Election fatigue hits Wis. in 4-way Senate primary
Topics: From the Wires, Politics News
FILE - In this Aug. 10, 2012, file photo Republican candidates for the U.S. Senate, Wisconsin Assembly speaker Jeff Fitzgerald, from left, R-Horicon, Eric Hovde, former U.S. Rep. Mark Neumann and former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson, right, prepare before their debate in Madison, Wis. Even with the name of Thompson on the ballot, the biggest name in modern Wisconsin politics, the Republican primary in a highly competitive U.S. Senate race appears headed for a fractious four-way face off in the Aug. 14 primary. (AP Photo/Andy Manis, File)(Credit: AP)MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Even with the biggest name in modern Wisconsin politics, the Republican primary in a highly competitive U.S. Senate race appears headed for a fractious four-way battle Tuesday. Many election-weary voters simply haven’t made up their minds.
Tommy Thompson, the former governor and Cabinet secretary, has near universal name recognition in the race to succeed retiring Democratic Sen. Herb Kohl. A recent poll finds Thompson leading the GOP field, but nearly 1 in 5 voters hasn’t settled on a nominee.
Thompson had expected an uncontested run for the nomination given that his history with the party dates back to his first election victory in 1966 and includes 14 years as governor. He also served as health and human services secretary under President George W. Bush. But the party has grown more conservative since he left the governorship in 2001, and his three challengers argue that they are more in touch with modern Republicans than the 70-year-old Thompson.
The campaigns are spending millions on television ads trying to sway undecided voters, and each candidate seems to appeal to a slightly different constituency. Thompson is the experienced workhorse with the most political ties. Former U.S. Rep. Mark Neumann is the tea party favorite. Eric Hovde is the political newcomer who made millions as a businessman. And Assembly Speaker Jeff Fitzgerald has the most direct ties to Gov. Scott Walker, who survived a high-profile recall election just two months ago.
One theory is that Wisconsin is enduring a political hangover after that recall election, which Democrats organized as payback for Walker’s push to strip most public workers of nearly all their collective bargaining rights. And, the primary is a month sooner than it used to be to comply with federal law. The result: Only 20 percent turnout is predicted.
“Wisconsin has been the state of chaos and I think people needed a break after the recall election and just weren’t paying attention, unfortunately,” said Nancy Milholland, a co-organizer of the Racine Tea Party. “All of our time spent working and focusing on the recall election would have been directed at the United States Senate race. The recall sucked the air out of the room.”
The winner of the Republican race will take on Democratic U.S. Rep. Tammy Baldwin, who is uncontested. No Republican has held the seat since 1957 — the demagogic Sen. Joe McCarthy of “McCarthyism” infamy — but the GOP sees it as a pickup opportunity as they try to wrest majority control from the Democrats.




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