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Herseth
Sandlin promises 'common sense' third term
November 5, 2008 | By
Kevin Woster, Rapid City Journal
Playing
the cards of a moderate bipartisan Democrat, South
Dakota Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin dealt herself
two more years in the U.S. House of Representatives
on Tuesday with another overpowering win over
another Republican challenger.
With
about 80 percent of the vote in Tuesday night,
the incumbent Democrat was beating Rapid City
businessman Chris Lien 68 percent to 32 percent.
The margin was only slightly closer than her runaway
69 percent to 29 percent win over Republican Bruce
Whalen in 2006, when there also was a third-party
candidate in the race.
Democratic
supporters said the margins were a tribute to
Herseth Sandlin's ability to reach across party
lines and attract moderate Republicans and Independents,
a crucial attribute in a state where Republicans
still dominate in voter registration rolls.
"She's
got a lot of common sense, and it shows in the
way she represents South Dakota," Rapid City
lawyer Jim Leach said. "Most South Dakotans
are more interested in results than they are in
partisan politics. She is a representative of
South Dakota, not a representative of Democrats
or Republicans."
Herseth
Sandlin called her win "a great victory"
but also said she will continue with the kind
of bipartisan congressional work that South Dakota
voters expect.
"I
bring a healthy dose of South Dakota common sense
to Congress, of wanting to move forward rather
than have stalemates," she said. "I
think, clearly, that Republicans and Independents
are trusting me more, and I'm overcoming some
of the skepticism that perhaps some voters had
of me when I was first running."
Herseth
Sandlin lost her first congressional race to formidable
Republican Gov. Bill Janklow in 2002. But she
came back in a competitive campaign to beat Republican
Larry Diedrich in a special election in June 2004
for the seat after Janklow was convicted of vehicular
manslaughter. She beat Diedrich again in the fall
for her first full House term.
Herseth
Sandlin praised Lien for having the courage to
take on a demanding statewide campaign and run
it cleanly.
"I
appreciate the kind of campaign he ran, and that
the tone stayed positive and focused on the issues,"
she said.
Lien
said Tuesday night that it was the only kind of
campaign he knew how to run.
"I
was hoping to have a campaign that tried to differentiate
on the issues, one on one, across the state,"
he said. "It was tough. But I feel very proud
of the campaign we ran, and more importantly,
I feel very proud of the people who were a part
of it."
Pennington
County Republican Party Chairman Kevin Thom said
Lien should feel proud.
"I
thought he clearly ran a campaign like the man
he is," Thom said. "He's a good man,
a man of character. He took on a difficult challenge
and did everything that he could."
Contact
Kevin Woster at 394-8413 or kevin.woster@rapidcityjournal.com.
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