When members of Congress announce their retirement, there’s usually a simple and familiar process: Candidates from both parties launch campaigns to succeed the incumbent and prepare for primary races.
Occasionally, however, members retire in a more sneaky and underhanded way that short-circuits that process. Take Tuesday’s developments in Montana, for example. The Associated Press reported:
Republican U.S. Sen. Steve Daines of Montana dropped his bid for a third term on Wednesday in a surprise withdrawal just minutes before a filing deadline for candidates. […]
Montana U.S. Attorney Kurt Alme, also a Republican, entered the race shortly before the state’s deadline for major party candidates.
There’s no great mystery as to what happened here: By all appearances, an incumbent senator prepared to retire, he chose a successor, and he didn’t want his choice to have to worry about a pesky primary process. They then appear to have executed a scheme in which the senator waited until literally minutes remained before the filing deadline, at which point he ended his re-election bid and allowed his handpicked choice to file the paperwork to succeed him.
What if other Montana Republicans wanted to launch candidacies of their own? Well, too bad for them: Daines’ ploy didn’t give them the time to throw their hats in the ring — or give voters the opportunity to consider their prospective candidacies on the merits.
Indeed, the scope of the scheme quickly came into focus. As the filing deadline came and went, Daines endorsed Alme, who also quickly picked up support from the entirety of the party establishment, including President Donald Trump, Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte and the state’s other Republican U.S. senator, Tim Sheehy.








