Lugar Loses Primary

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General Mung Beans
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Lugar Loses Primary

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http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/09/us/po ... wanted=all
Lugar Loses Primary Challenge in Indiana
Peter W. Stevenson for The New York Times

Senator Richard G. Lugar after giving his concession speech on Tuesday night at his election headquarters in Indianapolis.
By MONICA DAVEY
Published: May 8, 2012



INDIANAPOLIS — Richard G. Lugar, one of the Senate’s longest-serving members, a collegial moderate who personified a gentler political era, was turned out of office on Tuesday, ending a career that had spanned the terms of half a dozen presidents.
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Darron Cummings/Associated Press

Mr. Lugar, a six-term senator, was defeated in the primary election by Richard E. Mourdock.

Mr. Lugar, a six-term senator from Indiana who had won most of his recent elections with more than 60 percent of the vote, lost a hard-fought Republican primary to Richard E. Mourdock, the state treasurer. Mr. Mourdock’s campaign was fueled by Tea Party groups and national conservative organizations that deemed Mr. Lugar too willing to compromise and poured millions of dollars into the campaign to defeat him.

Mr. Lugar, 80, had not faced a challenge from within his own party since his first election to the Senate in 1976, and his defeat seemed to serve as a caution to moderates on both sides of the aisle.

In February, Senator Olympia J. Snowe of Maine, a moderate Republican, decided not to run for re-election, citing polarization in Washington. Senators Kent Conrad of North Dakota, a Democratic fiscal centrist, and Jim Webb of Virginia, a moderate Democrat, are retiring. Two other moderate Democrats, Senators Claire McCaskill of Missouri and Jon Tester of Montana, face tough re-election races.

Tea Party organizers and conservative leaders held the Indiana outcome as evidence of a broader national demand for Republicans with unshakable stances on fiscal reform and conservative values, as well as proof of the continuing power of the Tea Party movement.

“Richard Mourdock’s victory truly sends a message to the liberals in the Republican Party,“ said Chris Chocola, president of the Club for Growth. “Voters are rejecting the policies that led to record debt and diminished economic freedom.”

For a number of Mr. Lugar’s supporters, the results were a sorry arc — not just for a man who has served for 35 years in Washington and as mayor of Indianapolis before that, but for a larger notion of trying to work across party lines in Washington.

Prominent Democrats, including President Obama, issued statements of appreciation on Tuesday night for Mr. Lugar, the ranking Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and for his work, particularly on the nation’s foreign affairs.

“While Dick and I didn’t always agree on everything,” Mr. Obama said, “I found during my time in the Senate that he was often willing to reach across the aisle and get things done.”

Still, some Democrats, eager to hold onto the Senate, also seemed buoyed by the results here. With Mr. Lugar’s defeat, they see the glimmer of an opportunity to claim a Senate seat that the party had considered out of reach as long as he was in the running. The Democratic candidate, Representative Joe Donnelly, is thought to have better chance with independents and moderate Republicans in November against Mr. Mourdock.

Almost immediately, Democrats began emphasizing Mr. Mourdock’s conservative views. “Hoosiers deserve real leadership that will reach across the aisle in Richard Lugar’s successor, not Richard Mourdock’s Tea Party extremism,” said Dan Parker, the chairman of the Indiana Democratic Party.

For months, the campaign here had been intense, expensive and, by Indiana standards, mean. National groups including the Club for Growth, the National Rifle Association and FreedomWorks, which helped build the Tea Party movement, had viewed Mr. Lugar as a ripe and overdue target, and they poured millions of dollars into the state.

Mr. Lugar — who may be best known for his 1990s effort, along with Sam Nunn, a Democratic senator from Georgia, for a disarmament program in the former Soviet Union — was criticized throughout the campaign for what critics described as his tendency to cooperate with Democrats. He shifted to the right in 2011, after the threat to his re-election became clear.

Mr. Mourdock, meanwhile, has said that bipartisanship has led the nation to the brink of bankruptcy, and that the nation’s current circumstances call for a time of confrontation, not collegiality.

After his victory, he acknowledged his opponent. “I know what it’s like to lose — it’s not fun,” Mr. Mourdock told The Associated Press. “And especially after he’s given that 36 years in the Senate. I know he has to feel terrible tonight, and I truly feel badly for him.”

Some of Mr. Lugar’s critics accused him of being Mr. Obama’s closest Republican friend — a claim Mr. Lugar scoffed at, but also took questions about right up until Tuesday afternoon. They also railed against positions he took at various times in favor of Mr. Obama’s Supreme Court nominees, the Dream Act, the bank bailout, the nuclear arms control treaty and more.

Mr. Lugar’s supporters countered that he had maintained a conservative agenda over the years, for less government spending, a balanced-budget amendment and fewer regulations that harm businesses.

For his part, Mr. Lugar sounded unbowed on Tuesday afternoon, arguing that most Americans were fed up with partisan battling and saying his race had evolved into a “playground” for outside interest groups.

If it felt peculiar to be entering an election day as an underdog — Democrats did not even field an opponent six years ago — Mr. Lugar did not show it. “This morning, I woke up after a good night’s sleep, just as before, ready with vim and vigor to make certain that we do the Lord’s fight today, and we’re going to do the best we can,“ he said.

But for some here, Mr. Lugar’s troubles reached beyond questions of partisan loyalty. He was required this year to change his voter registration to the farm his family has owned for years rather than the Indianapolis house he sold in 1977 — an episode that underscored how long he had been in Washington and, in the view of some, how tenuous his ties to Indiana now felt.

“Everybody’s time comes,” said Ed Budd, who described himself as a Tea Party supporter and handed out Mourdock leaflets outside a polling place in Fairland on Tuesday when Mr. Lugar walked up looking, in Mr. Budd’s words, “diminished some“ from the familiar image he had seen on television for so many years.

Throughout the day, voters for and against Mr. Lugar confided quietly that they felt sadness and discomfort as they witnessed the unfolding scene.

“This is all really painful to watch,” said Larry MacIntyre, a supporter of Mr. Lugar.

Many in a ballroom here on Tuesday night were crying as Mr. Lugar stepped onto a stage smiling and said he hoped Mr. Mourdock would prevail in the fall.

“We are experiencing deep political divisions in our society right now,” Mr. Lugar said as tears welled in the eyes of the family members lined up behind him. “These divisions have stalemated progress in critical areas. But these divisions are not insurmountable, and I believe that people of good will regardless of party can work together for the benefit of our country.”

Carl Hulse and Jennifer Steinhauer contributed reporting from Washington.
A version of this article appeared in print on May 9, 2012, on page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: G.O.P. Voters Topple Lugar After 6 Terms.
At this rate, not only may the GOP not take back the Senate but it may not gain any or even lose a few.
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Re: Lugar Loses Primary

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General Mung Beans wrote:At this rate, not only may the GOP not take back the Senate but it may not gain any or even lose a few.
I think that depends on how well they play the "fear of Obama" card for the next few months. If they can get the word out that voting R is the only way to stop [EFFECT], they could get the usual voters to follow them to the right.

According to wiki, he was last elected in 2006 with eighty seven percent of the popular vote, and no Democratic opposition. He needs what, one in five of those voters to come back to make a convincing win?
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Re: Lugar Loses Primary

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Do keep in mind that in the last presidential election Indiana went to Obama, the first Democratic presidential candidate to win Indiana in over 40 years or more. It is not beyond possibility that Lugar's seat will go to a Democrat in November. The Republican party as a whole is shifting faster to the extreme right than the average Indiana Republican is.

Personally, though, I wouldn't lay bets on either side. While there are a lot of moderate Republicans in Indiana the Tea Party and other extremists are still to popular for my own taste.
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Re: Lugar Loses Primary

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I loved the MSNBC interview with the new guy. No bones about it: Bipartisanship, in his view, is Democrats surrendering to him and his.
To me, the highlight of politics, frankly, is to inflict my opinion on someone else with a microphone or in front of a camera.
Inflict is the right word. Or possibly infect, like the cancer that is the current conservative movement.
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Re: Lugar Loses Primary

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SirNitram wrote:I loved the MSNBC interview with the new guy. No bones about it: Bipartisanship, in his view, is Democrats surrendering to him and his.
To me, the highlight of politics, frankly, is to inflict my opinion on someone else with a microphone or in front of a camera.
Inflict is the right word. Or possibly infect, like the cancer that is the current conservative movement.
This guy is particularly cancerous. He views abortion as an evil that befits a civil war to end, and is an angry associate if not member of certain really really crazy factions of the christian right.
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Re: Lugar Loses Primary

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He says, and I quote, that as far as he's concerned bipartisanship is gaining such a large Republican majority in the House, Senate, and White House that Democrats have to come to Republican positions or be swept aside. Fuck this guy with a rusty chainsaw.

And the reason Lugar had no Democratic opposition in his last election is because he was until basically this year so insanely popular that they just didn't waste their time and money. If he ran as an independent, he'd probably have at least as good a shot as Joe Lieberman did, but he says he won't. Mourdock will be contested, I guarantee it.
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Re: Lugar Loses Primary

Post by General Mung Beans »

Rogue 9 wrote:He says, and I quote, that as far as he's concerned bipartisanship is gaining such a large Republican majority in the House, Senate, and White House that Democrats have to come to Republican positions or be swept aside. Fuck this guy with a rusty chainsaw.

And the reason Lugar had no Democratic opposition in his last election is because he was until basically this year so insanely popular that they just didn't waste their time and money. If he ran as an independent, he'd probably have at least as good a shot as Joe Lieberman did, but he says he won't. Mourdock will be contested, I guarantee it.
I think the Indiana law prevents primary losers from running in the general.
El Moose Monstero: That would be the winning song at Eurovision. I still say the Moldovans were more fun. And that one about the Apricot Tree.
That said...it is growing on me.
Thanas: It is one of those songs that kinda get stuck in your head so if you hear it several times, you actually grow to like it.
General Zod: It's the musical version of Stockholm syndrome.
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