Tea
Party Faces Uphill Battle In Latest Round Of U.S. Republican Primaries
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[May 20, 2014]
By John Whitesides
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Voters in six
states will choose candidates on Tuesday for some of November's top
congressional election races, including another round of crucial U.S.
Senate primaries between the Republican establishment and Tea Party
favorites in Kentucky, Georgia and Oregon.
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Tea Party candidates are fighting an uphill battle in all three
U.S. Senate contests, which could be vital to Republican hopes of
picking up the six seats they need to recapture control of the
chamber from Democrats in November.
Idaho, Arkansas and Pennsylvania also will hold primaries on the
campaign's biggest day of voting so far.
The most closely watched contest is in Kentucky, where Republican
Senate leader Mitch McConnell is a heavy favorite to beat Tea Party
challenger Matt Bevin, setting up one of November's top Senate races
against Democrat Alison Lundergan Grimes.
Republican Party leaders, determined to avoid the sort of divisive
primaries that helped cost them winnable Senate races in 2010 and
2012, have been more proactive this year in backing mainstream
candidates they think can win in November.
The effort has paid off so far with wins by establishment-backed
candidates in North Carolina and Texas Senate primaries.
This year, McConnell was a top target of Tea Party groups, but polls
show him with a comfortable double-digit lead. Bevin attacked
McConnell's long tenure in Washington and argued he had not done
enough to fight spending and President Barack Obama's agenda.
But McConnell and his allies pummeled Bevin for his inexperience,
and Bevin reinforced those claims with his own campaign trail
missteps, including an appearance at a rally promoting cockfighting.
Bevin said he thought it was a rally in support of states' rights.
"McConnell made it very clear early on that he and Republicans were
going to take on the Tea Party, and they have been very aggressive,"
said Stephen Voss, a political scientist at the University of
Kentucky.
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A crowded Senate primary field in Georgia makes a July 22 runoff
likely between the top two finishers on Tuesday for the right to
face off against Democrat Michelle Nunn in November.
The most conservative Tea Party candidates in Georgia are not among
the leaders in recent polls, with businessman David Perdue, U.S.
Representative Jack Kingston and former Georgia Secretary of State
Karen Handel fighting for the top spots.
In Oregon, where polling has been less frequent, moderate Monica
Wehby is considered a slight favorite against a Tea Party-backed
state representative.
They are vying for the right to face Democratic Senator Jeff Merkley
in the Democratic-leaning state, where problems with the state's
healthcare exchange have given Republicans hope of victory.
Other top races on Tuesday include a Tea Party challenge in Idaho to
eight-term Republican Representative Mike Simpson, who has been
backed by the pro-business U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and in
Pennsylvania to seven-term Representative Bill Shuster.
Voters in Arkansas and Pennsylvania pick candidates in competitive
governor's races.
(Editing by Alistair Bell)
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