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"There's a lot of anxiety and anger about what's happening in Washington, D.C., and I couldn't control that," Wamp said in his concession speech. "At the end of the day, a lot of that rubbed off on me, whether I was responsible for it or not." Rep. Artur Davis of Alabama, Rep. Gresham Barrett of South Carolina and Hutchison all fared poorly in their gubernatorial bids, unable to shed the Washington label. There have been a few exceptions to the trend. Two-term Sen. Sam Brownback of Kansas cruised to victory in the state's GOP gubernatorial primary over a little-known novice, and Republican Rep. Mary Fallin of Oklahoma defeated a tea party-backed state senator to win her primary. In the two remaining gubernatorial races where House members are running
-- Georgia and Hawaii -- Deal and Abercrombie went so far as to resign their congressional seats earlier this year, literally removing themselves from Washington. That may not be enough, as both face the strong possibility that their careers could be over. That's certainly true for Alabama's Davis, 42, a congressman once viewed as a rising star in the Democratic Party who said he's now done with politics after getting just 38 percent of the vote in his gubernatorial bid against Agriculture Commissioner Ron Sparks. "A candidate that fails across the board like that obviously needs to find something else productive to do with his life," Davis said after the election.
[Associated
Press;
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