FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) - Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron touted his endorsement from Donald Trump as an honor, reasserting his steadfast loyalty to the former president while campaigning for governor after a civil jury found the ex-president liable for sexually abusing an advice columnist nearly three decades ago.-
Trump-backed candidate for Kentucky governor downplays jury verdict against former president
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) - Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron touted his endorsement from Donald Trump as an honor, reasserting his steadfast loyalty to the former president while campaigning for governor after a civil jury found the ex-president liable for sexually abusing an advice columnist nearly three decades ago.-
"He is a fighter and I am a fighter," Cameron said during a televised debate Tuesday that didn’t include his main rival for the nomination, Kelly Craft.
With a narrow early voting window set to begin Thursday for the May 16 primary, Republican candidates campaigned all across the Bluegrass State, trying to set themselves apart in a race where the main contenders sound alike on core economic and social issues. Instead, most of the talk about issues was overshadowed by a barrage of attack ads between camps supporting Cameron or Craft. The heated tenor of the campaign may have exacerbated voter indifference, adding to the sense that the fiercest contest will come in November when the winner tries to knock off Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear.
"There doesn’t seem to be a lot of enthusiasm or interest in this primary," said GOP political consultant T.J. Litafik. "I’m not seeing a particularly high level of engagement really anywhere in this state."