WASHINGTON: Republicans have elected South Dakota Sen. John Thune as the next Senate majority leader, completing a momentous shift in their leadership that elevates a top deputy of Mitch McConnell into a key position as President-elect Donald Trump returns to the White House.
63-year-old Thune is in his fourth Senate term and has promised to work closely with Trump, despite differences the two have had over the years, and will be a crucial part of the incoming president's efforts to push through his policy agenda.
He beat out two other competitors, Sen. John Cornyn and Sen. Rick Scott, by gaining majority support from GOP senators in a secret ballot vote.
Republicans are replacing McConnell, the longest-serving Senate party leader, as they prepare to take majority control of the Senate with the 53 seats they won in last week's elections. Like McConnell, Thune hails from the Republican Party's more traditional wing. He has held the Republican whip position—no. 2 in party leadership—since 2019.
At times, Thune has countered Trump's wishes for Congress, and he broke publicly with Trump over the effort to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, which he called "inexcusable."
But in recent months, Thune has realigned with Trump, visiting him in his Florida home, and the two have been consulting on how to implement the incoming president's agenda. Thune told The Associated Press over the summer that he views their potential relationship as a professional one. If they both win their elections, Thune said, "We've got a job to do."
Well liked and a respected communicator, Thune has been perceived as a frontrunner for much of the year. As the No. 2 Republican, he took over for McConnell for several weeks last year when he was on medical leave. He is also a former chair of the Senate Commerce Committee.
Thune's win is all the more extraordinary because of his 2004 election to the Senate, defeating then-Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle after arguing during the campaign that Daschle had lost his South Dakota roots during his years in Democratic leadership.
Twenty years later, Thune will become majority leader himself.
As he geared up to run for leader, Thune spent much of the year campaigning for his colleagues.
According to his aides, he raised more than $31 million to elect Senate Republicans this cycle, including a $4 million transfer from his own campaign accounts to the Senate's main campaign arm.
This year, though, Thune and Trump have talked frequently on the phone and Thune visited the then-GOP candidate at his home in Florida.