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A generation ago, New England was bedrock GOP turf. But the bloodlines have thinned since the 1960s, when social conservatives from the South and West began eclipsing the national party's more moderate Eastern establishment. The GOP suffered key House losses in Connecticut and New Hampshire as surging Democrats took control of Congress four years ago. Republicans were stung again in 2008 when a Democratic tide claimed Connecticut's Christopher Shays, the last GOP House member from New England still standing. That left a solid block of 22 Democrats representing the region's six states in the House. "People just wanted a change," Bass said. "Now that the change has occurred, I think there's a bit of buyer's remorse going on." New England Republicans are borrowing from Brown's winning formula, preaching jobs and fiscal conservatism and hammering away at Obama's health care law, deriding it as a job-killing government takeover. They're not saying much about social issues like abortion rights and gay marriage. Democrats counter that an improving economy coupled with a fuller understanding of the benefits of the health care law will boost their prospects. "I think the health care bill will be seen as a huge help for the middle class," Shea-Porter said. Polling this year shows slumping job performance ratings for Obama and Democrats. Republicans, who are largely unified in their opposition to Obama's agenda, hope to have the same energy and strong voter turnout that carried Democrats in the past two elections.
[Associated
Press;
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