Tight race? Avoid tea party label on stump
By Kate Nocero, posted on Politico,10/16/12 11:44 PM EDT
After fending off a tea party challenge in 2010, Rep. Denny Rehberg quickly decided to sign up for the movement: He joined the Tea Party Caucus as soon as he returned to the House.
But two years later, Rehberg wants a Senate seat, and in the 2012 version of Montana politics, Rehberg is Mr. Bipartisan. He touts his vote against the Paul Ryan budget; talks up his work with a New England liberal, Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.); and has embraced expansion of a childrens health program.
He doesnt mention his tea party membership.
Rehberg isnt unique in looking for some distance from the diminished tea party brand. In close Senate and House races across the country, lawmakers who ran toward the movement in 2010 wont ascribe the tea party label to themselves or, like Rehberg, avoid talking about it all together.
Thats not to say grass-roots tea party supporters have disappeared; they are still there ready to work for Republican candidates. And the movement remains a strong force in Republican primary politics, forcing many candidates rightward in their positions. Still, some activists acknowledge that some candidates cant be quite as open about their tea party connections in tight races this year.
Eric Olsen, the co-founder of one of Montanas leading tea party groups, Montana Shrugged, said they still know Rehberg is on their side, but they also realize Montanas sole congressman has to appeal to independents and some Democrats to win a Senate seat that could determine control of the upper chamber.
We talk with Denny often, and he still supports us; he still appreciates us; hes completely changed the way hes voted since we started working with him, Olsen said. Hes much more conservative now. We have a good voting bloc in the state but not enough to ensure him a win, so we get that hes doing what he needs to do to win others over.
The tea party had a profound impact on House races around the country in 2010 and helped sweep in 87 freshmen who ran on an uncompromising platform to change the way Washington does business.
But now in 2012, with the congressional approval rating hovering around 10 percent, members in competitive races arent exactly touting their support from tea party groups.
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