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Hackett, a Marine reservist who returned from Iraq in March, is running in an August 2 special election to replace Republican Rob Portman, the former congressman from Ohio’s 2nd District who recently became President Bush’s trade representative.
In many respects, Hackett is a Democrat in the John Edwards mold. A tall 43-year-old trial lawyer who looks even younger, Hackett is an economic populist and a centrist on social issues. Though he is pro-choice, Hackett bluntly calls abortion “a bad thing.” While that may leave some Democrats ambivalent, he seems to have won more than a few converts in Anderson.
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Though the 2nd District is deep red -- the GOP’s Portman held it for 12 years and always won at least two-thirds of the vote -- local Democratic Party officials believe Hackett has a shot. And with Republicans stumbling both nationally and in Ohio, a Hackett victory could be hugely galvanizing in next year’s elections.
Hackett’s race is the first federal election since November, the first opportunity for Democrats to prove that they can run hard in red states. Given the stakes, you might think that the national party would have been pouring resources into the race. You would be wrong.
As of early July, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC), which gives money to House candidates, had offered none to Hackett’s campaign, according to local party officials. Not until July 12, nearly a month after Hackett decisively won the Democratic primary, did the DCCC put a notice on its blog asking readers to contribute to his campaign. Only after an outpouring of calls from local party activists, and with just three weeks remaining in the race, did the DCCC reportedly commit its own resources to the campaign. When asked about the Hackett race, DCCC spokeswoman Sarah Feinberg would not comment.
“We keep hearing that they’re going to be helpful, but it’s been frustrating,” says Tim Burke, chair of the Democratic Party in Hamilton County, which includes Cincinnati, Anderson, and a large slice of the 2nd District.
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