GOP Forced to Fight for Rebel Chafee
His Challenger in the Primary May Be Too Conservative to Win R.I.
By Shailagh Murray
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, September 10, 2006; Page A04
WARWICK, R.I. -- Republican Sen. Lincoln D. Chafee disagrees with his party on the Iraq war, tax cuts and a host of other issues. But national GOP leaders are flooding this tiny state with manpower and money to save the rebel senator, fearing that his loss in a primary could cost Republicans control of the Senate in November.
Party leaders believe that if Chafee loses to Cranston Mayor Stephen Laffey in Tuesday's election, they will have little chance of keeping the seat because many see Laffey as too conservative in Democratic Rhode Island to prevail against Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse.
If Chafee falls, he will be the second sitting senator to lose a primary this year. But unlike Democrat Joseph I. Lieberman in Connecticut, whose defeat is attributed to his outspoken support for the war, Chafee's problems have little to do with where he stands on issues. Rather, they are rooted in his contemplative, consensus-building style, an aberration in the current bitterly partisan climate.
By contrast, Laffey has an assertive, tough personality. He contends that Chafee's independence has made him irrelevant, and that his unpredictable voting patterns suggest a political identity crisis, as if the senator can't make up his mind. Most political observers in Rhode Island gave Laffey the edge as of late last week, but polling has been erratic, and both sides say the outcome is impossible to predict.
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/09/AR2006090900830.html