Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt on March 24 said that he will run for the U.S. Senate, seeking to succeed Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.), a fellow Republican who is retiring.
Schmitt, 45, announced his intention to run on Fox News two days after former Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens, also a Republican, announced his bid for the same seat.
“Increasingly, it feels like our culture and our country [are] slipping away and all the levers of power right now in Washington, D.C. are tilted towards the Democrats,” Schmitt told “Fox and Friends.”
“As the attorney general, I’ve spent my time defending President Donald Trump and the America First agenda and all the prosperity that came with that: secure borders, energy independence, more opportunities for more Americans,” Schmitt continued. “And now I’m spending my time pushing back against Joe Biden as he tries to dismantle that.”
Both Greitens and Schmitt are positioning themselves for an endorsement by former President Donald Trump, who would arguably provide the biggest boost for any Republican in a primary contest.
Schmitt is backed by Missouri megadonor Rex Sinquefield.
Greitens was a rising Republican star before resigning amid impeachment proceedings tied to an accusation arising from an extramarital affair and a charge related to his use of a donor list from his charity for political fundraising. Both charges were dropped after he resigned.
Greitens, who was married at the time and is now divorced, admitted to the affair but denied wrongdoing in both cases.
Schmitt in his announcement alluded to the threat of Republicans losing the Senate seat if Greitens wins the GOP nomination, saying Missouri needs “a leader who can hold this Senate seat in firm Republican hands without giving Democrats any chance to take this seat back.”
Voters first elected Schmitt to the state Senate in 2008 to represent a suburban St. Louis district. He was elected state treasurer in 2016, then took over as the state attorney general after Josh Hawley vacated the seat to join the U.S. Senate in 2019. He won another term as attorney general in 2020.