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Halter, a one-term lieutenant governor, is a former Clinton administration official, having served as a deputy commissioner and acting commissioner of the federal Social Security Administration. He was elected lieutenant governor in 2006 after briefly considering a run for governor against Mike Beebe, who won the post. The liberal group MoveOn.org, which had urged Halter to challenge Lincoln, asked its members to support his primary challenge to Lincoln. The Service Employees International Union in December said it would help Halter retire his debt from his 2006 lieutenant governor campaign, and the labor union's national political director said then he believed Halter had an "extremely bright political future." The AFL-CIO is expected to approve later this week its political committee's support vote for Halter. A union official, who spoke on condition of anonymity pending a formal announcement, said the federation hopes to raise $5 million for Halter's campaign. Lincoln has opposed key union-organizing legislation and Obama's nominee for the National Labor Relations Board. Both positions have gained the ire of the Arkansas AFL-CIO, which backed her re-election bid six years ago. As a lieutenant governor who hasn't cast a vote in the state Legislature, Halter's position on health care and other issues remains unknown. His signature issue has been his advocacy of an amendment authorizing the state to sell lottery tickets to raise money for college scholarships, which was approved by voters in 2008. Lincoln declined to say whether she believed Halter represented the left's extreme. "I think people are going to ask Mr. Halter where he is on things, and he's going to have to answer to that," Lincoln told reporters. The Senate landscape has shifted since the year began, with several states now considered competitive because of unexpected Democratic retirements. Republicans would need to hang on to all of their seats -- which is far from a certainty
-- and pick up 10 Democratic-held seats to take control of the Senate. Aside from Lincoln, the GOP also is going after Democratic incumbents in Nevada, Pennsylvania and Colorado. Republicans would add New York to that vulnerable Democrat list if they could just find a candidate to challenge Gillibrand. The GOP also is making strong plays for open Democratic-held seats in Illinois, Delaware, Connecticut, Indiana, and North Dakota.
[Associated
Press;
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