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The younger Powell never hesitates to mention his famous pedigree on the campaign trail. He announced his candidacy last spring on a stretch of Seventh Avenue known in Harlem as Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard. "The response from the public has been overwhelming," Powell said in an interview. "It's not just my history of public service and my father's legacy. People are ready to turn the page." But Powell has an exceedingly thin legislative record in the Assembly, where he has served since 2001, and has struggled to explain personal baggage of his own. He was arrested for drunken driving in 2008 and found guilty of driving while impaired, a misdemeanor. He was also investigated, but not charged, in connection with two sexual assault allegations in 2004. Powell said both encounters
-- with a 19-year-old legislative intern in Albany and a woman in Manhattan
-- were consensual. Powell has struggled with fundraising, pulling in just over $126,000, compared with $2.6 million for Rangel. As a result, Powell lacks basic campaign infrastructure like a program to identify supporters and get them to the polls. "We don't have a turnout operation yet," he said. "Maybe we can put together some phone banks." Rangel nonetheless has appeared to be unnerved by Powell at times, even as he maintains a guarded optimism about winning re-election. "I'm not overconfident," he said, "but I just don't remember losing a race for Congress."
[Associated
Press;
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