5 primaries worth watching on Tuesday

By Paul Steinhauser, CNN Political Editor
updated 8:41 AM EDT, Tue June 24, 2014



Mississippi family feud




STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • A bitter primary battle in Mississippi will be settled in runoff
  • New York's Charlie Rangel running his last campaign after four decades in House
  • Senate race in Oklahoma could be headed for runoff
  • Tom Tancredo's run for governor in Colorado could hurt fellow Republicans in November



Washington (CNN) -- It's judgment day for two of the longest-serving members of Congress, both of whom are fighting for their political lives.
The contests involving Republican Sen. Thad Cochran of Mississippi and Democratic Rep. Charlie Rangel of New York -- who have each served more than four decades on Capitol Hill -- are the marquee matchups Tuesday as seven states from the East Coast to the Mountain West hold primaries.
Also in the spotlight: a high-profile tea party vs. establishment Republican contest in the GOP Senate primary in Oklahoma; the Republican gubernatorial primary in Colorado, where a controversial and outspoken former congressman is one of the frontrunners; and the GOP lieutenant governor's runoff in South Carolina, where a 2014 contest may have 2016 implications.
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Here are five contests to watch on this busy primary day:
1. Bitter battle in Mississippi: Take a six-term Republican senator fighting for another six years in Congress and a tea party-backed state senator who's challenging him. Mix in nasty attacks on both sides, abizarre incident involving the incumbent's nursing home-bound wife, tons of cash by outside groups and lots of big names from the world of politics and even sports and entertainment parachuting onto the campaign trail, and you've got the GOP Senate primary runoff in Mississippi.
State Sen. Chris McDaniel narrowly edged out Cochran in the primary three weeks ago, but with neither man cracking 50% (there was a third Republican candidate on the ballot who grabbed 1.5% of the vote), the contest moved on to a runoff.
Cochran, who's touting his seniority in the Senate and his ability bring in the federal bucks, is backed by much of the state's GOP establishment, many national Republicans and outside groups such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which traditionally supports mainstream Republicans. His backers argue a McDaniel victory in the primary could put a very safe GOP seat in play in November's general election.
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But tea party groups and anti-establishment Republicans see Cochran as the problem, and his comments back in February, when told reporters that "the tea party is something I don't really know a lot about," didn't do him any favors.
Several tea party and anti-establishment groups have run ads backing McDaniel or helped with get-out-the-vote efforts in support of the candidate.
In the runoff campaign's closing days, big names parachuted into the state. Former Sen. Rick Santorum, a 2012 GOP presidential candidate who may run again in 2016, campaigned with McDaniel, and Sen. John McCain of Arizona, the 2008 Republican presidential nominee, hit the trail in support of Cochran.
But wait, there's more: The race also turned into a battle of celebrities.
Longtime game show host Chuck Woolery -- famous for hosting "The Dating Game" and "Love Connection" -- headlined a bus tourorganized by the Tea Party Express in support of McDaniel. Woolery's appearance came just a couple of days after pro football great Brett Favre, a Mississippi native, starred in a U.S. Chamber of Commerce TV ad for Cochran.
McDaniel's supporters say House Majority Leader Eric Cantor's defeat two weeks ago in his primary in Virginia to a little-known and underfunded tea party candidate is giving the challenger's supporters even more energy. The big question is whether Cochran can expand the electorate by persuading black Democrats to come out and vote for him.

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2. Rangel's last run: Win or lose, Rep. Charlie Rangelof New York says this is his last campaign. The Korean War veteran, who was first elected to the House of Representatives 44 years ago, is trying keep from getting pushed out office by his main primary challenger, state Sen. Adriano Espaillat, who came within around 1,100 votes of ousting Rangel in the Democratic primary two years ago.
Rangel, the former chairman of the powerful tax-writing Ways and Means Committee, was forced to step down from his post in 2010 and later that year he was censured by the House for ethics violations.
Just as damaging for Rangel was the redrawing of New York's 13th Congressional District after the 2010 election, from a Harlem-based, African-American-dominated district to one that now has a Hispanic majority, thanks to shedding parts of Harlem and adding other neighborhoods in northern Manhattan and parts of the Bronx.
Rangel, one of the best-known politicians in the country, remains confident.
"If you had a race horse that won 43 races, brings in the money, but the horse is old and experienced and knows the track -- what would you do?" the 84-year-old Rangel asked reporters this past weekend. "Would you send him to the glue factory? Hell no."
Espaillat says Rangel is emblematic of all that ills Congress.
"This is a coalition of victory that is completely convinced that Washington is broken and that at the center of that dysfunction is a gentleman called Charles Rangel," he said Saturday.
Rangel's confidence was buoyed by a nonpartisan poll last week that indicated he held a 13-point lead over Espaillat, who if elected in November would become the first member of Congress born in the Dominican Republic.
But some political analysts say it's difficult to poll in the district and feel the race is much closer. Plus, Rangel suffered the embarrassment of failing to win endorsements from President Barack Obama and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio.
"If Rangel were he to be defeated, it would be a huge national story, but not a shocking one like Eric Cantor's loss, since Rangel barely escaped defeat two years ago," Lee Miringoff, director of the Marist Institute for Public Opinion, told CNN.
3. A run to the right in Oklahoma: Sen. Tom Coburn's announcement in January that he would step down at the end of the year -- with two years left in his term -- sparked a competitive primary to replace the conservative senator. There are seven candidates in the race, but the contest is really a battle between the two frontrunners: Rep. James Lankford and former state House Speaker T.W. Shannon.
For a party looking for more diversity, the 36-year old Shannon, who was the youngest speaker ever of the Oklahoma House, is an attractive choice. He's part Native American and African-American. He's been backed by such tea party heroes as Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin. And some national anti-establishment organizations have pumped big bucks into the race in support of Shannon.
But many local tea party groups are keeping their distance, with some questioning Shannon's outsider credentials. In fact, Shannon's no stranger to politics. He worked for Oklahoma Republican Rep. Tom Cole and former congressman J.C. Watts before launching his own political career.
Lankford, who has risen through the ranks to become Republican Policy Committee Chairman -- the fifth-ranking House Republican -- in just two terms in Congress, is criticized by many on the right for his vote to raise the debt ceiling. But labeling the Baptist minister with strong social conservative backing as an establishment candidate is a hard case to make.
"The Oklahoma primary doesn't fit neatly into the establishment vs. anti-establishment box. It's very different than some of the other high-profile races where you had a challenger taking on an incumbent," Nathan Gonzales, deputy editor of the nonpartisan Rothenberg Political Report, told CNN. "The political insider in Washington may not look like the political insider in Oklahoma."
The most recent polling in the contest gave Lankford the slight edge over Shannon. But with former state Sen. Randy Brogdon at 3%, and the four other candidates grabbing about 2% support between them, this race could be headed to an August 26 runoff.
4. Controversial figure: Colorado's Tom Tancredo is making noise once again and giving fellow Republicans headaches. The former congressman, known for his hardline stance against illegal immigration, is running for his state's GOP gubernatorial nomination, in the hopes of facing off in November against Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper.
Tancredo, who touted his immigration stance during a short run in the 2008 Republican presidential campaign, briefly bolted from the GOP to run for governor in 2010 as a third-party candidate, coming in second to Hinckenlooper and ahead of the Republican nominee.
Tancredo will face off Tuesday against former U.S. Rep. Bob Beauprez, a late entry into the race who has establishment backing. Also running are Colorado Secretary of State Scott Gessler and former state Sen. Mike Kopp.
What makes this contest so important is that Republicans see Hickenlooper and Democratic Sen. Mark Udall, who's also up for re-election this year, as vulnerable.
But here's the problem: Some GOP strategists to whom CNN spoke worry that a Tancredo victory in the primary could damage their chances of ousting Hickenlooper and could hurt the rest of the Republican ticket come November. They say that with Tancredo as the nominee, Rep. Cory Gardner's chances of defeating Udall get tougher.
It appears Democrats see Tancredo as the easier candidate to beat in the midterms. An outside group with Democratic connections went up with ads slamming Tancredo for his Obamacare attacks, which could help the candidate with conservative primary voters. And another spot by the group accused Beauprez of supporting earmarks, which could hurt him with primary voters.
5. 2014 primary with 2016 implications: South Carolina Republicans are headed to the polls for a second time this month to vote for their party's nominee for lieutenant governor.
The race pits former state Attorney General Henry McMaster, who's also a former Palmetto State GOP party leader, against businessman Mike Campbell, the son of the late Carroll Campbell, a popular Republican governor.
But what makes this race interesting to a national audience is that two former Republican presidential candidates who may run for the White House again in 2016 are taking sides in this showdown. In the closing days of the runoff campaign, former Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania stumped with McMaster while former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee campaigned for Campbell.
Campbell was South Carolina chairmain of Huckabee's 2008 presidential campaign, and now Huckabee is returning the favor. Campbell took Huckabee on a traditional fly-in through the states three top media markets -- Greenville/Spartanburg, Columbia and Charleston -- designed to gain saturation statewide news coverage. McMaster focused Santorum's visit on the conservative and voter-rich Upstate.
With South Carolina traditionally holding the first Southern primary in the race for the White House, there's more than just bragging rights on the line.
"Both McMaster and Campbell have strong brand names in South Carolina politics, and the office of lieutenant governor is part time with plenty of time to devote to political organizing," said GOP consultant Bruce Haynes, a South Carolina native. "The Campbell brand is gold, and Huckabee already has a strong relationship with the family. McMaster is a former attorney general and S.C. GOP chair, well-known and liked in establishment party circles with a deep network of relationships that could be very attractive to Santorum in 2016,"
"Wednesday morning, either Huckabee or Santorum will come out of the runoff with a statewide winner who owes them a favor and has both the time and the network to pay that favor back in 2016," Haynes added.

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