Although Alexander was initially thought to be vulnerable to a primary challenge from the right, he worked to avoid this and ultimately did not face a high-profile challenger. He declared his intention to run early, quickly won the endorsement of
Governor Bill Haslam, every living former
Tennessee Republican Party Chairman and the state's
entire Republican congressional delegation (except scandal-hit
Scott DesJarlais). He also raised a large amount of money and worked to avoid the mistakes of ousted Senators
Bob Bennett and
Richard Lugar by trying to stay in touch with his constituents, especially in
East Tennessee. Moreover, out-of-state conservative organizations such as the
Senate Conservatives Fund made little effort to defeat Alexander. During his re-election campaign in 2008, Alexander faced no opponents in the Republican primary. As early as July 2013, it was obvious that the same would not be true in 2014. The weekend of July 20, 2013, a rally was held in
Smyrna in opposition to Alexander. Activists attending the event included
Williamson County GOP leader Kevin Kookogey. By mid-August, Triton Polling released a poll showing Alexander trailing "a generic conservative" by 4.6 points. But no "generic conservative" seemed to want to step up. In search of a candidate, a "Beat Lamar" PAC held a forum and invited Kookogey,
Knox County mayor
Tim Burchett, and Alexander's only formal opponent at the time, Brenda Lenard of Knoxville. On August 20, 2013, State Representative
Joe Carr announced his candidacy. He had previously been opposing
Scott Desjarlais in the race for
Tennessee's 4th congressional district, but swapped races under public pressure. Kookogey soon dropped out of the race. Four candidates were then vetted in September by the "Coalition for a Constitutional Senate": Carr, truck driver Jerry Davis, business owner John McDaniel, and electrician Danny Page. The coalition ultimately endorsed Carr with 59% of the vote, but some felt that Carr's nomination was coerced by the leaders of the Beat Lamar PAC. Independent candidate Danny Page was especially vocal on that issue. Entering the race late was George Flinn, a radiologist from
Memphis who had run for Congress against
Steve Cohen in 2012. There was some speculation that Flinn was a spoiler deployed by Alexander to steal Tea Party votes from Carr. but he did not receive much other support from outside of Tennessee, failing to receive endorsements from the
Senate Conservatives Fund or the
Club for Growth. Ultimately, Alexander won the primary, though he recorded the lowest winning percentage (49.7%) and lowest margin of victory (9.2 points) ever in a primary for a Republican U.S. Senator from Tennessee. Carr won a larger percentage of the vote (40.5%) than the previous 11 challengers to sitting Republican U.S. Senators in Tennessee history combined (40.3%).
Candidates Declared • Christian Agnew •
Lamar Alexander, incumbent U.S. Senator • George Flinn, radiologist, radio station owner, former
Shelby County Commissioner and nominee for
Tennessee's 9th congressional district in
2012 • John King, businessman • Erin Kent Magee
Declined •
Diane Black, U.S. Representative •
Marsha Blackburn, U.S. Representative •
Stacey Campfield, state senator •
Jimmy Duncan, U.S. Representative • Kevin Kookogey, former chairman of the
Williamson County Republican Party • Monty Lankford, businessman, board member of the
Tennessee Family Action Council and nominee for
Tennessee's 4th congressional district in
2008 •
Ron Ramsey,
Lieutenant Governor and Speaker of the
Tennessee Senate •
Phil Roe, U.S. Representative
Endorsements Polling • Internal poll for Lamar Alexander campaign • ^ Internal poll for Terry Adams campaign
Results == Democratic primary ==