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Vulnerable House Dems Declare Their Independence

CRISTINA SILVA   09/26/10 03:25 PM ET   AP

Dina Titus
Nevada Congresswoman Dina Titus, answers questions for members of the media after speaking at Whitney Elementary School to help kick off the Back Pack for Kids program Friday, Sept. 17, 2010, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)

LAS VEGAS — Rep. Dina Titus has been a loyal soldier in pushing the Democrats' ambitious agenda, voting for health care legislation, extended unemployment benefits, new energy taxes and a repeal of the military's ban on gays serving openly.

Her campaign signs, however, proclaim Titus an "independent voice" for Nevadans.

Aware that their stock has taken the same tumble as home values, Congress' most vulnerable Democrats are declaring their independence from their party's agenda in Facebook profiles, television advertisements, news interviews and campaign websites leading up to the Nov. 2 election. That's when Republicans hope to retake control of the House they lost four years ago.

The rebranders include Democratic Reps. Betsy Markey and John Salazar in Colorado, Zack Space in Ohio, Jason Altmire in Pennsylvania, Glenn Nye in Virginia and Joe Donnelly in Indiana. In Texas, Rep. Chet Edwards, once promoted as a potential running mate for Barack Obama, has become a vocal critic of his party's policies.

The tactic could hurt Democratic turnout at a time when the party needs to protect its majority in Congress, some political strategists say.

"They want to get turnout as high as possible among those who vote for Democrats," said Joseph Bafumi, a government professor at Dartmouth College. "Running away from the president or the party might not be the way to do it."

Democrats such as Altmire, Edwards, Space and Nye stand out for defying party leaders on leading issues such as health care, but they are having to defend their independent bona fides because of the "D" after their name.

Titus and others have raised eyebrows for carrying water for Obama in vote after vote, only to pivot and say they are not beholden to a party.

Salazar, for example, opposed federal money for abortions and new clean-energy taxes. But he also voted for many Democratic priorities unpopular among conservatives, including the stimulus bill, health care reform and debt-financed extended unemployment benefits.

Sliding toward the middle is a tested tactic. It could appeal to moderate Republican and nonpartisan voters alarmed by the number of hard-right candidates under the GOP banner this year.

Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, chairman of the House Democrats' campaign committee, said ideological diversity will prove an asset as tea party fever continues to push Republicans to the far right.

"The Democratic caucus is a big-tent caucus," Van Hollen said. "We don't have a purity or an ideological test the way the Republicans do."

Republicans argue Democrats are whitewashing their political records during the sluggish economic recovery that has focused voter anger on Washington.

"Democrats may try to run away from their party's unpopular agenda, but their voting record tells the real story," Rep. Pete Sessions of Texas, who leads the committee charged with electing House Republicans, said in a statement. "Our responsibility over the coming weeks is to remind voters that House Democrats have been complicit in backing a big-government agenda that has done nothing to create jobs in this country."

The party infighting ranges from minor jabs – Titus criticized Democrats for failing to sell the health care bill – to body blows.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is a favorite punching bag.

In Indiana, Donnelly tell voters he fought against Pelosi's "energy tax on Hoosier families."

In Alabama, Rep. Bobby Bright begged off a question about whether he would vote for Pelosi as speaker by pointing out that "she may get sick and die."

In Texas, Edwards also won't say whether Pelosi can still count on his vote.

Nimble politicians have tried to shun their political baggage before when confronted by a wary public.

Republicans did it in 2006 and 2008, when George W. Bush held the White House. Democrats did it in 2000 in a failed attempt to retain the White House in the bruised final days of President Bill Clinton.

"It's an act of desperation more than anything else. 'What can I do to persuade the voters that I can be representative of them?'" said Tom Brunell, a political science professor at the University of Texas at Dallas. "They are staring at a tidal wave and they are looking for any life buoy they can find."

Re-election prospects seem particularly dim for the handful of Democrats who trumped Republican incumbents while riding Obama's coattails in 2008.

In Virginia, Nye rarely tells voters he is a Democrat. He calls himself a fiscal conservative and has circulated a petition to extend all income tax rates.

Still, he's in a toss-up race in a conservative district that seems eager to return to a Republican.

In Nevada, Titus' independent message has done little to nudge poll numbers in her favor in a district plagued by record high levels of foreclosures and unemployment and sinking property values.

The first-term congresswoman defended her claim in a recent interview with assurances that she would be willing to vote for extending Bush era tax cuts for everyone and would have voted against the bank bailout had she been in office at the time.

Her challenger, tea party favorite Joe Heck, paints her as a Pelosi henchman.

Titus' "independent voice" sign hangs in Heck's campaign office. His staff called it motivation.

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LAS VEGAS — Rep. Dina Titus has been a loyal soldier in pushing the Democrats' ambitious agenda, voting for health care legislation, extended unemployment benefits, new energy taxes and a repeal...
LAS VEGAS — Rep. Dina Titus has been a loyal soldier in pushing the Democrats' ambitious agenda, voting for health care legislation, extended unemployment benefits, new energy taxes and a repeal...
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12:39 PM on 09/28/2010
How funny
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dr Scott
All I ask is that you make sense
11:18 AM on 09/28/2010
And Obama wonders why there's an enthusiasm gap this election? Get your own house in order before castigating the voters, Mr. President.
09:26 AM on 09/28/2010
BO has no "coat tails" among the majority of Congressional Democrats.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
henrypapillon
Put a Psychiatrist in every NRA meeting.
04:16 AM on 09/28/2010
Ever notice the antelope that separates from the pack is the first one to be picked off by the predators.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
caribindian
12:25 AM on 09/28/2010
Cowards...
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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11:28 PM on 09/27/2010
Like our President said

I want to put this car in D and get us out of this ditch,
problem is, the dad gum transmission is broke.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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10:53 PM on 09/27/2010
My Congressional District is pretty much locked up by Frank Wolf (R)
in Northern Va.

Not once has the Democratic Party here, really had anyone sharp enough to break
his hold on all The Homeland Security and Private Government Funded Contractor
Base here.

The place is swimming in government agency employees and a smorgasbord of the who's who in government funded private corporations.

We all know their prime directive is FUNDING SECURITY.

I just find it comical that so many people who earn their living
from taxpayer funded programs also scream the loudest about how the government
is "Out Of Control" with their spending.

Maybe we should start THE PARTY PARTY

Win or lose we have a great time participating in our government, right? :-)
10:35 PM on 09/27/2010
I just joined today, and would like to post a remark to the following from your story:

""The Democratic caucus is a big-tent caucus," Van Hollen said. "We don't have a purity or an ideological test the way the Republicans do."

Well, my VERY FIRST post just got deleted by your censor elsewhere on your website. Is this the way you guys roll?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Truth In Voting
Paranoid Rightwing Catchphrase Bingo!!
10:00 PM on 09/27/2010
Oh man, I can see the aftermath of the slaughter already...


"I don't know what happened," said stunned Alabama candidate Bobby Bright. "I completely sold out my principles to get elected. I decried the size of the federal government, talked about tax cuts, and cozied up to insurance and offshore drilling interests. Hell, I even joked about Nancy Pelosi dying just so Republicans would like me!"

Says Dina Titus: "The good news is that there were a bunch of conservatives in this election, and they didn't win. The bad news is that they some of them were us."


We've danced and sung this song and dance already in 2004, remember? The early signs of discontent with the wars were settling in, and then John Kerry went running to the center. Meanwhile, Democrats who didn't feign shock about being a Democrat, like Bill Clinton, were still riding huge popularity waves.

Look at Congressman Alan Grayson who's unapologetic about being a Democrat. And look what a huge lead he has in a "Republican" district, how awash he is in campaign donations from Democratic citizens. Do we need sketch artists to draw pictures of the GOP Elephant defecating on the USA map, with an arrow pointing to a crudely drawn picture of strong Dem candidates awash in voter campaign donations? Will they get it then?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
popart
retired school teacher
09:47 PM on 09/27/2010
cowards might prevail in the short run but can they live with themselves once they have proven their lack of integrity. they can rationalize it all they want...but in the end they are still the losers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Truth In Voting
Paranoid Rightwing Catchphrase Bingo!!
09:11 PM on 09/27/2010
All these incumbents should have a chat with Congressman Grayson before they lose.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/09/27/alan-grayson-republicans-dont-join-em-beat-em_n_740983.html
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justalurker
edited my micro-bio
08:08 PM on 09/27/2010
It would appear that the House Dems have bought into the negative spin the corporate news media has done on Obama's ratings. When seen in context (compared with others), it is QUITE CLEAR that Obama is the most trusted (or at least the most favorable) national politician in America right now.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-c-wilson/whats-the-real-story-behi_b_738931.html
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JaneK13
07:20 PM on 09/27/2010
Titus voted for ObamaCare.

That's enough reason to vote FOR Joe Heck, her Republican challenger.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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06:50 PM on 09/27/2010
Glenn Nye in Virginia's 2nd District has independent credentials, having voted against Cap and Trade and Health Care, but he has a terrible campaign team around him and his constituent services have left a lot to be desired. I look for him to lose narrowly.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ScapeGoat
Facts are stubborn things. Science Rocks!
07:11 PM on 09/27/2010
Good, he should lose.
06:25 PM on 09/27/2010
They might as well run on their records because claiming independence from Pelosi/Obama isn't going to fool anyone.
Their toast in any case in other words.