ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — President Barack Obama's decision in June
to appoint a Republican congressman to a Pentagon post has paid
dividends in November now that Democrats have gained the House seat by
capitalizing on a split between moderates and conservatives in the GOP.Lawyer
and retired Air Force Capt. Bill Owens won the special election Tuesday
in northern New York in which the Republican candidate withdrew over
the weekend under pressure from the party's right wing and GOP
heavyweights endorsed the Conservative Party nominee. Owens said
he hopes to bring the heavily Republican district together after the
contentious race left the GOP with one less seat in this bluest of
states. "Our challenges aren't Democratic or Republican. They're
not liberal or conservative. They are American challenges that we will
overcome with American resolve," Owens said in his victory speech. "The
only way that we can create jobs and attract economic development to
our communities is by bringing people of all parties together and
giving everyone a seat at the table." With 92 percent of the precincts reporting early Wednesday, Owens defeated businessman Doug Hoffman,
the Conservative Party candidate, 49 percent to 45 percent, after a
boost from unified labor efforts in the last days of the campaign. The GOP had represented the region for more than a century. Republican John McHugh vacated the seat to become Army secretary.
Owens
thanked one-time opponent Dierdre Scozzafava, a moderate Republican who
exited the race Saturday after Republicans criticized her support of
abortion rights and same-sex marriage and Hoffman surged past her in the polls. Scozzafava, an assemblywoman in the state legislature, picked up 6 percent of the vote herself. The
race received national attention, with some calling it a referendum on
Obama and others saying it could help Republicans focus their message
to attract more people to the party. Owens defeated Hoffman despite a voter registration edge of 45,000 for Republicans and big-name endorsements for Hoffman from former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, former Republican Sen. Fred Thompson and others. "This is only one fight in the battle, people," Hoffman
said before a gathering of supporters in Saranac Lake, N.Y., after
conceding the race. "Let's keep the fight going. Let's make sure our
voices are heard." Owens will be up for election for a full term next year. The race took several sharp curves leading up to Election Day. It started with Scozzafava in the lead while Hoffman was considered a spoiler at best. That gradually turned around, with Hoffman leading 41-36 in a Siena poll a day before the race. Despite the fervor that surrounded Hoffman
in the final week of the campaign, Owens managed to appeal to the
voters with his talk of job creation and the need for more federal
support for Fort Drum and farmers. "I don't believe the vast
majority of voters in the 23rd District — be they Democrats or
Republicans or independents — are looking at this as a referendum on
Barack Obama or as a referendum on the Republican Party or the
Democratic Party or Rush Limbaugh or any of that," he said. "I think
the vast majority of voters in the 23rd are saying, 'We had us a great
congressman in Congressman McHugh. Which of these candidates can do a
better job representing me in Washington?'"
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