Republican US Senate candidate Rand Paul. Photo by Ed
Reinke, File/AP.
Anti-tax crusader Rand Paul's election victory has given
the tea party a flag bearer to send to the Senate and hope that
more like-minded Washington outsiders would be elected to
Congress.
The first-time candidate and champion of small government
upended the Kentucky Senate race by trouncing the Republican
establishment's hand-picked candidate in the May primary and
then winning decisively against Democratic state Attorney
General Jack Conway on Tuesday.
Candidates with tea party support were on the ballot in more
than 70 House districts, seven races for Senate and three for
governor. Paul, an ophthalmologist and son of libertarian
hero Rep. Ron Paul of Texas, was elected to a seat currently
held by a Republican, so the win did not contribute to GOP
hopes for gains in the Senate. He will replace Republican
Sen. Jim Bunning, who is retiring.
The grassroots tea party movement, without any official
platform or national organization, drew a committed
following. About four in 10 voters considered themselves tea
party supporters, according to an Associated Press analysis
of preliminary exit poll results and pre-election polls. It
was an impressive feat for a movement that didn't even exist
in the last congressional election, two years ago.
But the tea party also was a polarizing force among some
voters - about a quarter of voters said they considered their
vote a message of support for the tea party and nearly as
many said their vote was meant to signal opposition to the
movement. About half said the tea party wasn't a factor.
Many tea party candidates were running for the first time but
still able to defeat opponents with Republican establishment
backing in the primaries, including Senate GOP nominees Paul,
Sharron Angle in Nevada and Christine O'Donnell in Delaware.
The movement's candidates had no unified agenda, but often
pushed for a balanced budget, elimination of the federal
debt, repeal of the health care law and strict interpretation
of the Constitution.
The AP's polling analysis found nearly all tea party
supporters wanted to repeal health care and felt President
Barack Obama's policies hurt the country. Only about a
quarter of non-tea party supporters felt that way.
Politically, tea partiers vowed to turn the Republican Party
toward conservatism. Some Republicans warned the movement
could give Democrats an opportunity for electoral victories
by running too far to the right. In some cases - such as
Senate races in Florida and Alaska - tea party candidates
sparked a three-way race.
Tea party candidates weren't always easy to identify since
the movement is a network of loosely connected community
groups - not an established political party with official
nominees. Even within the tea party there often was
disagreement among rival groups about the legitimacy of
candidates claiming tea party credentials.
In identifying candidates, The Associated Press assessed
factors including a candidate's history with the movement,
the involvement of local leaders and activists in a campaign,
endorsements or support from tea party-affiliated groups and
whether a candidate is running on a platform that dovetails
with the movement's agenda.
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