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How Dede got the nod

By: Michael Barone
Senior Political Analyst
10/21/09 1:48 PM EDT

How did the hapless Dede Scozzafava, whose travails my Examiner colleague Mark Tapscott has   chronicled, get the Republican nomination in the special election in New York’s 23rd congressional district? Blogger and tea party activist Michael Patrick Leahy has the scoop. It’s an interesting example of how local political stumbling can affect a race of some national significance. Any of the other eight candidates would apparently have received the Conservative party nomination and probably would have won the special without too much trouble. But in a district narrowly carried 51%-47% by George W. Bush in 2004 and 52%-47% by Barack Obama in 2008, Democrat Bill Owens now has a strong chance to capture the district for his party since many Republican voters, turned off by Scozzafava’s support of the Democratic stimulus package and the unions’ card check bill, will vote for Conservative nominee Doug Hoffman.   




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All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Mad Monica

Oct 21, 2009

This is the mindset that lost us Congress and the White House. If the same people who put this numbskull RINO up for this spot continue their brainless antics, not only will be lose again in 2010, but Obama will get another four years to rape the country. WAKE UP!!

 

DRB

Oct 21, 2009

Let me see if I understand this. On the first ballot, Duprey votes for the candidate who receives the most votes in her county. But he does not win (comes in third, apparently) so she switches to the candidate with the plurality on the second ballot. And for this she is vilified? What were they supposed to do, sit there and cast identical votes for ballot after ballot?

 


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