
 
Now other senators, worried that former Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen (D) could win the seat for Democrats, have urged Corker to step back in.
 
But Blackburn’s campaign has blasted that prospect, saying anyone doubting her general election prospects is a “sexist pig.” Blackburn has also retained key support from the network of donors led by conservative billionaire brother Charles and David Koch, even in the face of Corker’s potential entry into the race.