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Less certain is whether Paul will beat Democrat Jack Conway, whether Buck will overtake Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet and whether Angle will engineer the biggest of all tea party victories
-- ousting Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. All those races are competitive. And what if the challengers win? There's no telling how outsider candidates who want to eliminate the Education Department or phase out Social Security
-- and who view themselves as independent of the party apparatus even as they get help from the GOP
-- would act as members of a body that's the epitome of the establishment. Party politics dominate the buttoned-down Senate, but no on knows whether the outsiders would follow the traditional rules
-- or even support Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell. It's possible that these new GOP senators could align themselves with DeMint, who has endorsed tea party candidates in GOP primaries nationwide. Chris Chocola, president of the anti-tax Club for Growth, cast Miller as part of the GOP's next chapter, saying: "Joe Miller represents a new generation of pro-growth conservative leadership committed to America's founding principles of limited government and economic freedom." The GOP establishment was more muted as it contemplated the loss of Murkowski, one of its own. "I offer my sincere congratulations to Joe Miller and offer him my strong support," said Texas Sen. John Cornyn, who leads the GOP's Senate campaign effort.
Democrats, meanwhile, crowed that Miller's win simply gave credibility to their argument that the GOP and the tea party were the same, offering extreme policies. Vice President Biden has led the charge, painting "the Republican tea party" as "out of step with where the American people are." Democrats may score points with their base voters with that pitch. But there's a danger, too. Some Democrats privately worry that the party risks alienating important numbers of independent voters who already are trending toward the GOP, identifying with the tea party's disgust with what it calls out-of-control spending and the growth of government under President Barack Obama.
[Associated
Press;
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