Alaska's Lisa Murkowski Should Have Been Ousted Earlier, But Joe Miller Finally Did It With Tea Party Help.
It's another Tea Party win as Alaska's Murkowski concedes
Sean Cockerham
ANCHORAGE — Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski late Tuesday conceded the Republican primary election to Joe Miller, the Tea-Party backed challenger who maintained his Election Day lead after thousands of additional absentee and other ballots were counted through the day.
“We know that we have outstanding votes to count in the primary but based on where we are right now I don’t see a scenario where the primary will turn out in my favor. And that is a reality that is before me at this time,” Murkowski said in a news conference broadcast live over statewide television from her campaign headquarters in Anchorage.
Murkowski said she shared the news with Miller, but she did not endorse him in her concession speech. She took no questions. Miller was in Fairbanks on Wednesday. He did not make an immediate public statement on his victory. Campaign spokesman Randy DeSoto told the Associated Press, “In the end, we’re, of course, just happy to hear she conceded, that it would not end up in a long recount or that sort of thing.
Miller will now face Democrat Scott McAdams, the mayor of Sitka, in the November general election.
The race was bitter down to the end. Miller in recent days has alleged that the Murkowski side was trying to steal the election by possibly tampering with votes. Murkowski called him paranoid.
Murkowski’s concession came after a day of counting just over 17,000 absentee and questioned ballots. Nearly 12,000 of them were from Republican voters, who had the potential to change the Miller-Murkowski race. But when the day was done, she had only picked up 38 votes. Additional absentee and question ballots will be counted on Friday and next week.
Murkowski gave her concession speech surrounded by her campaign volunteers. Many of them were in tears.
“I’m so proud of the campaign we conducted. It was honest it was upright, it was energetic. It was what campaigning in Alaska should be. We stayed focused on the issues, we stayed on the high road,” Murkowski said
Miller, a 43-year-old Yale-educated lawyer, West Point graduate and Gulf War veteran, won with the help of $600,000 spent by the California-based Tea Party Express. The Tea Party Group became interested in Miller after former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin endorsed him.
After the concession, Palin posted a congratulatory message to Miller on Twitter: “Do you believe in miracles?! ..Thank you for your service, Sen. Murkowski. On to November!
“We congratulate Joe Miller on winning the political shocker of the year. Joe Miller’s campaign based on a constitutional conservative platform resonated with the state’s Republican primary voters and should serve as a wake up call to the political establishments of both parties,” Tea Party Express Chair Amy Kremer said in a written statement. “We also thank and congratulate Gov. Sarah Palin who first called our attention to this race. She was right in her proclamation that Joe Miller was a first-rate candidate who offered a vision for the future of this country and how to return America to the right track.”
Miller and the Tea Party Express advertised heavily right before the election, with ads attacking Murkowski as a “liberal” who too often sided with the Democrats in Congress. Murkowski argued to voters that her seniority and position in the Senate is good for Alaska. She’s a member of the powerful Appropriations Committee and the most senior Republican on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.
Murkowski was stunned after Miller ended last Tuesday’s Election Day balloting with a 1,668 vote lead. Murkowski said the day after the election that “our (poll) numbers all throughout have not only been strong but really overwhelmingly strong,” she said. “Clearly there was a shift, whether it was kind of the anti-incumbency feedback that you get in the Lower 48, I don’t know yet.”
Murkowski was a state legislator when she was appointed by her father, Frank Murkowski, in 2002 to the U.S. Senate seat he was giving up to become governor. Miller and the Tea Party Express called the Murkowskis a royal dynasty that had to go.
Read more: http://www.kentucky.com/2010/08/31/1415319/alaska-absentee-count-looks-like.html#ixzz0yGuvZyql
Labels: GOP, Politics, Republicanism
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