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To: Last Dakotan; fieldmarshaldj; AuH2ORepublican; Impy; GOPsterinMA; randita; Sun; LdSentinal
North Dakota is solidly Republican in the abstract. At the same time, voters there put a much higher premium of the candidates as individuals people than is the case elsewhere. Therefore, Democrats can definitely win if the Republican candidate makes a bad impression. Political historians will recall not only the unseating of Mark Andrews in 1986, but the landslide defeat of Congressman Tom Kleppe when he ran for the U.S. Senate back in 1970.

I know very little about any of the candidates running. North Dakota Freepers would be extremely helpful if they learned all they could about the candidates and gave us their input.

2 posted on 05/15/2012 4:37:36 PM PDT by Clintonfatigued (Obama and Company lied, the American economy died)
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To: Clintonfatigued

North Dakota voters need to remember that no matter what the Democrat candidate says about protecting oil drilling rights. Once this woman is elected she will march in lock-step with Pelosi’s environmental wacko agenda.


3 posted on 05/15/2012 4:43:16 PM PDT by wrcase
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To: Clintonfatigued; BillyBoy; Impy; AuH2ORepublican

I went and looked up info on that infamous 1970 Senate contest, which was actually a rematch of 1964. Tom Kleppe won his 2 House races by an unimpressively narrow margin (defeating freshman Democrat Rolland Redlin by less than 4,000 votes, 52-48% and in a rematch where he won by a plurality of 49% in 1968). Kleppe was wealthy and decided to wage a new style of campaign in 1970 by literally bombarding the airwaves on just how far-left Quentin Burdick was (Barone pointed out in the first edition of the Almanac of American politics that $32 or so would buy you a tv ad, and Kleppe dropped several hundred grand).

It ended up backfiring, but only because the voters couldn’t understand how that “nice” Burdick fella, longtime former Congressman Usher Burdick’s beloved son, was the ultraleft monster portrayed in Kleppe’s ads (’cept he was), and Kleppe lost by an even wider margin than his 1964 race. The fallout undoubtedly also harmed the GOP nominee, Robert McCarney, in the ND 2nd District (the seat Kleppe was vacating), as he lost to Democrat Arthur Link by about 500 votes (a 50-50% tie)).

To add to the strangeness, ANOTHER candidate named Kleppe (Russell Kleppe) ran as a 3rd party Conservative (he also ran in the 1968 race, almost costing Tom Kleppe the seat).


7 posted on 05/15/2012 6:03:00 PM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (If you like lying Socialist dirtbags, you'll love Slick Willard)
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