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Chuck Hagel, Former GOP Senator, Backs Joe Sestak For Senate

PETER JACKSON   08/23/10 05:05 PM ET   AP

Chuck Hagel Sestak
Former Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel, a Republican who has broken ranks in the past with the GOP, gave Democrat Joe Sestak his endorsement Monday.

HARRISBURG, Pa. — Former Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel, a Republican who has broken ranks in the past with the GOP, gave Democrat Joe Sestak his second major endorsement from moderates in a week in his bid for a hotly contested Senate seat in Pennsylvania.

Hagel told The Associated Press on Monday that Sestak has demonstrated during his two terms in Congress that he puts the interests of the nation and his constituents ahead of his party.

"I think he's exactly what our country needs more of. I think he's what the Senate needs more of – courageous, independent thinking," Hagel said. "That's what the job is about. You are supposed to use your judgment."

Hagel refused to comment on the candidacy of Sestak's opponent, Republican Pat Toomey, a former congressman.

The men are seeking the seat long held by Sen. Arlen Specter, a Republican-turned-Democrat whom Sestak beat in the primary.

Hagel plans to announce his endorsement Tuesday at news conferences with Sestak in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia.

The two have military ties: Hagel, a moderate Republican, is a Vietnam war veteran, while Sestak is a 31-year Navy veteran who reached the rank of vice admiral before retiring in January 2006.

Like Hagel, Sestak is not afraid to buck his party. Until he won the May primary, Sestak received the cold shoulder from Democratic leaders including President Barack Obama and Gov. Ed Rendell, who backed Specter's bid for a sixth Senate term.

Hagel is co-chairman of President Obama's Intelligence Advisory Board. While in the Navy, Sestak served in the Clinton White House as director for defense policy on the National Security Council.

Hagel is the second prominent figure outside the Democratic Party to endorse Sestak, who is trying to woo independent voters. Last week, he was endorsed by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a three-term mayor who left the Republican Party to become an independent.

Toomey said he did not regard the endorsements as a sign that he is losing ground among independent voters. A statewide poll by Quinnipiac University in July showed Sestak and Toomey running even overall, but found that independents favored Toomey by a margin of 44 to 35 percent.

"The independent voters that I talk to across Pennsylvania understand that we can't borrow and spend our way to prosperity," he said. "They understand that, when one party has complete control, it sometimes leads to extreme policies, and that's exactly what's been happening in Washington."

Toomey launched a four-day bus tour Monday that included an appearance before political insiders at a Pennsylvania Press Club luncheon in Harrisburg, where he spoke and fielded questions.

Toomey blamed liberal Democratic policies that Sestak supports for impeding the nation's economic recovery and keeping unemployment high. He said he would reduce corporate taxes, federal spending and the role of government.

"Joe thinks that we should have a dramatically larger federal government, should spend much more money, we should launch new programs, new bailouts," he told reporters. "And I just disagree. I think the government is spending too much money, the deficits are too large. This is a fundamental question that's going to be debated throughout this fall."

Toomey's bus tour is expected to cover most of the state except the southeastern corner, which includes heavily Democratic Philadelphia and its suburbs.

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HARRISBURG, Pa. — Former Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel, a Republican who has broken ranks in the past with the GOP, gave Democrat Joe Sestak his second major endorsement from moderates in a week in ...
HARRISBURG, Pa. — Former Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel, a Republican who has broken ranks in the past with the GOP, gave Democrat Joe Sestak his second major endorsement from moderates in a week in ...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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Wallysmom 11:02 PM on 08/23/2010
When a pretty decent moderate Republican like Hagel backs a Democrat, you know that the guns are going to come out blazing from the Right. The Republicans may win the House in November but at the cost of becoming a joke. They are embracing the crazytoons in the Teabag Party and will pay for it when they get boggled down in goofus legislation after January. Both elements are using each other for now, but  Read More...
02:37 PM on 08/25/2010
Ugh! Another example of a great statesman... too bad he wasn't much of a leader when he was part of the Republican Caucus in the Senate. Man has great ideas, but its a bit late now for him to anything.
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Kiffanik
02:45 PM on 08/24/2010
I wish there were no party affiliations. Everyone should have to run as an independent and CLEARLY lay out their own individual personal plan for what they intend to do if elected. Voting party line doesn't work even if you look at George Bush. Yes, he was socially conservative, but he was obviously not an advocate of small government or fiscal responsibility. Assuming you know someone's views/opinions because of the letter after their name is a poor way to utilize the power of the vote.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jced
I'd love to kiss ya...but, I just washed my hair!!
02:38 PM on 08/24/2010
Chuck Hagel would be hounded out of the GOP now adays... He's much to reasonable,centered and intelligent ! Oh, and he actually is a Patriot!
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
den1953
The best politicians are for free!
12:26 PM on 08/24/2010
thank you
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
den1953
The best politicians are for free!
12:26 PM on 08/24/2010
I wish Senator Hagel even though i know why he left the Senate would have stayed he is one of the true Republican voices i believe would and still is for the middle class, that you sir for your endorsement of Congressman Sestak i to believe he is the best choice for PA.
12:19 PM on 08/24/2010
Chuck Hagel, although I don't agree with him socially, was one of the good ones. If he was a voice in the republican party, they would make much more sense then they do now.
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11:53 AM on 08/24/2010
I actually like Chuck Hagel as far as repubs go. He seems down to earth and pragmatic. The Dems should be lucky the GOP doesn't have reps full of moderates like him in their ranks or they would be really screwed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert Turner
News? I hurt the news.
10:47 AM on 08/24/2010
Wait. I didn't just wake up and read that. It must be the morning brain lag. I know I'll read this later and find out Hagel actually said "does not support" and "mosque".
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ebanks84
Grandma knows best!
10:43 AM on 08/24/2010
Good man. I wonder if he would have done that if he was a current senator though! Hummmmm!
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karela
10:04 AM on 08/24/2010
Both Bloomberg and Hagel have done many things that support the view that they are men of honor and of discernment. These are great endorsements. I wish I could vote for Sestak.
09:34 AM on 08/24/2010
I guess if Ben Nelson is a "democrat," then Chuck Hagel is a "republican."
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Jamie Kowalski
Composer
10:46 AM on 08/24/2010
He was a republican until they changed the definition on him.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
den1953
The best politicians are for free!
12:28 PM on 08/24/2010
Ben Nelson is neither a R or a D he is for Ben Nelson and greed!
09:29 AM on 08/24/2010
Chuck Hagel should have become the Republican candidate for president several years ago when he was seriously exploring the possiblility. Instead, he chose not to make the effort and decided to leave the Senate. Here is a highly decorated Viet Nam War veteran, an intelligent, competent man who as a Senator always placed Country above party politics. He was representative of the last of the moderate Republicans being thrown overboard by the ultra-right wing crazies who are currently in charge of the asylum looking for more crazies to join them in the chamber.. He made some speeches after leaving the Senate, and it was clear that he had had enough if what it had become.

I would have gladly donated money and volunteered time to his campaign had he chosen to run, and I believe that had he been elected the Country would have been a much better place.
10:56 AM on 08/24/2010
i agree with you...hagel has integrity unlike many in both parties
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
towny
The GOP clown car runs on hot air
03:52 PM on 08/24/2010
agreed, great post
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phylsboutique
09:25 AM on 08/24/2010
There probably are more Repubs that would endorse our Democratic candidates if they weren't going to be subject to the raff of the tea party Rethugs!
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09:09 AM on 08/24/2010
I had forgotten about Chuck Hagel. I liked him back in the day. Sestak is getting some nice endorsements from people who don't even directly have a stake in the race. I think a lot of it is about his opponent's extremism.

Personally, I'm rooting for Sestak, but he kind-of lost some of his luster when he backtracked on his statement that the Obama admin offered him a cabinet slot if he would drop out of the race. I found Sestak's backtracking offputting and very politician-esque.
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towny
The GOP clown car runs on hot air
03:53 PM on 08/24/2010
I agree with your point however as a person from PA I have to say he is clearly the right choice!.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
littlemonster
Grrrrrrrrrrr
09:01 AM on 08/24/2010
gates' replacement?
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karela
10:06 AM on 08/24/2010
Outstanding suggestion!
10:57 AM on 08/24/2010
an excellent suggestion