Delaware senator spends big to turn back
progressive challenge
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[September 07, 2018]
By David Gaffen
(Reuters) - Three-term U.S. Senator Tom
Carper successfully fought off a challenge from community activist Kerri
Evelyn Harris in Delaware in Thursday's Democratic primary, after
spending several million dollars compared to less than $70,000 by his
opponent.
With nearly all of the votes counted, Carper was leading with about 65
percent of the vote, while Harris had about 35 percent, according to
state figures.
Carper, 71, was challenged by Harris, 38, who was vying to become the
first black woman and openly gay person elected by the state's voters.
The senator is likely to win a fourth term, and faced only token
opposition in Senate nominating contests in the past. But Harris drew
strong support from outside groups, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
who defeated incumbent Congressman Joe Crowley in a New York City
nominating contest in June, and rallied for Harris.
The race was the latest test of whether voters dissatisfied with
Democratic leadership would push out an incumbent in favor of a younger,
more diverse candidate they see as a potentially more robust opposition
to Republican President Donald Trump.
So far, such challenges have been successful in progressive
Congressional seats, beginning with Ocasio-Cortez and more recently,
Tuesday's upset by Boston city councilwoman Ayanna Pressley over
longtime incumbent U.S. Representative Michael Capuano.
But Delaware's tendency to elect moderates to federal office held
Thursday.
Political analysts see Carper, a moderate, as a safe win for Democrats
in November. He will face Robert Arlett, a county councilman, who won
the Republican primary.
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Senator Tom Carper (D-DE) speaks to reporters ahead of the weekly
party luncheons on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., August 1, 2017.
REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein/File Photo
Harris, an Air Force veteran, was far outspent, signaling that
Carper took the challenge seriously. Her campaign's expenditures
totaled a mere $69,000, while Carper spent $3.35 million, according
to the U.S. Federal Elections Commission database.
Carper was endorsed by former Vice President Joseph Biden, who
served with Carper in the Senate representing Delaware.
Most of the nation's nominating contests for this election cycle
have been completed. Next week features elections where incumbent
Democratic governors also face insurgents, in Rhode Island, and most
notably New York, where actress Cynthia Nixon is challenging
two-term incumbent Andrew Cuomo.
(Reporting By David Gaffen in New York; Editing by Colleen Jenkins,
Bill Berkrot and Diane Craft)
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