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GOP In Striking Distance In Several New England Congressional Races

HOLLY RAMER and ANDREW MIGA   04/28/10 11:42 AM ET   AP

Newhampshire

CONCORD, N.H. — New England Republicans, dismissed as a vanishing breed after a string of congressional losses, are now thinking comeback.

Tapping a deep vein of voter discontent over the economy, jobs and President Barack Obama's health care overhaul, the GOP has a reasonable shot at capturing a handful of House races in the six-state region.

"I think people are feeling this sense of desperation and this sense of fixing the country and stopping spending," said Kate Benway, 30, a Republican from Concord, N.H., who works in marketing. "I don't think those are necessarily new messages, but somehow we're at this psychological breaking point."

Scott Brown's stunning claim on the late Sen. Edward Kennedy's seat in liberal Massachusetts earlier this year was a jolt of energy for the GOP. The little-known Brown's success in one of the bluest states set off Democratic alarm bells – and sent Republican hopes soaring that the party can reverse its long slide in New England in this fall's midterm elections.

Republicans need to retake 40 seats in November to regain control of the House. Success in a Democratic stronghold like New England could significantly improve GOP efforts nationally.

"The public really wants to see balance in Washington and has become extremely wary of one-party control of both houses and the administration," said Maine Sen. Susan Collins, a prominent Republican moderate who has bucked the trend. "That general feeling and some of the excesses of the Obama administration and the increase in spending have set the stage for a Republican comeback."

Democrats still enjoy a strong hold on New England, where Obama easily swept the six states in 2008. And with six months until November, the party hopes the signs of economic revival continue and voter disenchantment fades. In the coming weeks, congressional Democrats hope to gain an edge as they push a new crackdown on Wall Street abuses.

"I am significantly upbeat, certainly here in New England," New Hampshire Democratic Party Chairman Ray Buckley said. "With the economy turning around, we'll be in good shape in November. ... A Republican winning up here is more of an anomaly than a regular current anymore."

Still, Republican prospects are looking up in:

_New Hampshire, where polling shows the GOP favored to win back the two House seats the party lost in the 2006 Democratic tide. Two-term Democratic Rep. Carol Shea-Porter appears vulnerable, and a second seat is open because Democratic Rep. Paul Hodes is running for the Senate. Republican Sen. Judd Gregg decided not to seek re-election. Former Rep. Charlie Bass, a centrist ousted four years ago, is embracing the agenda of conservatives and tea party activists who played a key role in Brown's victory. GOP candidates are pushing strong anti-government themes in crowded primaries in both districts. "Republicans will do well," said former Sen. John E. Sununu, who was toppled by Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen two years ago.

_Rhode Island, where there are echoes of Brown's insurgency in Republican John Loughlin's bid for retiring Rep. Patrick Kennedy's seat. Members of Brown's political team are working for Loughlin. Like Brown, Loughlin is a state legislator who has served in the National Guard and opposed the new health care law. Republicans such as Sen. John McCain of Arizona, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani are backing Loughlin. Loughlin needs to score big in Providence and Woonsocket, Democratic strongholds.

_Massachusetts, where a hard-fought race is on tap for retiring Democratic Rep. William Delahunt's seat, which stretches from Boston's South Shore to Cape Cod and includes the Kennedy family's Hyannis Port home. Brown won 60 percent of the vote in the district against Democrat Martha Coakley in the special Senate election, a surprising sign of GOP strength. The top Republicans are former state treasurer Joe Malone and Jeffrey Perry, a conservative state representative who has won Brown's endorsement and is aggressively courting tea party activists.

"This is a good year for Republicans to be running," Perry said. "The people that I am talking to, they're not happy. The approval ratings for the people in Congress are going down, down, down and our problems are getting larger."

A generation ago, New England was bedrock GOP turf. But the bloodlines have thinned since the 1960s, when social conservatives from the South and West began eclipsing the national party's more moderate Eastern establishment.

The GOP suffered key House losses in Connecticut and New Hampshire as surging Democrats took control of Congress four years ago. Republicans were stung again in 2008 when a Democratic tide claimed Connecticut's Christopher Shays, the last GOP House member from New England still standing.

That left a solid block of 22 Democrats representing the region's six states in the House.

"People just wanted a change," Bass said. "Now that the change has occurred, I think there's a bit of buyer's remorse going on."

New England Republicans are borrowing from Brown's winning formula, preaching jobs and fiscal conservatism and hammering away at Obama's health care law, deriding it as a job-killing government takeover. They're not saying much about social issues like abortion rights and gay marriage.

Democrats counter that an improving economy coupled with a fuller understanding of the benefits of the health care law will boost their prospects.

"I think the health care bill will be seen as a huge help for the middle class," Shea-Porter said.

Polling this year shows slumping job performance ratings for Obama and Democrats. Republicans, who are largely unified in their opposition to Obama's agenda, hope to have the same energy and strong voter turnout that carried Democrats in the past two elections.

___

Miga reported from Washington.

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CONCORD, N.H. — New England Republicans, dismissed as a vanishing breed after a string of congressional losses, are now thinking comeback. Tapping a deep vein of voter discontent over the econo...
CONCORD, N.H. — New England Republicans, dismissed as a vanishing breed after a string of congressional losses, are now thinking comeback. Tapping a deep vein of voter discontent over the econo...
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mcmutter
A Groover has to expect a few setbacks .....
05:13 PM on 05/11/2010
STOP THE PENTAGON SPENDING .....

A $70 BILLION CUT TO THE PENTAGON BUDGET NEXT YEAR .......
madame48
NO..it's a gop Cookbook !Tempus edax,homo edacior
12:25 PM on 05/03/2010
Charlie Bass is a worm. After he got thrown out in '06 he remade his image as a moderate..set up a moderates group and went on the MSM as one. He was anything but.too bad I threw away all his letters slamming stuff like a minimum wage. NH doesn't like Teabagger extremists
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SPQR1775
09:27 AM on 04/29/2010
Oh, Please! I am tired of all this disfunctional attitude of and by the MSM. This is the same attitude they showed the Democrats in 2006; 2008 and again in 2010. In both 2006 and 2008, the DEMOCRATS carry the day and its even worst today the way the GOP is missbehaving and you thing that the "SILENT MAJORITY" is just going to sit this one out? The truth is except for the old people who keep answering the phones and get trick into answering polling questions. The vast majority of Americans no longer have a home phone and if they do, they don't use it (like myself-only for the ADT). Cell phones and face book is the new wave and the GOP don't understand that. The MSM is a tool that won't change at all. The GOP is cold, and they are out; the Democrats are IN and they are HOT!!!! Change will sweep across America starting this summer, Iraq, Immigration and College Students will ensure that millions (120 on or about) head to the polls this year, November 2nd can't wait!
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07:23 AM on 04/29/2010
If Charlie Bass is running as a teabagger in New Hampshire, it proves why he lost his last election. It's very out of touch with this part of the state. Southwestern New Hampshire would be more apt to vote for Vermont's Bernie Sanders than a teabagger.
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bolduc999
only a fool confuses kindness with weakness
08:33 AM on 04/29/2010
Agreed. The teabaggers get a lot of media attention, but from what I see and hear they represent a very small minority in Southern NH. Far more prevalent are the registered Independents who are more in sync with a progressive agenda.

Why the pundits automatically assume the Independents will break for the right is puzzling. I know they rely on their polling, but most of the Indies are not on the radar for that. I could be wrong; this is just my take on things. I would be interested to see just how accurate the polling in NH really is, considering most of the younger voters rely on cellphones.
07:07 AM on 04/29/2010
As an independent who elected Susan Collins to office I can say I would not vote for her today for siding with the republican party instead of representing her constituents.
03:32 AM on 04/29/2010
People should be aware of this.

http://www.tomflocco.com/fs/NewHampshireVoteFraud.htm
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quindy
quindy
02:25 AM on 04/29/2010
'"The public really wants to see balance in Washington and has become extremely wary of one-party control of both houses and the administration," said Maine Sen. Susan Collins."'

For 6 years the republicans held all three branches of government. We went from solid surplus to trillion dollar deficit. It seems that Susan Collins doesn't mind spending money on wars based on lies, or corporate welfare in form of tax cuts, but has trouble spending money on health care for all, unemployment benefits and other social programs. She should be ashamed of herself.
02:45 AM on 04/29/2010
Susan Collins voice for balance in Washington is really balance for the party of shame, obstruction and blatant partisanship, she is a avowed supporter of Nancy Reagan's solution to problems by saying "Just Say No"

She indeed should be ashamed of herself and her republican party. of "No"
01:53 AM on 04/29/2010
Having one paty control one House and the other party in charge of the other would produce STALEMATE and NOTHING would ever get done!

What is the point of that argument ?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ramirez
Proud to be an American
01:36 AM on 04/29/2010
The moderate New England Republican and the moderate Southern Democrat are two political groups that bring spirit to the concept of cooperation and compromise in American politics. I hope both groups flourish.
11:21 PM on 04/28/2010
So voters are going to vote out the guy who (they think) can't fix the problem and vote in the guys who created the problems/

Whats the rationale behind that?
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HHarvey
Do not feed the trolls
10:30 PM on 04/28/2010
Didn't NH go to McCain anyway? I always thought of them as a republican state.
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bolduc999
only a fool confuses kindness with weakness
06:25 AM on 04/29/2010
NH went to Obama, 54% to 44%.
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HHarvey
Do not feed the trolls
01:01 PM on 04/29/2010
Ah, thanks. For some reason I thought McCain had squeezed the majority of votes in that state.
madame48
NO..it's a gop Cookbook !Tempus edax,homo edacior
12:22 PM on 05/03/2010
in 2000 McCain beat Bush in a big upset as Georgie was backed by much establishment gop...it was because of this that Bush and his Brown shirts smeared McCain in the next primary in the south..."he has a black baby" stuff. It worked. This was back when McCain was still sane...I felt sorry for him, for a while
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08:14 PM on 04/28/2010
People are not all that bright. They cannot see the stupidity of Ben Stein pushing a fee charging credit rating agency. Is he so poor an economist that he needs to use credit. If a statement appears on Fox or in National Enquirer, you can be sure that a disreputable polling company will discovewr that 75% of Real Americans believe it to be true. It's not just the stupidity of the beliefs--there is the question of who is deliberately and knowingly fostering anger to go with it. Going down south from Canada is becoming a minefield. It used to be fun to say that the weather got warmer once you entered Obamaland--everyone smiled--no longer is that the case.
05:18 PM on 04/28/2010
The grammer is amazingly bad from the people that use the word stupid to describe the voters. They must have been educated in the public school systems.
11:18 PM on 04/28/2010
And you from the private school system, which is why you cant think for yourself
02:51 AM on 04/29/2010
Attack the public school system all you want, it is still the best method for educating citizens no matter the criticism by some.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paisano
I am invisible and trying to stop time!
04:40 PM on 04/28/2010
Well... Add NH to the "States too stupid to vote list!"
02:56 PM on 04/28/2010
The Democrats didn't sweep New England in 2008 through magical thinking. It took plenty of effort to win. Like thousands of other volunteers, I made calls, knocked on doors and drove voters to the polls in New Hampshire. And I donated $. So if you don't want to see seats lost in NE, or anywhere else in the country, join Organizing for America and pitch in now.
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SageFire
I like Obamacare, like Single Payer best
11:09 PM on 04/28/2010
Fanned. Right on.
02:58 AM on 04/29/2010
Thank you for your efforts in 2008, now we must get back to work in 2010 to continue on the road to victory by preventing the party of No Cooperation and Ideas from victories during the midterms elections this November 2010...