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Elections 2012: Republicans Race To Get Into 2012 Senate Match-Ups

Republican Senate Candidates 2012

PHILIP ELLIOTT   12/28/10 06:40 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Less than two months after voters gave Republicans six more Senate seats and control of the House, the GOP is lining up candidates for 2012, well ahead of the pace of previous election cycles.

Looking to ride what they hope will be a continuing Republican wave, nine potential challengers, including two each in Missouri and Virginia, already have said they are weighing bids for the U.S. Senate.

They have an abundance of targets. Twenty-one of the 33 Senate seats up in 2012 are held by Democrats and two others are occupied by independents who align themselves with Democrats. Including those independents, Democrats will hold a 53-47 Senate advantage in the new Congress that convenes Jan. 5. The 10 Republican senators up for re-election in 2012 have yet to draw a challenger.

"I want to do my part in fighting for America's future. That's why I have decided to run for the United States Senate," Republican Sarah Steelman said in announcing her challenge to Missouri Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill.

Former Sen. Jim Talent, too, is weighing a rematch against McCaskill. The two faced off in 2006 and McCaskill won in that Democratic wave.

Florida Senate President Mike Haridopolos has visited Washington to talk about his expected Senate bid against Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson, who won a second term with 60 percent of the vote in 2006. George LeMieux, who filled the last 15 months of Republican Mel Martinez' term through an appointment, might also seek Nelson's seat.

LeMieux is returning to Florida to make room for Marco Rubio, a former speaker of the Florida state House who won election to the Senate this year.

Democratic Sen. Ben Nelson of Nebraska, who won by 28 percentage points four years ago, drew an early challenger in state attorney general Jon Bruning just days after last month's election.

In Montana, first-term Democratic Sen. Jon Tester has drawn GOP businessman Steve Daines as a challenger. Republican Marc Scaringi has announced a campaign against Democratic Sen. Bob Casey of Pennsylvania, another 2006 winner expected to face a tough re-election bid.

"That's really a reflection of the opportunity people see," said Sen. John Cornyn, the Texas Republican who heads the GOP Senate campaign.

In an interview, Corynyn recalled having a hard time finding Republicans willing to challenge Senate Democrats after President Barack Obama's landslide in 2008.

"It was hard to recruit people early on in 2009," Cornyn said. "As time went by, people sensed an opportunity.

"I remember specifically, Mark Kirk, who was the only Republican who could win in Illinois. He was pretty hesitant, running for the Obama Senate seat, knowing the Democratic machine would be throwing everything they had at him," Cornyn said . "Eventually, he came around and decided to make the run."

Kirk, a five-term House member, defeated Illinois' Democratic state treasurer Alexi Giannoulias to win election in November to finish Obama's term.

The collapse of Obama's sky-high popularity was a major factor, Cornyn acknowledged. In February 2009, Obama had a 67 percent approval rating in an AP-GfK poll. The weekend after November election, the same poll found Obama had 47 percent approval to 51 percent disapproval.

"When we went into the campaign in January 2009, it looked one way," Cornyn said. "By November 2010, it changed dramatically."

Democrats find themselves having to defend so many seats because of their success in 2006, when they picked up six seats in the Senate and also took the House away from Republicans after a dozen years of GOP control.

"This is the compensation we have for being beaten very badly in 2006," Cornyn said. "We're glad to be in this posture. I'd rather be in our position than theirs."

In Virginia, Democratic Sen. Jim Webb could face a rematch against former Sen. George Allen. Webb inched out Allen in 2006, but Allen has been building buzz for a return to Washington with speeches to tea party groups and less-than-subtle hints he is weighing another campaign.

Allen also might not be alone seeking the nomination. Prince William Chairman Corey Stewart has floated the idea of a campaign for Senate and took a swipe at Allen in the process.

"Sen. Allen was a great governor of Virginia, he really was," Stewart, a Republican, said on a local TV interview. "But his record in the United States Senate was mediocre. And I don't think most people in Virginia think of him as a great United States senator. They think of him as a great governor."

Indeed, contested primary races could again be an issue for Republicans in 2012, just as they were in 2010, when Democrats retained a couple of Senate seats after candidates who were viewed as their most potent GOP challengers lost their party's primary.

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WASHINGTON — Less than two months after voters gave Republicans six more Senate seats and control of the House, the GOP is lining up candidates for 2012, well ahead of the pace of previous elect...
WASHINGTON — Less than two months after voters gave Republicans six more Senate seats and control of the House, the GOP is lining up candidates for 2012, well ahead of the pace of previous elect...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
Gaylord P Farqua 05:16 PM on 12/28/2010
This GOP wave of excitement on the heels of their recent victories will be well funded by the corporate dollars that can now flow thanks to the Robert's Commercial Court. The only thing standing the way of another purchased election will be if the Tea party folks and others finally discover that they are the junior partners in the new coalition and those who still think the GOP is going help frustrated  Read More...
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07:20 PM on 12/29/2010
Where do they get the ridiculous pictures for these stories?
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popart
retired school teacher
04:56 PM on 12/29/2010
the folks in the GOP will be spending all there energy just trying to get elected for offices still two years away...that will cost them time and money...maybe it will keep them from having time to do their usual mischief in government....every elected Republican with ambition will have to watch his back...know his friends and allies from his enemies and avoid getting caught in wrong doing or taking posistions that might cost him support....voting for anything could come back to haunt them..having strong views about anything significant could be dangerous...the next election will go to the best con men and the slickest politians. congratulations america...
01:29 PM on 12/29/2010
They can't even wait for the people who got elected in this recent one to be sworn in before they go and recruit more people? How about coming up with ideas that actually work first? That shouldn't be too much to ask for but look who I'm talking to.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NickfromCali
wants a better Democrat than Feinstein as my Senat
12:49 PM on 12/29/2010
Note NO challengers declared against Sen. Feinstein in CA
Probably because Sen. Feinstein is CA's best ever Republican Senator!
11:16 AM on 12/29/2010
When the new senate leadership proves just as vacuous and incompetent as all GOP leadership has been since 1993, the quick re-learning curve of the American people will be brutal...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Herbert Spencer
10:37 AM on 12/29/2010
I am sure you, liberals will hold the republicans in the house to the same standards you have held the democrats in the house in the last 4 years since Queen Nancy took over! (roll eyes)
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littlepuffycloud
I propose a toast to my self control...
10:45 AM on 12/29/2010
You really enjoy rolling your eyes, don't you Herbie?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Herbert Spencer
10:48 AM on 12/29/2010
Its a condition I developed reading liberal blogging on this website.
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BBackSoon
Hello, I must be going.
11:54 AM on 12/29/2010
The house passed quite a bit of legislation over the past four years, some of it was quite good. Most was blocked in the Senate but the House did pretty good.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Herbert Spencer
02:07 PM on 12/29/2010
And how much of that "legislation" could the democrats run on in the last election, NONE!
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dfranz
With Liberty and Justice for all
10:23 AM on 12/29/2010
I believe that the Tea Party will have worn out its welcome by 2012. We haven't seen the antics of the next congress and from what I see, there is going to be a lot of nonsense coming out of congress once they start trying to push their draconian agenda. Frankly, I think once the attempt to destroy SS is out of the bag, even revved up Tea Baggers will not support that. But who knows? People have been voting against their own best interests for decades.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Herbert Spencer
10:21 AM on 12/29/2010
I hear Bachmann is going for a Senate seat in two years:

"Chris Matthews: “Congresswoman Bachmann, are you hypnotized tonight? Has someone hypnotized you? Because no matter what I ask you, you give the same answer. Are you hypnotized? Has someone put you under a trance tonight? That you give me the same answer no matter what question I put to you?”

Rep. Michele Bachmann: “I think the American people are the ones that are finally speaking tonight. We’re coming out of our trance....I think people are thrilled tonight. I imagine that thrill is probably maybe not quite not so tingly on your leg anymore.”
— From MSNBC’s election night coverage, November 2."

and I can see why you liberals "h@te" her so much like Palin! (roll eyes) After all you liberals have always had the american voters figured out!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lwallis
Obama/Biden 2012.
10:29 AM on 12/29/2010
Is there a point in here somewhere?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Herbert Spencer
10:32 AM on 12/29/2010
Read my other quotes on this thread! Let alone "...I imagine that thrill is probably maybe not quite not so tingly on your leg anymore.” (roll eyes)
11:39 AM on 12/29/2010
I think it's to show how she gives the same non-answer to every question.
IreneNH
Please feel free to disagree
10:06 AM on 12/29/2010
"The 10 Republican senators up for re-election in 2012 have yet to draw a challenger."

Where is the Democratic Senatorial Committee? Get with it "guys". NOW!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ClearNSimple2012
10:02 AM on 12/29/2010
America's cracked political system
US politics, often decried for its 'partisanship', is all too bipartisan – in its deeply dysfunctional consensus on tax and wealth!

The problem for the rich is that, other than military spending, there is no place to cut the budget other than in areas of core support for the poor and working class. Is America really going to cut health benefits and retirement income? Will it really balance the budget by slashing education spending at a time when US students already are being outperformed by their Asian counterparts? Will America really let its public infrastructure continue to deteriorate? The rich will try to push such an agenda, but ultimately they will fail.

Obama swept to power on the promise of change. So far, there has been none. His administration is filled with Wall Street bankers. His top officials leave to join the banks, as his budget director Peter Orszag recently did. Obama is always ready to serve the interests of the rich and powerful, with no line in the sand, no limit to "compromise".

If this continues, a third party will emerge, committed to cleaning up American politics and restoring a measure of decency and fairness. This, too, will take time. The political system is deeply skewed against challenges to the two incumbent parties. Yet, the time for change will come...

I believe that they will be proved wrong.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2010/dec/27/useconomy-us-politics
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Herbert Spencer
10:01 AM on 12/29/2010
Charles Pierce: "Well, we’re almost here, aren’t we? The end of a long, arduous, four-month campaign for a Senate seat that you have approximately the same chance of filling as you did the pilot’s chair of the Starship Enterprise....The notion that Massachusetts would elect a Republican to fill the seat left vacant by Edward Kennedy was the property of people who buy interesting mushrooms in interesting places. You might as well expect the House of Windsor to be succeeded on the British throne by the Kardashian sisters.”
— The Boston Globe Magazine’s Charles Pierce in a January 10 column addressed to GOP Senate candidate Scott Brown."

Yeah? You liberals have the american voters all figured out! (roll eyes) even in MA!
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
PatLow
A karate man bruises on the inside
03:46 PM on 12/29/2010
How did Brown turn out for you baggers? I thought I read they were going to primary him.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R U Sirius
Retired educator, trainer; writer/editor
10:00 AM on 12/29/2010
Hoppin' onto that MONEY TRAIN!!!
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
noaxe397
09:37 AM on 12/29/2010
Sorry all, but I continue to blame Dems for this mess not because of their policies or legislation or programs but because of their inability to explain to the voter in words they can understand how those policies or legislation or programs helps them.
 
That creates a knowledge and perception vacuum that Fox and the GOP will gladly fill with THEIR interpretations of those policies, legislation and programs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R U Sirius
Retired educator, trainer; writer/editor
10:04 AM on 12/29/2010
It's difficult to explain tough stuff to a populace that loses interest if the sound bite is longer than 15 seconds. Eighty-five percent of American young people do not give a RIP about the implications on their future that are being foisted upon them by greedy, unscrupulous robot zombie politicians.

And yes, FoxPAC and the TeaPublican'ts do a really, really fine job of providing the masses with the opiates that they want to hear.
IreneNH
Please feel free to disagree
10:08 AM on 12/29/2010
Absolutely correct. The message is 9/10ths of the battle. F&F
12:13 PM on 12/29/2010
Check the %s of those that believed SH was behind the terrorist attacks, that Obama is a Muslim, born in Kenya, support our federal govt torturing suspects, building a "Mosque" on Ground Zero, Death Panels,... and subsequently research the DETAILs of those issues,...

I no more blame Democrats than I blame Fox Views for telling folks what they ALREADY want (or need, pending on one's preferences) to hear.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lwallis
Obama/Biden 2012.
09:23 AM on 12/29/2010
How wonderful! The whole country suffers and it's all just one big game to them.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
swift goat pet for truth
The Life of the Land is preserved in Righteousness
09:45 AM on 12/29/2010
A GAME?

Sure it is.
They are all Rich!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lwallis
Obama/Biden 2012.
09:52 AM on 12/29/2010
Of course, you have to rich to play it.
09:17 AM on 12/29/2010
Ah yes opportunist republicans sensing blood ..
lets jump in in 2011 and start hammering about health care and going back to the good old days

Now 50 Million Americans don't have health care because they can't afford it.