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Richard Mourdock, Richard Lugar Tea Party Challenger, Struggling To Knock Off Republican Incumbent

Richard Lugar Indiana Senate

By HENRY C. JACKSON and TOM LoBIANCO   10/13/11 12:42 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- The tea party movement's best remaining hope in 2012 for picking off an incumbent Republican in the Senate has boiled down to one state, Indiana, where six-term Sen. Richard Lugar still faces a challenge from the right.

Polls show Lugar is vulnerable and his record, dotted with votes for the Troubled Asset Relief Program and other government spending, is ripe for conservative critique, despite decades as one of the Senate's foreign policy experts. But the tea party candidate challenging him in the GOP primary, state treasurer Richard Mourdock, lacks Lugar's heft and name recognition.

It looked for a time as if three longtime Senate moderates – Orrin Hatch of Utah, Olympia Snowe of Maine and Lugar – were in danger of being taken down by primary challenges from the right. But the upstart campaigns in Utah and Maine have fizzled as Hatch and Snowe made concerted efforts to woo right-wing voters in their states.

Hatch's best-positioned challenger, Rep. Jason Chaffetz, decided against a run. Hatch still must survive Utah's byzantine convention nominating process, but unlike his former Senate colleague, Bob Bennett, he hasn't been caught off guard and has spent months building his tea party credentials.

A minor tea party candidate has announced a run against Snowe, but she has the support of Gov. Paul LePage, the state's most prominent tea party supporter, and efforts to target her haven't gotten off the ground.

That leaves Mourdock, who has been running for months with little attention, as the tea party's best shot in the Senate.

He is millions of dollars behind Lugar in fundraising. He only recently began to seal the support of national tea party groups and his message still hasn't reached voters who are looking for an alternative to the incumbent. Lugar has the bulk of the state's established donor base committed to him. He closed the most recent fundraising period with $3.8 million in the bank after collecting $840,000 in donations. Mourdock's report was not available from the Federal Election Commission – campaigns must file them by Saturday – but as of July he had $215,000 in the bank.

Matt Barns, a Republican voter from Indianapolis, knows precious little about Mourdock, even though he is inclined to support him.

Ask him about Lugar, though, and Barns' thoughts are clear.

"It's time for him to be put to pasture," Barns said.

Gary Meltzer, an undecided GOP primary voter from Indianapolis, said Mourdock will have to work harder if he's going to succeed.

"He needs to get better advertising out there because Lugar is too well known," said Meltzer, 63.

Lugar has advantages that his Senate colleagues in 2010 didn't have.

"Incumbents have a luxury of seeing what happened last time, so you won't catch anybody off guard," said Brian Nick, a Republican strategist and Indiana native, referring to the tea party's primary successes in 2010. "If you're underfunded, you sometimes benefit from the incumbent or the establishment candidate being a little lackadaisical or resting on their laurels. I don't think that's the case with Sen. Lugar."

But Mourdock's campaign said it was building up methodically to Indiana's May 2012 primary.

"We are focused on doing what we need to do to win this race, and we are not privy to the timetable of other organizations and their decision processes," Mourdock spokesman Chris Conner said.

Mourdock's camp touts high-profile endorsements from Republican presidential contender Herman Cain, flat-tax proponent Steve Forbes and conservative blogger Erick Erickson. Aides say they've put in more time courting activists than Lugar and that will pay off in time for the state's May 2012 primary.

The Tea Party Express, a national group, recently endorsed Mourdock shortly after a group of Indiana tea partyers officially approved his campaign. The conservative FreedomWorks is also set to endorse Mourdock on Oct. 21, said a Republican aide familiar with the group's upcoming endorsement; that aide spoke on the condition of anonymity because the aide was not allowed to speak publicly for the group.

There are significant holdouts, though.

The Club for Growth, which earlier this summer poured thousands of dollars into ads attacking Lugar, hasn't endorsed Mourdock. The group's spokesman, Barney Keller, said his organization hadn't made a decision on the race.

Lugar has said that South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint, a conservative kingmaker, has stayed out of the race because Lugar served as his mentor when DeMint was starting out in Congress. But DeMint aides say he is focused on filling open seats and beating vulnerable Democrats.

GOP operative Ryan Erwin said Mourdock will have to show he is a good candidate running a good campaign before voters unseat Lugar.

"Tea party values are always electable ... but a bad candidate or a bad campaign is never going to win," Erwin said.

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WASHINGTON -- The tea party movement's best remaining hope in 2012 for picking off an incumbent Republican in the Senate has boiled down to one state, Indiana, where six-term Sen. Richard Lugar still ...
WASHINGTON -- The tea party movement's best remaining hope in 2012 for picking off an incumbent Republican in the Senate has boiled down to one state, Indiana, where six-term Sen. Richard Lugar still ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert Weissman
Hooah!
02:42 PM on 10/14/2011
Its pretty much sad that the entire GOP has been stolen by the T-Baggers, especailly when most of Armerica can't stand them
10:30 AM on 10/14/2011
Fat, middled aged, white people in lawn chairs...they're a dying breed.... (quite literally).
05:51 PM on 10/13/2011
"It looked for a time as if three longtime Senate moderates – Orrin Hatch of Utah, Olympia Snowe of Maine and Lugar – were in danger of being taken down by primary challenges from the right."

In what bizarro, parallel universe is Orrin Hatch a moderate?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hacharacter
No micro-bio here.
05:37 PM on 10/13/2011
Check this out about the Tea Party. How soon they forget just how violent TP'rs caa be.

http://www.deathandtaxesmag.com/33792/rand-paul-tea-party-shoulder-blame-for-head-stomp-attack/
NYC619
Tri-corn hats cannot fit block heads
04:25 PM on 10/13/2011
Richard and Richard-two Dicks fighting it out in the TeaGOP, who knew?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BoycottFox2
Fox News Viewers Know Less.
03:55 PM on 10/13/2011
Poor Guy. He sell a couple of his goats I guess, that mite help...
1hotgolfer
One faithful and irritated Democrat
03:22 PM on 10/13/2011
I wonder if the tea party has "campaign fashion consultants"? If so, they may want to suggest to Mr. Mourdoch that his wearing a necktie that is a "replica of the confederate flag" may be a bad fashion statement for the tea party's image.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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BeachBubbaTex
google picnic bear
03:17 PM on 10/13/2011
Lugar a solid Senator (if a bit long in the tooth). I can see why the TP dislike him, he's thoughtful and rarely puts party interests ahead of the nation. I'm a life-long lib and voted for Lugar when we lived in Indy.
02:54 PM on 10/13/2011
This guy, literally looks like he needs a good blood transfusion
02:50 PM on 10/13/2011
After the b.s. they pulled with the Debt Ceiling vote, their approval rating is now down to 11 %. No American should send any of these people to congress. This country cannot afford more people in the government that refuse to compromise to do what is in the best interest of the country. I hope Americans kick all the t-bag congress people to the curb in 2012 ! They are a cancer on the country!
02:36 PM on 10/13/2011
When people thought the teaparty stood against the bank bailouts and the excess greed in this country and our government, they were behind them. After it was revealed that they were fighting to save the tax cuts to the wealthy, and the privatization of Medicare and Social Security, people ran away from them. Once everyone knew that what they stood for was the same thing that republicans have given us during the Bush Error, their approval ratings went down to the same approval rating that Bush had when he left office!

Seems that what people were really angry about was the greed on Wall Street and corporations running our government policy! That is what the 99% are standing against! That is what people will finally get behind! It's the change we thought we voted for in 2008 -- but didn't get! No one will vote against Obama in order to bring back more of the same from the Bush Error! If that was what the American people wanted, they wouldn't have turned out in 2008 and voted for democrats! And republicans wouldn't have to keep trying to keep those same people from voting in 2012!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sylvia wadlington
Gnothi Seauton
02:14 PM on 10/13/2011
I hope the tea party is costing the republicans a fortune in campaign financing and the democrats beat every one of them. Call it financial justice, the republicans financed the tea party and now have to pay to get rid of them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Benny Belloes
As long as brakes cost more than trainmen
02:13 PM on 10/13/2011
I don't really feel that a liberal like me should be helping the Tea bagger candidates hoe to get elected but I will make this one exception. All you Tea bagger candidates need to stop spending your limited resources on the primary election and holdout to run as a third party candidate. That way you folks will have tons of money for advertising thus you will be getting your message out when more people are paying attention. Remember run as a third party candidate against the Republican candidate. Buddy I'm tell you are in.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
treadway123
treadway123
02:06 PM on 10/13/2011
I certainly wouldn't want a T.P in, however Luger is so set in his ways, won't conform to New Idea's an want to take us back wards! It is time for him to retire!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dax49
01:44 PM on 10/13/2011
Have these tea-baggers-and the politicians using them realized just how sleazy they all look to the American people?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Querent
I just had to say that.
03:11 PM on 10/13/2011
Nope. They're still claiming they never carried racist signs. I think some of them might actually believe it.