Banks used two appearances with Fox News to launch his campaign for Indiana’s vacant Senate seat.
Representative Jim Banks (R) of Indiana has been “a major conservative voice in the House” and claims that the state “deserves a conservative senator.”
Banks, a veteran of the Afghanistan war currently serving his fourth term as a state senator for a district in northeast Indiana, formally announced his candidacy for the Senate on Tuesday, 2024, to replace Republican Sen. Mike Braun, who announced last month that he would run for governor of Indiana instead of seeking re-election.
Before announcing, Banks told Fox News that he plans “to go to the Senate and be the sort of conservative fighter that Hoosiers demand out of their senator.”
His platform in the Senate includes “keeping the Biden administration responsible” and “restoring America,” as well as “fighting for our conservative beliefs” and “putting America first.” “I am 100% pro-life, pro-family, pro-military, pro-veteran,” he stated.
Banks announced the beginning of his candidacy for the Senate in a live national appearance on Fox News’s “Fox and Friends.” He also released a statement and video in support of his bid. In the upcoming days, he plans to travel around the state to meet with friends and supporters and talk to local media.
In his announcement of his entry into the Senate race, he highlighted the support of two prominent Republicans: Arkansas’s Sen. Tom Cotton, a rising star in the GOP, and Indiana’s 8th Congressional District representative, Larry Bucshon, who serves in the state’s southwestern region.
Former Republican Study Committee chair and current member of the House of Representatives, Banks, said, “It is time for new, conservative leadership in the United States Senate, and I feel compelled to provide it by running for that body. This is a requirement in Indiana. That’s the conservative fighter the Senate needs and Indiana needs.”
He made the case that he could do more good in the Senate if he represented conservative ideals vital to him and the people of Indiana.
For Banks, “the three main challenges facing our country now” are the ballooning national debt, the Chinese threat, and “woke.”
“China represents a threat to our American way of life,” Banks said, “and the Senate provides an even wider platform to do more to battle the China menace and hold China responsible.”
In his opinion, wokeism is “a malignant growth in the United States; if allowed further, wokeism would destroy our educational system, the armed forces, the government, and big business. I’ve been in the forefront of the resistance to critical race theory, anti-Americanism, and wokeness in the House, and the Senate gives me an even louder voice with which to counter these trends.”
As an “indication that we need fiscal conservatives in the Senate that would fight back against massive spending omnibus legislation, not go along with it,” he added, “the omnibus [bill] that went out of the Senate was frankly a significant element in my choice” to run for the Senate.
Longtime Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell voted for the big bipartisan budget deal that prevented a government shutdown.
When Banks was asked if he would vote for McConnell, he responded, “I believe the Senate might benefit from the addition of fresh conservative voices and leaders. Because of this, I must flee. The omnibus bill is indicative of the problem that there aren’t enough of them. There are several instances of Republican senators in the U.S. Senate voting with Democrats to promote the extreme Biden agenda. It’s a place I’ve always wanted to see, and I intend to go there and put up a fight.”
Indiana, which used to be a swing state in presidential elections but is now reliably Republican, may see a competitive contest for the available Senate seat. Banks may be the first prominent Republican contender to enter the campaign, but he will undoubtedly have opponents for the party’s nomination for Senate.
Republican Mitch Daniels, who served as governor of Indiana for two terms and was well-known for his fiscal conservatism during his time in office, is reportedly considering a run for the Senate, according to his supporters. In the most recent round of Republican primaries, the Club for Growth, a prominent free-market advocacy group, released an ad claiming that “moderate Mitch” was “inappropriate” for the Senate. If Daniels runs for the Senate, he may encounter resistance from the right, as seen by the modest ad buy.
Representative Victoria Spartz (R), who represents a district in central Indiana that includes sections of Indianapolis and its suburbs, is also considering a run.
Although he barely lost the election for House majority whip in November to Minnesota Republican Rep. Tom Emmer, who had served as the NRCC head for the previous two election cycles, Banks has been a staunch ally and backer of Trump for quite some time.
The former president, who declared his third presidential run in November, is still a significant player in the Republican Party.
“Trump has done great things for our country and the Republican Party, and I applaud him. Still much beloved in his home state of Indiana, President Trump’s endorsement would mean a great deal to me since it comes from a man who has worked tirelessly to put America first and who I had the honor of serving under as president. “A bank reportedly made that claim.
The representative described that they “was a pioneer in the battle for border security, anti-immigration legislation, fair trade practices, and other pro-American initiatives. I would appreciate the backing of President Trump, who is aware of this fact.”