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    Mixed showings for GOP veterans in Fla., Wis.

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Two longtime Republicans, former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson and Rep. John Mica of Florida, turned back conservative challengers in primaries on Tuesday while 12-term Rep. Cliff Stearns of Florida was trailing tea party challenger Ted Yoho, a veterinarian and political novice.

    Yoho's strong showing was the surprise of the night as four states held primaries, including Connecticut and Minnesota. He was ahead of Stearns by less than 900 votes, complete but unofficial primary results showed.

    Yoho's anti-incumbent campaign was boosted by a television ad with actors dressed as politicians in suits eating from a trough alongside pigs and throwing mud at each other.

    Stearns, who is chairman of an investigations subcommittee for the House Energy and Commerce Committee, has led high-profile probes of the failed California solar energy company Solyndra as well as Planned Parenthood.

    Thompson turned back a trio of challengers to win Wisconsin's Republican Senate primary, setting up a general election race against Democratic Rep. Tammy Baldwin for retiring Democratic Sen. Herb Kohl's seat. The GOP hasn't held it since 1957.

    Thompson's win, as an establishment Republican derided by rivals as not conservative enough, was a disappointment for tea party forces and other conservative activists hoping to add to big wins earlier this year in the Indiana and Texas GOP Senate primaries. Tea party candidates scored major gains in the 2010 congressional races, but they've had mixed success since then.

    The win marked the first step in a political comeback for Thompson, 70, a former Cabinet secretary who hasn't been on the ballot since 1998.

    He beat former U.S. Rep. Mark Neumann, businessman and political newcomer Eric Hovde, who spent at least $4 million on the race, and state Assembly Speaker Jeff Fitzgerald. Neumann had support from tea party forces as well as the anti-tax group Club for Growth.

    Thompson's challengers cast themselves as closer than Thompson to today's more conservative GOP.

    Wisconsin Republicans hope they can build momentum from GOP Gov. Scott Walker's recall win in June and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney's decision to tap native son Rep. Paul Ryan as his running mate. The GOP sees the Senate race in Wisconsin as a pickup opportunity as they try to gain majority control from the Democrats.

    Thompson enjoyed the most name recognition statewide as a governor for 14 years who was first elected to political office in 1966. He got a late boost from Ryan, who praised Thompson's record as governor during a rally in Wisconsin on Sunday. Ryan did not mention Thompson's rivals. Thompson aired a radio ad on Monday featuring Ryan's comments.

    In Florida, Mica, a 10-term congressman who wields considerable clout as the chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, is expected to win in November in his Republican-leaning district. Adams fell short despite backing from 2008 GOP vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin.

    Mica and Adams landed in the same central Florida district due to redistricting, and the result was a nasty member-versus-member primary.

    The Florida contest was a prime example of the sharp split in the Republican Party this election season between grass-roots conservatives and the GOP's establishment candidates.

    Mica overcame criticism by Adams that the big-spending ways of longtime lawmakers and Washington insiders like him have fueled the nation's soaring debt, a charge that echoes the deep divisions in the GOP. The two tangled over spending for pet projects and who's more conservative.

    Also in Florida, Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson will face Republican Connie Mack IV in November after each won handily in their respective party primaries.

    In Connecticut, wealthy former wrestling executive Linda McMahon, the GOP's endorsed candidate, defeated former Rep. Christopher Shays in the Senate primary. Sen. Joe Lieberman, an independent, is retiring.

    Shays, a moderate who had represented a district anchored by Greenwich and other wealthy suburbs outside New York City since 1987, lost his seat in 2008. He had hoped his Washington experience could blunt McMahon's wealth and official party support.

    McMahon spent about $50 million of her own money in her failed 2010 Senate race. It was the largest amount of money spent on any campaign in state history, as well as the largest amount per vote nationwide. She outspent Shays and attacked him as a career politician.

    In Connecticut's Democratic Senate primary, Rep. Chris Murphy, who was the party's endorsed candidate, beat former Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz. Looking past Shays, McMahon has already aired an attack ad against Murphy.

     

    127 comments

    • ddawg  •  Madison, Wisconsin  •  1 day 1 hr ago
      A sign of the times (sadly) in our country. Eric Hovde spent $5 million (the article is wrong) of his own money and almost bought (I mean won) the election.
      • Darcy 23 hrs ago
        @joseph: "With what Bush and the Republicans spent for the previous eight years to cause the economic by 2007"

        So they spent money on two wars and gave the people tax breaks that isn't what caused the housing crash and the risky behavior of our banks... You might want to go back further...
      • Joseph 23 hrs ago
        My ignorance, Hmmm, have checked all my facts and figures, so your reference to my ignorance has no meaning. As for your statement that "no one person is to blame", I agree, they are all to blame, including all of us who did or did not vote for them, oops that is everybody, even the pea sorters. The focus should not be on what has been done, has been done. It instead should be on a way to get us out of the mess we are in, because at this time there has been so much damage from the past, that it will take many more years of our futur to recover to at least even. That is where the focus should be.
      • Darcy 23 hrs ago
        Don't have to sell me on it...
    • rayD8  •  1 day 0 hrs ago
      She spent $50,000,000 of her own dollars to try and get a $175,000 a year job position.
      hmmmmmmm..... I wonder why ?
      • Big Woody 1 day 0 hrs ago
        Because she can. Why would anybody buy a $110,000 Mercedes when they can take a bus for a dollar? The voters must of liked what she had to say. So it was money well spent. I wonder if she will donate her pay and benifits like so many others do?
      • Navy60 1 day 0 hrs ago
        She wanted the congressional health care plan and retirement package. It's priceless compared to what we working stiffs get.
      • PLD 1 day 0 hrs ago
        She's crazy.
    • Dave D  •  1 day 0 hrs ago
      wow, old people hate eliminating medicare...who would have guessed?
      • Chris 23 hrs ago
        Democrats claim that their Medicare cuts won't effect patient care, but I'm not sure that's actually been checked.
      • Big Woody 1 day 0 hrs ago
        Thanks Barnone. I am 66 and I noticed Obama's concern for us too. $700,000,000,000 That's a lot of Medicare.........GONE
      • Baroke 1 day 0 hrs ago
        700 billion in cuts to medicare-- thanks Obama.
    • ub40  •  23 hrs ago
      Hey all you GOPeer's out there...Enjoy your vouchers, look for them in the Sunday paper,
      Good from Wed. thru Sat. only.
    • ub40  •  23 hrs ago
      Mitt can say "Cheesy Grits" in french.
    • Dean  •  1 day 0 hrs ago
      The perfect mix for a waffle recipe...
    • Common Sense  •  1 day 0 hrs ago
      Lots of Common Sense here. Yay America!
      • MICHAEL 1 day 0 hrs ago
        But I do think that there are a lot of delusional agend-driven psuedo-conservatives like Lynn out there. Oh, and Lynn, I'm a Vet, and you're full of runny brown mud.
      • Teddy 1 day 0 hrs ago
        Where? I'm still looking.
    • MuMar  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  1 day 1 hr ago
      Spectacle for the mob begins.
      THEY will do EVERYTHING to be elected to the government that they hate so much.
      Do not run morons.
      Let run those who believe in government and it's positive role in civilized society
      • MuMar 23 hrs ago
        Amen Balok.
        Now lets round up some/many wall street criminals, banksters, isursters,
        oilsters, and corrupted politicians, lock them up, execute a few when applicable
        and we are set for another 20-25 years.
        And remember corporations are people my friend
      • Balok 1 day 0 hrs ago
        The only positive roles that the government should have, are those specifically prescribed in the Constitution of the United States.
        Any additional roles are defined as usurpation of the powers delegated to the respective States, or to the People.
    • rick j  •  Richmond, Virginia  •  1 day 0 hrs ago
      Whats to understand vets see our selves as american citizens first! Not lifers!
    • SILAS  •  1 day 1 hr ago
      Mixed??? what a joke the AP has become.....
    • Grandma Loves Democracy  •  17 hrs ago
      Money talks, honesty walks.
      Can the sheep in the pea party repulsicans NOT READ? Do they not see that only the uber rich can now run for office and have a chance to win? Are they not capable of reading the large writing on the wall? If only the rich are running the country, do you really believe that they will do anything to help the other 99%? mittless and pittiless want to kill Social Security, Medicade, free public education and anything else that separates the former America [ that saw neighbors helping neighbors or even complete strangers] from the despot control of a bunch of people who will use any means necessary to keep/increase their billions.
      Do all these people who claim Obama has ridden up the debt REMEMBER that Clinton left a surplus in the budget which the little drunken bush turned around into a negative by spending $10 billion dollars for every child, woman and man ON THE PLANET? Most of the debt we now face is simple INTEREST on the loans drunken bush and elmer fudd-ney took out in CHINA?
      Do they really want to stop abortions worldwide? Then why do all their leaders send jobs and money to China, which has no problems with forcing a 7 month pregnant woman to have an abortion, making sure the wanted baby died?
      If they vote for a party that says "No insurance? Die", do they expect to be able to afford health insurance when they lose their full time job to the box store trickle down part-time workers only mentality? Do they want to have their children and grandchildren forced out of their schooling at age 9 so that they can get a menial, part time job?
      Do these pea party repulsican sheep ENJOY paying twice the tax rate as their uber rich masters? Or, as is probably true with mittless the fake Mormon and friends, do their masters even pay taxes on their American based earnings at all?
      Do they not see that any pea party repulsican attempt to help free, public, education is really an attempt to cyphon money from the public sector into the business controlled private sector? In other words, business people running education.
      Are they that stupid? Can we really try to educate stupid? Can you fix stupid or just spay and neuter them so that they can't have stupid children? Or, to benefit their children, can we take them away from their stupid parents and put them in group homes where American values such as honesty and integrety and hands on hard work are taught to them?
      I predict that if mittless and pittiless should win in the Fall, the Mayans end of the world in 2012 will indeed become a fact.
    • Dave  •  23 hrs ago
      It isn't like Romney has a chance.
    • Dave  •  1 day 0 hrs ago
      Overall we are seeing a turning away from the Tea Party.
      They are too radical and stop government from functioning.
    • Kurt  •  1 day 0 hrs ago
      Hopefully we can get the most extreme people from each party to go to washington. That way, the can be even more #$%$ up.
    • Republican Whip  •  Athens, Tennessee  •  1 day 0 hrs ago
      Ron Paul is a veteran,
      Obama, NO
    • Brisco  •  College Park, Maryland  •  1 day 0 hrs ago
      Who cares, republican republican, tea party republican, they all have only one agenda. You tell me what is it.
    • Dan  •  1 day 1 hr ago
      I'd like to sling some mud at the Koch brother pigs.
    • Michael G  •  Miami, Florida  •  1 day 0 hrs ago
      Nelson is all about big spending, don't need him anymore in Florida.
    • The moderate majority  •  New York, New York  •  1 day 0 hrs ago
      Usually what's bad for the Tea Party is good for the Republican party - and vice versa. Nice to see moderate Republicans taking back their party from the lunatics.
    • Sarah Palin  •  1 day 0 hrs ago
      Sounds like the death knell of the tea party.........
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