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Her backers routinely remind voters that Buck went to Princeton, where his acquaintances included President Barack Obama's Supreme Court nominee, Elena Kagan. Buck remembered Kagan as a bright and friendly classmate, but quickly added that they never talked about politics
-- "I suspect we would've disagreed," he said. Colorado's Democratic governor, Bill Ritter, was best man at Buck's wedding
-- the two knew each other as young prosecutors. Norton has derided Buck as a government lawyer in automated phone calls to Republican voters and on radio ads. "This guy is the consummate insider," Norton's campaign manager, Republican state Sen. Josh Penry, told reporters recently. Norton reminds voters that she is the only Colorado native running for the seat; she attended Colorado State University. Sure, she has deep-pocket donors in Washington, she says, but that's because she's the best choice. "It's no surprise that people all over the country see that I can beat (Democratic Sen.) Michael Bennet," Norton said. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce endorsed her this week. Bennet was appointed to the Senate seat as a replacement for Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and is now waging his first campaign. He faces a primary challenge from former state House Speaker Andrew Romanoff but has proved a capable campaigner. Bennet has raised more than $6 million and got a personal campaign visit from Obama. Romanoff has struggled to raise money, although he got a major boost Tuesday with an endorsement from former President Bill Clinton. Many Republicans are turned off by the fact that the party establishment favors Norton
-- and Colorado's Republicans have lost badly in recent statewide elections. In 2002, Colorado had two Republican senators, a Republican governor, a 4-2 advantage in the House delegation and both chambers of the state Legislature. Today, Democrats hold both senatorial seats, the governor's office and the Legislature. Only two members of Colorado's seven-member House delegation are Republican. "I see a lot of people who don't want anybody the party picks," said Don Suppes, head of the rural Delta County GOP. "They're just fed up with the overall scheme, and they refuse to vote for anybody they see as a permanent politician the party wants them to vote for." ___ Online:
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