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Four years later, he really was. Nelson bucked the so-called Republican Revolution in 1994 and won a second term by 47 percentage points. His next victory was tight: In 2000, he won the Senate seat held by retiring Democrat Bob Kerrey, 51-49 percent. Nelson quickly built a reputation as one of the Senate Democrats most likely to support Bush's initiatives and to cut deals to pass them. Before Nelson's freshman term was half-over, his horse-trading helped pass a pair of Bush tax cuts. He helped broker a bill to allow Bush, but not future presidents, override collective bargaining rights by homeland security workers. His state voted for Republican Sen. John McCain for president last year and re-elected Bush over Democrat John Kerry by 33 percentage points in 2004. So appealing was Nelson to the Republicans that Bush tried to persuade the freshman senator to become his agriculture secretary. Nelson turned down the offer; Nebraska's Republican governor would have appointed his successor and Democrats would have lost the seat. The gesture was appreciated by Nelson's Democratic colleagues, who tolerate his ideological infidelity on some issues because on others, he has walked with them. Notably, Nelson was one of the Gang of 14 who in 2005 helped negotiate the end to a procedural standoff over judicial nominations. He has also built good will by promising senior Democrats, especially Reid, never to surprise them with his positions. Holding fundraisers for those up for re-election helps, too.
That, and Nelson's affable nature, is why he found himself in the Nebraska woods in early November, giving New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, a fierce gun control advocate, "a hunter safety course on steroids." Nelson was holding a fundraiser for Schumer's re-election campaign
-- attended, Nelson said, by billionaire Warren Buffett. But Schumer wanted to go hunting, too. The pair insist that Brooklyn-born, Harvard-educated Schumer bagged three birds that weekend. Nelson, though, dressed them. Health care, along with the delicate task of courting Nelson's vote, was not seriously discussed, the senators say. But Schumer came away with an appreciation for just how conservative Nelson's constituents are. "He is the lead Democrat in one of the most Republican states in the country," Schumer said. And though Nelson appears able to handle and even joke about the pressure facing him, "Nobody thinks he's doing this for personal aggrandizement."
[Associated
Press;
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