Liz Cheney claims victory in Wyoming
primary for U.S. House seat
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[August 17, 2016]
By Ruffin Prevost
CODY, Wyo. (Reuters) - Liz Cheney, former
Vice President Dick Cheney's eldest daughter, claimed victory late on
Tuesday in Wyoming's Republican primary race for the state's lone U.S.
House of Representatives seat.
Unofficial early results by 10 p.m. (0400 GMT) showed Cheney with 26,363
votes in the nation's least populous state. State Senator Leland
Christensen was running a distant second, with almost 15,000 votes,
while her six other Republican competitors each held fewer than 12,000
votes.
"I'm honored by the trust Wyoming Republicans have placed in me to serve
as our next Representative in Congress," Cheney said in a statement.
The Casper Star-Tribune newspaper called the race late on Tuesday night.
Wyoming is a reliably red state, with the Republican primary winner all
but assured of a general election victory in November.
Cheney's apparent victory comes two years after she launched an
unsuccessful bid for a U.S. Senate seat that saw her withdraw from the
race early.
She drew criticism from some establishment Republicans two years ago
when she ran against popular incumbent Senator Mike Enzi and was labeled
a "carpetbagger" for having only recently established residency in Teton
County, one of the country's wealthiest zip codes, in a state widely
populated by working-class miners, oil, and gas workers.
She said a family health crisis prompted her to withdraw.
Cheney, 49, is a lawyer who worked in the U.S. State Department while
her father was vice president.
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Senate candidate Liz Cheney speaks to voters during a Republican and
Tea Party gathering in Emblem, Wyoming August 24, 2013.
REUTERS/Ruffin Prevost
Her campaign has received strong financial support from former
high-ranking government officials, such as former Presidents George
H.W. Bush and George W. Bush, former Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld and former White House political adviser Karl Rove.
Cheney campaigned as a "strong conservative voice for Wyoming,"
promising to protect the state's pivotal coal industry, defend gun
rights, and generally work "to reverse President Obama's devastating
policies."
(Reporting by Ruffin Prevost in Cody, Wyoming; Editing by Curtis
Skinner)
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