Gingrich: Akin Win Could Rebuke GOP Establishment

Gingrich: Akin Win Could Rebuke GOP Establishment

By DAVID A. LIEB and JIM SALTER
Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo.
Still mourning the death of her mother, Democratic Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill returned to campaigning Wednesday as Republican challenger Todd Akin gained a dual boost from a former presidential hopeful and a political group that had aided one his rivals in the GOP primary.

Former Republican presidential hopeful Newt Gingrich led a rally for Akin in Kansas City, urging supporters to send a powerful signal to “the moneyed Republican establishment” that _ led by GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney _ abandoned Akin after an August remark about “legitimate rape.”

Yet there were fresh signs that Akin was regaining GOP support. The Now or Never Political Action Committee, which backed an Akin rival in the GOP primary, announced Wednesday that it was buying $800,000 of TV ads urging Romney supporters to also vote for Akin on Tuesday.

Missouri polls have consistently shown Romney leading Democratic President Barack Obama, who narrowly lost the state four years ago. Some polls also have shown a tightened Missouri Senate race, as Akin has attempted to rebound from an Aug. 19 TV interview in which he said women’s bodies have ways of avoiding pregnancy after “legitimate rape.”

McCaskil had canceled most of her campaign events during the past week to spend time with her ailing mother, who died Monday. She returned to campaigning Wednesday with an event outside a St. Louis County elementary school.

McCaskill used the school setting to criticize Akin’s opposition to the federally funded school lunch program, which began during the administration of President Harry Truman, a Missouri native. Akin has suggested states could better handle the program.

At the rally in Kansas City, Akin suggested it is McCaskill who was out of touch with most Missourians in supporting Obama’s federal stimulus act and health care law. He noted that 71 percent of Missouri voters approved a 2010 ballot measure rejecting a key provision in the health care law.

Akin also emphasized that low-income housing firms affiliated with McCaskill’s husband, Joseph Shepard, have received tens of millions of dollars of federal subsidies. That’s “your taxpayer dollars that are going to her family business,” Akin said Wednesday.

Cheers mixed with jeers as Akin and Gringrich spoke at Kansas City’s historic Union Station to a crowd that included about 100 supporters and nearly as many protesters, many carrying signs that referenced Akin’s “legitimate rape” remark. The event highlighted the intensity of a campaign that has remained in the national spotlight and could help determine party control of the U.S. Senate.

Republicans need a net gain of four Senate seats in Tuesday’s election _ or just three, if Romney defeats Obama and gives a GOP vice president the power to break tie votes in the Senate _ to retake the chamber’s majority from Democrats.

Winning the majority was the reason cited by the Now or Never PAC for its new ad. The group had backed Akin rival Sarah Steelman in the Aug. 7 GOP primary.

Among the protesters at Wednesday’s rally in Kansas City was Neil Harris, a retired college teacher and McCaskill supporter who held a sign saying, “Todd and Newt (equals) Hypocritical Mass.” Harris referred to Akin as “an idiot.”

Akin supporter Kiley Chaney, a union bricklayer who drove an hour from rural Garden City to attend the rally, acknowledged that Akin had “made some blunders in the campaign.” But Chaney said he was more concerned with McCaskill’s ties to Obama and the large national debt.

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Salter reported from St. Louis.

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