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Angle is more often found speaking at tea party rallies or other rarely advertised events where like-minded supporters are likely to gather. "She isn't trying to hide," said Mary Newman, 51, a Las Vegas supporter who has seen Angle at a handful of conservative rallies. "She wants to reach out to people who listen." Reid has a demanding job that keeps him in Washington for long stretches. When the Senate is in recess, he largely sticks to private or carefully orchestrated events where the chance for errors or confrontation is small. "He doesn't do the 'pet the dog and kiss the baby' circuit very well," said Reid adviser Billy Vassiliadis. "He would rather stick a needle in his eardrum before he participated in a pie-eating contest." The closest the candidates have gotten to each other was at a one-hour candidate forum where Angle responded to Reid's videotaped statements on the economy, health care and education. Reid was in Washington and couldn't attend, his campaign said. Angle, a tea party darling who wants to be elected to federal government so she can then minimize federal government, said national education polices have undermined learning gains and that federal regulations had handcuffed Nevada's coal industry. Reid, an unpopular fourth-term incumbent who has become one of the nation's most powerful men, touted his ability to bring home federal dollars. "You don't take someone out of the game unless you have somebody better to put in," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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