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The Washington Times Online Edition

Nevada GOP Senate candidates feel ‘tea party’s‘ power

** FILE ** Former state Assemblywoman Sharron Angle (center), a GOP Senate candidate, meets with voters at a home in Pahrump, Nev., in May. Mrs. Angle, a "tea party" conservative, is in the lead to face Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Democrat, in this fall's general election.** FILE ** Former state Assemblywoman Sharron Angle (center), a GOP Senate candidate, meets with voters at a home in Pahrump, Nev., in May. Mrs. Angle, a “tea party” conservative, is in the lead to face Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Democrat, in this fall’s general election.

The apparent power of the “tea party” is showing itself again, this time in Nevada where Sharron Angle has battled to the lead in another poll.

According to a Mason-Dixon poll released Sunday, two days before the primary that will determine which Republican will take on Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid this fall, the former state assembly minority whip is the favored choice of 32 percent of Nevada Republicans, eight points ahead of businessman Danny Tarkanian at 24 percent.

Mrs. Angle, a favorite of both the Tea Party Express and the fiscally conservative Club for Growth, also is now nine points ahead of Sue Lowden, a Las Vegas casino executive who is the Republican establishment’s pick for the U.S. Senate nomination. The survey of 500 likely Republican primary voters was taken from June 1 to June 3 and has an error margin of 4.5 percentage points.

The same poll taken in early April had Mrs. Lowden, the one-time state party chairman, leading the pack as the choice of 45 percent of respondents. Mrs. Angle barely registered with a mere 5 percent, far behind Mrs. Lowden and Mr. Tarkanian. But that was before the Tea Party Express got behind Mrs. Angle.

Long-time California Republican consultant Sal Russo founded a political action committee that in turn spawned the Tea Party Express, one of many organizations and groups around the country identify themselves as part of the tea-party movement.

The campaign organizations of the top three contenders have been very sensitive about both the embrace of any tea-party identified group as well as the findings of each new poll, fearing the impact on the respective candidate’s momentum.

Tarkanian pollster James Fisfis has questioned the Mason-Dixon poll’s methodology, and Mrs. Lowden’s campaign and supporters publicly pooh-poohed the reliability and accuracy last week of a Suffolk University poll that also had Mrs. Angle jumping into the lead and Mrs. Lowden sinking to third place.

Mrs. Lowden’s campaign and supporters publicly pooh-poohed the reliability and accuracy last week of a Suffolk University poll that had Mrs. Angle jumping into the lead and Mrs. Lowden sinking to third place.

That Suffolk poll also showed Mrs. Angle with the greatest intensity of support of the three top candidates, with more of her voters saying they would not consider switching to another candidate under any circumstances when they go into the voting booth.

Both Mrs. Angle and Mrs. Lowden enjoy out-of-state support from prominent Republicans.
“Most view Lowden as the strongest candidate against Reid and she has a solid conservative voting record,” Michigan Republican National Committee member Sault Anuzis told The Washington Times.

Lowden campaign spokeswoman Heidi Smith described Mr. Anuzis as a member of the Lowden “kitchen cabinet” of advisers.

But the latest poll shows Republican respondents think Mr. Tarkanian stands a bit better chance than Mrs. Angle of knocking off Mr. Reid in November.

Mr. Tarkanian, who owns a real-estate business, acknowledged that unlike his two top rivals, he has no legislative voting record. “If people are looking for a political record, I am the last person in race to they will vote for — but rhe first if they are looking for a strong fiscal conservative,” he told The Times.

Mr. Tarkanian said Mrs. Lowden “is not a genuine conservative — she supported the first bailout when George W. Bush was president. If anybody should drop out of this race, it should be Sue. I would rather lose to Sharron than to Sue.”

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About the Author
Ralph Z. Hallow

Ralph Z. Hallow

Chief political writer Ralph Z. Hallow served on the Chicago Tribune, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Washington Times editorial boards, was Ford Foundation Fellow in Urban Journalism at Northwestern University, resident at Columbia University Editorial-Page Editors Seminar and has filed from Berlin, Bonn, London, Paris, Geneva, Vienna, Amman, Beirut, Cairo, Damascus, Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, Belgrade, Bucharest, Panama and Guatemala.

 

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