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Lincoln's run-off as well as the defeats of Specter and Grayson also raised questions of whether political parties
-- the establishment in elections -- are losing power and, if so, what that means for coalition building and the influence of outside groups, if not for democracy. Seeing tea party activists successfully sidestep the will of leaders in Washington, voters could increasingly turn to the Internet to air grievances, mobilize and force change. Certainly, candidates nominated without their party's support owe little or nothing to their party leaders and, thus, it may become tougher to build coalitions to get things done on Capitol Hill. And big-monied special interest groups might just be emboldened by Halter's success so far to overtake the traditional party roles of recruiting and funding candidates. Union leaders who nudged Halter into the Arkansas race vowed to carry him to victory in the runoff over Lincoln. Said AFL-CIO political director Karen Ackerman: "We are certainly ready and able to spend whatever we need to spend on behalf of Halter." Organized labor has already spent more than $5 million to oust Lincoln, a moderate who angered unions by opposing legislation to make it easier for workers to organize and working to kill a government insurance option in health care legislation that passed Congress. As Lincoln and Halter duke it out, the Republican nominee, Rep. John Boozman can refill his campaign coffers and plan strategy for the fall in a race the GOP has long targeted. Less than 24 hours after the primaries, the shape of the fall campaign was quick to form. In Pennsylvania, Republicans rolled out a new website and video against Sestak, pointing out that the congressman votes with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other Democrats most of the time and was endorsed by the progressive MoveOn.org. "Just how liberal is Joe Sestak?" the spot asks and answers: "Way too liberal for Pennsylvania." In Kentucky, Democrats portrayed Paul as out of touch. They released a video that contrasts the state's 10.7 percent unemployment with Paul's calls to eliminate the Education Department and corporate taxes. The video also highlights his opposition to curtailment of Medicare payments to doctors; he's an eye doctor. "The one payment Paul doesn't want to cut is his own salary," says the video that claims Paul is "against helping Kentuckians" but "for helping himself."
[Associated
Press;
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