A competitive Senate race in North Carolina has Republicans worried
		
		 
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		 [September 10, 2022]  
		By Andy Sullivan and Jarrett Renshaw 
		 
		(Reuters) - In his campaign for the U.S. 
		Senate in North Carolina, Republican candidate Ted Budd has described 
		himself as a "conservative warrior" and a "liberal agenda crusher." But 
		some of his fellow Republicans worry he is not fighting hard enough. 
		 
		While Democratic candidate Cheri Beasley has spent the summer running TV 
		ads and campaigning across the state, Budd has kept a lower profile, 
		staying off the airwaves for months and devoting much of his time to 
		private fundraising events. 
		 
		Former Governor Pat McCrory, who lost to Budd in a hard-fought 
		Republican primary, told Reuters that Budd is running a "risk averse" 
		campaign, while conservative radio host Brett Winterble lamented the 
		lack of "fire and fury" in the race.  
		 
		The North Carolina contest is one of a handful that could determine 
		which party controls the Senate after the Nov. 8 midterm elections. 
		Republicans need to pick up only one seat to win back the majority, 
		which would enable them to block most of Democratic President Joe 
		Biden's legislative agenda and reject his nominees for jobs in his 
		administration and the federal judiciary. 
		  
		
		
		  
		
		 
		Opinion polls show a race effectively tied between Budd, a congressman 
		and gun-store owner backed by former President Donald Trump, and 
		Beasley, a former chief justice of the state Supreme Court who would 
		become the only Black woman in the Senate if elected. 
		 
		Seven Republican strategists said in interviews that they are concerned 
		that Budd is not doing enough to court independent voters, who now 
		outnumber registered Republicans and Democrats in the politically 
		competitive state. 
		 
		The strategists said they fear the race will steal resources from 
		Republican candidates in other states including Georgia and Arizona that 
		are key to the party securing Senate control.  
		 
		"There is no doubt outside groups will have to come once again and 
		rescue Republicans in the final weeks," said one strategist involved in 
		the race, speaking on condition of anonymity. 
		 
		The Republican Leadership Fund, a national committee that backs Senate 
		Republicans, has begun to air $27 million worth of attack ads in North 
		Carolina aimed at boosting Budd's chances. Other conservative groups are 
		contacting voters directly.  
		 
		INFLATION AND BIDEN 
		 
		Budd's campaign said his U.S. House of Representatives duties kept him 
		in Washington for much of the summer, but he plans to run TV ads and 
		campaign more intensively in the state in the coming weeks, focusing on 
		bread-and-butter matters like inflation. Republicans have sought to pin 
		the blame for rising prices on Biden. 
		 
		"Inflation is the number one issue right now in North Carolina, and 
		Cheri Beasley has supported all of the Joe Biden policies that yielded 
		this inflation," said Jonathan Felts, a senior adviser to the Budd 
		campaign. "I feel pretty good about our chances." 
		 
		Nonpartisan analysts have said Budd remains favored to win the race to 
		succeed retiring Republican Senator Richard Burr, given Biden's low 
		approval ratings and voter concerns about the economy. 
		 
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			Republican U.S. Senate candidate Ted Budd meets with a supporter at 
			his primary election watch party in Bermuda Run, North Carolina, 
			U.S. May 17, 2022. REUTERS/Erin Siegal McIntyre 
            
			
			
			  
            Democratic candidates have come up short in the past three Senate 
			races in North Carolina, despite raising more money than their 
			Republican rivals. Even so, some Republican strategists said the 
			current race is more competitive than they had anticipated, and 
			called on Budd to campaign more aggressively. 
			 
			A senior Republican official in North Carolina said Budd's 
			reluctance to talk to the news media or voters will not help him 
			attract unaffiliated women voters concerned about his strict 
			opposition to abortion. 
			 
			"This is an issue that he needs to get in front of or else it could 
			really hurt," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
			 
			 
			Abortion rights have become a central theme of the midterms after 
			the U.S. Supreme Court in June overturned 1973 Roe v. Wade decision 
			that legalized abortion nationwide. 
			 
			Beasley, who has raised more than twice as much money as Budd, has 
			emphasized her support for abortion rights and other policies 
			popular with Democrats. But Beasley has also sought to portray 
			herself as having an independent streak, unafraid to break with her 
			party on issues. 
			 
			Beasley won statewide judicial elections in 2008 and 2014. She lost 
			her re-election bid for the state Supreme Court in 2020 by 401 votes 
			out of 5.3 million cast - a better performance than Biden, who lost 
			the state by 11,000 votes. 
			 
			Her campaign has criticized Budd for voting against bipartisan 
			infrastructure and semiconductor legislation. 
			 
			"Cheri has the momentum in this race with her unique candidacy, 
			winning message and robust campaign," campaign spokesperson Dory 
			MacMillan said. 
			 
			Budd has campaigned as a staunch conservative, posing with a handgun 
			in his waistband at the U.S.-Mexico border and vowing to block 
			Biden's "woke, socialist agenda." Budd has not yet said whether he 
			will agree to a debate with Beasley. 
			 
			He campaigned with Trump during the Republican primary race, and 
			like many Republican lawmakers, voted against congressional 
			certification of Trump's 2020 election loss to Biden. It is not 
			clear whether Trump will return to North Carolina before the general 
			election. 
            
			  
			McCrory, Budd's former Republican rival, said Trump's support could 
			turn off unaffiliated voters. 
			 
			"North Carolina is always close, but this year it will be even 
			closer," McCrory said. 
			 
			(Reporting by Andy Sullivan in Washington and Jarrett Renshaw in 
			Philadelphia; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Will Dunham) 
            
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