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Other Democrats are more worried. Former Minnesota Attorney General Mike Hatch, who lost the 2006 governor's race to Republican Tim Pawlenty, said he senses growing public frustration with his party's efforts to improve the economy. "I'm afraid that the Democrats may read this election of '09 wrong," Hatch said. "This is about a Washington government that has got to pay a little more attention, a little more concern with the average person." Several prominent Democrats said Tuesday's elections will hardly influence the health care debates in Congress. "I think the health care legislation has its own life, its own set of issues," said Don Fowler of South Carolina, a former national party chairman. If the Democratic-controlled Congress approves a hefty version of the health care proposals, he said, most Americans will see the party as trying to help the average person. The biggest danger for Democrats is to be too cautious and conservative in crafting major legislation such as health care, said Missouri Democratic Party Chairman Craig Hosmer. "You try to be bipartisan, but if you can't, you've got to get something done," he said. Democrats "need to act like a majority." Terry Holt, a Washington-based Republican campaign consultant, said the New Jersey and Virginia elections are bound to worry some House Democrats facing tough races next year. "There's a lot of deer-in-the-headlights looks on Capitol Hill today," he said, even if some lawmakers inevitably read too much into off-year elections. "Now the fight for the 2010 election begins," Holt said, "and it's going to be pretty even."
[Associated
Press;
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