Tag: mike honda
In Blow To GOP Establishment, Tea Party Forces Run-Off

In Blow To GOP Establishment, Tea Party Forces Run-Off

Washington (AFP) – The U.S. Republican establishment suffered an embarrassing political setback Tuesday courtesy of a Tea Party challenger, who battled a long-time Senate incumbent to a draw in a Mississippi race with national implications.

Seven other states also held primaries in one of the biggest vote nights of the 2014 campaign season ahead of November’s congressional mid-term elections in which Republicans are aiming to take back the Senate from President Barack Obama’s Democrats.

But all eyes were on Mississippi, where the Tea Party movement poured outside funding into its best chance to oust an establishment Republican Senate incumbent.

The conservative movement that promotes small government and lower taxes has had a rough 2014 campaign season, mostly failing to oust mainstream Republicans including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.

It pinned its hopes on constitutional conservative and spending-slasher Chris McDaniel, a 42-year-old Mississippi state senator pitting himself against the old guard in the form of genteel Senator Thad Cochran, 76, who first won the seat in 1976.

With 95 percent of precincts reporting, McDaniel was leading Cochran by half a percentage point in the Republican Party primary battle in Gulf coast Mississippi, one of America’s poorest and most politically polarized states.

But with neither man crossing the 50 percent threshold in the multi-candidate race, McDaniel and Cochran were forced into a run-off to be held later this month.

Speaking to supporters, McDaniel said he expects to win, “whether it’s tomorrow or three weeks from tonight. This is a historic moment in this state’s history. And because of your hard work, because of your dedication, we sit here tonight leading a 42-year incumbent.”

Cochran did not speak to supporters Tuesday night.

McDaniel has seized on Cochran’s old-school style of behind-the-scenes negotiating with opponents, a quality increasingly absent in a gridlocked chamber where a take-no-prisoners attitude has come to prevail.

Experts say McDaniel could claim the momentum going into the run-off, having survived a Mississippi mudfight that saw four McDaniel supporters arrested after one sneaked into a nursing home to take pictures of Cochran’s wife, who is being treated for dementia.

Mainstream Republican strategists have quietly warned that a McDaniel primary victory could give Democrats an opening in November, complicating GOP efforts to retake the Senate.

Meanwhile candidate Joni Ernst won Iowa’s Republican primary for the seat vacated by retiring liberal Democrat Senator Tom Harkin.

Ernst is that rare Republican who managed to be courted by both the Tea Party and the establishment, and should she defeat Democratic congressman Bruce Braley in November she would become the first woman ever elected to Congress from the Hawkeye State.

In California, septuagenarian House Democrat Mike Honda finished first with a hefty margin in a primary challenge from Ro Khanna, 37, in what had been a tight Silicon Valley race.

Property lawyer and former Obama administration official Khanna drew on support from tech giants, reportedly including Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg and Yahoo chief executive Marissa Mayer.

Under a new California ‘top-two’ system designed to break up entrenched partisanship, both will advance to a run-off in November. Both men are liberals, but Khanna is seen as presenting a more tech-industry-friendly message.

With more than half the votes counted Tuesday night, Honda had 51 percent compared to about 26 percent for Khanna. Two Republicans trailed far behind, the San Jose Mercury news reported.

The entire US House of Representatives, currently held by Republicans, is up for grabs in November.

Analysts expect the party will retain control in the lower chamber, but polls show the Senate, currently controlled 55-45 by Democrats, could swing the Republicans’ way.

Thirty-six Senate seats are in play, and at least seven Democrat-held seats are seen as being at risk.

Photo: Gage Skidmore via Flickr

Tea Party Takes Another Stab At U.S. Senate Upset

Tea Party Takes Another Stab At U.S. Senate Upset

Washington (AFP) – Several U.S. states hold primary votes on Tuesday ahead of November’s mid-term elections, with the Tea Party eyeing perhaps its best remaining chance to bounce an establishment Republican incumbent from the Senate.

The conservative movement that promotes small government and fewer taxes has had a relatively rough 2014 campaign season, mostly failing to oust mainstream Republicans including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.

Now it is pinning hopes on constitutional conservative and spending-slasher Chris McDaniel, a 42-year-old state senator from Mississippi pitting himself against the old guard in the form of the U.S. Senate’s consummate Southern gentleman, six-term Republican Thad Cochran, 76.

Outside political groups have pumped millions into the race, which spiraled into a Mississippi mudfight when four McDaniel supporters were arrested after one sneaked into a nursing home to take pictures of Cochran’s wife, who is being treated for dementia.

But McDaniel still remains in the running in impoverished and deeply polarized Mississippi, according to local polls. He has earned endorsements from national Republican figures like 2008 vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin.

McDaniel has seized on Cochran’s old-school style of behind-the-scenes negotiating with opponents, a quality increasingly absent in a gridlocked chamber where a take-no-prisoners attitude has come to prevail.

McDaniel, who opposes earmarks, also took aim at Cochran’s taste for political pork — the spending of federal dollars in his cash-strapped home state.

But Cochran said he believes there is still a place for his style of bridge-building in Washington.

“I think it pays to be able to work with people on both sides of the aisle,” Cochran recently told the Hattiesburg American newspaper.

Cochran is an iconic figure in Washington; he was the first Mississippi Republican in the Senate in more than a century.

But earlier this year, when Cochran was painted as a permanent Capitol Hill fixture out of touch with constituents, he did little to negate that charge when he told reporters that the Tea Party is “something I don’t really know a lot about.”

McDaniel shot back: “Well, perhaps it’s time for an introduction.”

Seven other states also hold primaries Tuesday including California, where another septuagenarian lawmaker, the liberal House Democrat Mike Honda, faces a challenge from Ro Khanna, 37, in a tight Silicon Valley race.

Property lawyer Khanna is drawing on support from tech giants, reportedly including Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg and Yahoo chief executive Marissa Mayer.

The entire House of Representatives, currently held by Republicans, is up for grabs in November, and analysts expect the party will retain control.

But polls show the Democrat-led Senate could swing the Republicans’ way, so the Senate races are among the most fiercely fought.

More than a third of the Senate seats (36 of 100) are in play, and at least seven Democrat-held seats are seen as being at risk.

Photo: Win Mcnamee via AFP