Current:Home > reviewsMayor wins 2-week write-in campaign to succeed Kentucky lawmaker who died -WealthTrail Solutions
Mayor wins 2-week write-in campaign to succeed Kentucky lawmaker who died
View
Date:2025-04-14 07:44:24
Follow live: Updates from AP’s coverage of the presidential election.
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — An Appalachian mayor was declared the winner Thursday of an 11-candidate scramble for a Kentucky Senate seat left vacant by the death of the Republican incumbent just two weeks before Election Day.
Pineville Mayor Scott Madon, a Republican who branded himself as a conservative supporter of public education, transportation, coal and now-President-elect Donald Trump, easily outdistanced his rivals in the whirlwind, write-in campaign spanning five counties in the eastern Kentucky district.
Madon, 62, will succeed the late state Sen. Johnnie Turner, 76, who died Oct. 22 after being injured weeks earlier when he plunged into an empty swimming pool at his home while on a lawn mower.
Madon will serve a full four-year term in Kentucky’s Republican-supermajority legislature.
“I will do my very best to carry on and continue Sen. Turner’s legacy of service to eastern Kentucky,” Madon said in a tribute to his predecessor, who was known for his staunch support for the coal industry and other causes in his Appalachian district.
Turner’s death — along with the prior withdrawal of his only general election challenger — prompted a frenzied write-in campaign for the Senate seat. Eleven people filed to run within days of Turner’s death. Those write-in hopefuls who had filed their paperwork were the only eligible vote-getters.
The Republican establishment quickly rallied around Madon. The mayor was endorsed by the region’s powerful GOP congressman, Hal Rogers, and the Senate Republican Campaign Caucus Committee, which provided crucial financial and organizational support to boost Madon’s campaign.
Turner’s wife, Maritza Turner, and their children also supported Madon, saying in a statement that the mayor would champion the “conservative Republican values Johnnie held dear.”
“To have their backing and encouragement despite their time of tremendous grief and mourning was incredibly touching and very emotional for me,” Madon said in his victory statement.
Even with those advantages, it turned into an exhaustive few days of campaigning. Early in-person voting in Kentucky began six days after Madon formally entered the race. The mayor was already well known in Bell County, which includes Pineville, but he had to quickly build name recognition in the other four counties in a short amount of time, said Madon’s campaign consultant, T.J. Litafik.
“This one was like drinking from a fire hose,” Litafik said Thursday.
Campaign signs went up at key highway intersections, and Madon advertised heavily on TV, radio and social media and distributed campaign mailers in the district.
“We worked hard and fast because we knew we were rushing to beat the clock late in the fourth quarter of the game,” Litafik said.
veryGood! (43713)
Related
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- A seventh man accused in killing of an Ecuador presidential candidate is slain inside prison
- 2 teens indicted on murder, battery charges in fatal hit-and-run of bicyclist captured on video
- 50 Cent, ScarLip on hip-hop and violence stereotype: 'How about we look at society?'
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- A 13-year old boy was fatally stabbed in an argument on a New York City bus
- From runways to rockets: Prada will help design NASA's spacesuits for mission to the moon
- Packers LT David Bakhtiari confirms season is over but believes he will play next season
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Man found guilty of murder in deaths of 3 neighbors in Portland, Oregon
Ranking
- Eva Mendes Shares Message of Gratitude to Olympics for Keeping Her and Ryan Gosling's Kids Private
- 'Wait Wait' for October 7, 2023: With Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar
- 4 members of a Florida family are sentenced for selling a fake COVID-19 cure through online church
- Troopers who fatally shot Cop City activist near Atlanta won't be charged, prosecutor says
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- 5 people hospitalized after shooting in Inglewood, near Los Angeles, authorities say
- Credit card APRs are surging ever higher. Here's how to get a lower rate.
- Angus Cloud’s Childhood Friends Honor “Fearless” Euphoria Star 2 Months After His Death
Recommendation
Connie Chiume, Black Panther Actress, Dead at 72: Lupita Nyong'o and More Pay Tribute
Earthquakes kill over 2,000 in Afghanistan. People are freeing the dead and injured with their hands
For these Peruvian kids, surfing isn't just water play
Videos show Ecuador police seize nearly 14 tons of drugs destined for U.S., Central America and Europe
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Scientists say they've confirmed fossilized human footprints found in New Mexico are between 21,000 and 23,000 years old
Record amount of bird deaths in Chicago this week astonishes birding community
Four people are wounded in a shooting on a Vienna street, and police reportedly arrest four suspects