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Home » News » Politics

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Republicans face fights over primary races

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By Donald Lambro

Earlier this year, the Democrats were widely expected to add seats in the Senate in the 2010 midterm elections, but double-digit unemployment, a fierce health care battle and record government spending and debt have soured the country's mood and lifted Republican hopes of making a comeback.

That has boosted candidate recruitment among Republicans but also produced a string of party primary battles, in some cases pitting more conservative challengers against moderate-to-liberal opponents backed by the party establishment. Here are a half-dozen Republican primary races that are among those that bear watching:

1. FLORIDA — Republican Gov. Charlie Crist appeared to have smooth sailing for the Senate nomination earlier this year when Sen. John Cornyn, chairman of the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee, recruited him to run. But then former state House Speaker Marco Rubio, a charismatic, Reagan-style conservative, jumped into the race, attacking Mr. Crist as a tax-and-spend Republican who had embraced President Obama's nearly $800 billion spending stimulus bill.

Mr. Rubio has not only ignited his party's conservative base but also won support from "tea party" anti-tax activists from around the country who have made the race their next target.

His attacks have thrown Mr. Crist on the defensive, forcing him to plead his conservative credentials and deny recently that he ever endorsed Mr. Obama's big stimulus plan. However, the anti-tax Club for Growth came out with a new video last week, showing Mr. Crist and the president at a rally in February to support the massive spending package.

Even so, a Rasmussen poll conducted Oct. 20 showed Mr. Crist leading his primary challenger 49 percent to 35 percent.

The winner will likely face Democratic Rep. Kendrick B. Meek, but analysts say Mr. Meek faces "an uphill fight" in the race to succeed interim Republican Sen. George LeMieux, serving out the term of the now-retired Mel Martinez.

2. OHIO — The Buckeye State has been running heavily Democratic in recent elections, but former Rep. and Office of Management and Budget Director Rob Portman is given a chance of keeping this open seat in the Republican column, though the race is very competitive.

The Democratic front-runner, Lt. Gov. Lee Fisher, has the support of Democratic Gov. Ted Strickland among other party leaders, and a recent head-to-head Rasmussen poll in September showed Mr. Portman and Mr. Lee locked in a dead heat.

However, before he gets to a general election race, Mr. Portman first will have to overcome wealthy car dealer Tom Ganley in the primary; early polls show Mr. Portman with a strong lead.

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