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Rollins, a 65-year-old wealthy Delaware businesswoman, is a first-time candidate who is backed by the GOP establishment and runs ahead of Urquhart in private polls. In an interview, she said she decided to run as a reaction to Obama's health care bill, which she opposes, and says, "For me, this election is very much about the free enterprise system. ... Jobs are the issue, the economy is the issue. Who ever heard of hundreds of trillions of dollars in debt?" But she has yet to launch a sustained television advertising effort to introduce herself to the voters, and the challenge from Urquhart has prevented her from pivoting quickly to a fall campaign against the better-known Carney. Her political predicament was clear one recent night at a town hall-style meeting in a sparsely furnished room at the Hockessin fire station where Republican candidates for the House and Senate were invited to speak. A few moments after she said she wanted to repeal the health care legislation that Obama won from the Democratic-controlled Congress, Urquhart accused her of flip-flopping. "When did you decide to change your mind and follow my lead?" he challenged her. She was on her feet quickly, referring her rival to an earlier event they had both attended where the issue came up. "I wish you remembered, Glen. Maybe you weren't listening," she bristled. By contrast, Carney glides unopposed toward the Sept. 14 primary, pointing toward the short, seven-week general election campaign that will follow. "It's all about jobs and the economy," he says of the race. He lists the plant closures in the state in the past year or so: an Avon products facility, a General Motors factory, a Chrysler plant and a Valero gasoline refinery, and says there is an underlying anxiety about the economy despite recent improvement in unemployment. In an interview, he said he favors steps to produce jobs immediately, as well as prepare the economy for longer-term growth. As an example, he cited a proposal to construct wind power projects off the Delaware coast, and talks of having the state become home to domestic manufacturers of the turbines needed to run the windmills for other developments as well. He favors steps to reduce the federal debt but generally avoids specifics, saying, "You've got to have an overall plan." As for Obama's health care legislation, he says the feature that requires most individuals to purchase coverage "wouldn't have been my approach."
[Associated
Press;
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