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Utah senator faces caucus challenge from Tea Party candidates
SALT LAKE CITY |
SALT LAKE CITY (Reuters) - Seeking one last term, Republican U.S. Senator Orrin Hatch is facing what may prove to be the toughest re-election of his 36-year tenure in Thursday's Utah Republican caucus against two popular younger Tea Party-backed candidates.
Conservative and heavily Republican Utah last elected a Democrat to the U.S. Senate more than four decades ago, so the Republican nominee is usually considered the presumptive winner of the general election in November.
For a senior stalwart of the Republican mainstream like Hatch, the ranking Republican on the tax-writing Senate Finance Committee, the Senate seat has long been regarded as his to lose. He was first elected in 1976 and turns 78 next week.
But former state Senator Dan Liljenquist, 37, and state Representative Chris Herrod, 46, are running this year against Hatch, saying now is the time for change.
Both have gained a strong following from the conservative Tea Party movement with campaign rhetoric focused on such themes such as reducing the size of government and lowering taxes. They have suggested Hatch's principles have been compromised by his lengthy tenure as part of the inside-the-Beltway establishment.
"It's time for a new generation to step up and lead," Liljenquist said in a recent interview. "Washington will not be changed from the inside."
Now Hatch is girding to avoid the fate of his former Senate colleague, Bob Bennett, whose 2010 run for a fourth term foundered over conservative outrage at the healthcare overhaul pushed by President Barack Obama, leading to a revolt against the Republican establishment by state Tea Party activists.
Hatch has cast his seniority and experience as a plus for Utah, warning the state stands to lose political clout on Capitol Hill if he is unseated.
Even so, the senator vowed on Tuesday to serve just one more term, his seventh, if he manages to prevail over those who would force him into retirement sooner. "I want to make it the best six years anyone's put in for Utah," Hatch said.
The Washington-based political action group FreedomWorks, closely aligned with the Tea Party movement, has spent nearly $600,000 to unseat Hatch this year, according to campaign expenditure filings.
Political watchers and many party faithful expect a more even-keeled mood at Thursday's caucus meetings compared with two years ago, and they anticipate the state Republican Party push to boost caucus attendance will work in Hatch's favor.
TEA PARTY HEAT
"There's certainly a lot of those in the well-organized conservative groups who want to get Senator Hatch out," said Swen Howard, a legislative district vice-chair for the Republican Party in Davis County, just north of Salt Lake City.
"My sense is if there is a really good turnout, which I expect there will be, it won't be quite the same environment as it was with Senator Bennett," Howard said.
Party officials have stepped up precinct training and paid for lawn signs and ads on television and radio reminding voters to attend their caucuses, all in a push to increase attendance.
They got a boost from the Mormon church, which asked congregations to refrain from holding church meetings the same night as the party caucuses to avoid scheduling conflicts.
The Republican Utah caucuses take place on Thursday with hundreds of meetings throughout the state in homes, churches, schools and other locations where registered Republican voters will select 4,000 delegates to represent them at the state party convention to be held April 21.
A candidate who emerges from the convention with 60 percent or more of the party's delegate vote will clinch the nomination.
If no contender takes 60 percent, the two highest vote getters compete in a primary election on June 26, the same day as Utah's presidential primary.
(Editing by Steve Gorman and Cynthia Osterman)
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Having said this, I would still vote for a democrat for senate for the GOP leaves such a nasty taste in my mouth. Mitt Romney is a self-proclaimed “know it all having done it all” pretty boy mormon who makes claims based on blatant lies and speculation, he is a perfect anchor for fox news, and i use “news” lightly.
I have wondered throughout this whole GOP misfits of candidates campaign why they didn’t chose the obvious and back Hatch as President. At least I wouldn’t be scared to death of the outcome if he would have won the Presidency.
It astounds me that America would put any of these candidates in as President since, not so long ago, the GOP/Bush Presidency nearly caused a global economic collapse protecting the wealth and illegal activities of large corporations…healthcare insurances companies, financial organizations, etc. with absolutely no conscience of the outcome to middle class and poorer Americans as a whole. It was like their little “click” with no regard to the welfare of Americans as a whole. The Auto industry nearly collapsed, the bread and butter of this nation…independent banks and small business shut their doors, record unemployment was at a unmanageable high, foreclosures from illegal buyouts on mortgages by these protected large financial institutions left people shut out of their homes that they built and maintained as a family. The unraveling of this web of deceit, greed and illegal dealings of the wealthy GOP and Bush Presidency was left for President Obama to address and fix! The enormousy of this deceit was far greater than ANY President has EVER inherited, especially because of the effect of technology globally.
I am sick of hearing about what President Obama has or hasn’t done. He has done a remarkable job in the wake of all the Bush/GOP disaster and I am in awe that Americans want to go back to the secret condoning of corporate greed and padding of pockets of the GOP by the wealthy conglomerates and to hell with everyone else.
Hatch, I would trust…these GOP campaign misfits remind me of the 3 stooges.




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