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To: Oral Roberts who wrote (348034)2/9/2010 12:44:53 PM
From: DMaA1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793745
 
Hey, what do you know about Sean Duffy? Sounds pretty good on paper:

Sean Sean Duffy end Obey’s reign?

Ashland County District Attorney Sean Duffy is among the 10 conservatives to watch in 2010, a Web-based political source says, ranking him with the likes of former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin and Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty.

By: Shelley Nelson, Superior Telegram

Sean Duffy shakes hands with a supporter during the grand opening of his campaign office in Ashland. Duffy is seeking the Republican nomination for Wisconsin’s 7th Congressional District. (Photo submitted by Chris DeRose)

Ashland County District Attorney Sean Duffy is among the 10 conservatives to watch in 2010, a Web-based political source says, ranking him with the likes of former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin and Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty.

Washington Independent, a subsidiary of the Center of Independent Media, ranked Duffy No. 3, one spot behind Pawlenty and three ahead of Palin as the 10 Republicans to watch in 2010.

Time magazine reported that Duffy could be among the GOP challengers to follow in the footsteps of Scott Brown, the first Republican elected to the U.S. Senate from Massachusetts in 32 years. The news magazine predicts Duffy could give Wisconsin Democrat Dave Obey, head of the powerful House Appropriations Committee, a run for his money if Duffy defeats Republican candidate Dan Mielke in the September primary race.

The Wall Street Journal also acknowledged that the 38-year-old Ashland prosecutor’s campaign challenging the “Goliath” is gaining traction as he seeks to defeat the congressman who has held the seat in Wisconsin’s Democratic-leaning 7th District longer than Duffy has been alive.

“Sean is getting traction because he’s talking common sense, fiscal responsibility and the need to leave job creation to Wisconsin’s small businesses, not government and bureaucracies,” said Craig Rosand, a teacher, supporter and chairman of the Douglas County Republican Party.

Duffy, who once played a part in MTV’s “The Real World,” launched his campaign in early July in his hometown of Hayward before a crowd of hundreds. Soon after, uncommon fundraising success started to create a light buzz about the Republican’s campaign. By the end of 2009, Duffy had raised $286,358 for his campaign, run largely with the help of his wife, Rachel, at his kitchen table. Duffy opened his campaign office in Ashland last week.

“People thought there was something different about our race, not only in Wisconsin but around the country,” Duffy said. “I never anticipated this would happen. I think our hard work is paying off.”

Duffy has raised less than his Republican opponent, but what stands out is where the money is coming from — farmers, teachers, lawyers, doctors, retirees and homemakers. More than 330 individual donations make up about 97 percent of the contributions reported to the Federal Election Commission at the end of December. Only 22 individual contributions — less than 10 percent in actual donations — came from outside Wisconsin. Three percent came from PAC funding: three donations totaling $8,000.

In contrast, about 89 percent of Mielke’s campaign funding reported came from the candidate, $348,050 in-kind contributions. About 11 percent of the $399,457 reported came from individual contributions, about 41 contributions, and PACs have provided no funding.

Though Obey has raised more money through individual contributions, those account for only 40 percent of Obey’s total $902,665 in campaign funds reported in the quarter ending Dec. 31. About 67 percent of actual campaign dollars from individual contributions for Obey came from outside Wisconsin. About 59 percent came from PACs, only 14 of which — $22,400 — came from organizations in Wisconsin, none in the 7th District, according to data reported to the Federal Elections Commission.

Duffy, a father of five with his sixth child on the way in April, said he gets out to public venues every chance he gets.

“I’m getting very positive feedback so far,” Duffy said. He said while there is little doubt that there are people loyal to Obey, he’s finding younger people don’t necessarily share in that loyalty.

“I think people are open to a new candidate with new ideas, and I think that’s what we’re experiencing,” Duffy said. “One of our biggest differences is the economy and jobs, and Dave and I have stark differences on how you stimulate the economy. ... I don’t think borrowing and spending through government is the way to grow the economy. I believe that the way the economy grows is through the hard work of individuals in the community. It’s going to come from the sweat of risk-takers and entrepreneurs and hard workers.”

He said businesses are shell-shocked and concerned about pending regulations and tax increases, making them resistant to hiring when they don’t know what their costs are going to be.

“I think we need a new generation of leaders that aren’t like [President] Obama — that aren’t like [George W.] Bush — that can live within our means in government,” Duffy said.



To: Oral Roberts who wrote (348034)2/9/2010 12:46:06 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793745
 
Insanity.

It's a major fight in a lot of communities.

BYW, you would think that states that are over-populated with deer would have open seasons until the deer decreased to where they weren't a problem. But "Noooooo!"

lindybill@woodsmansparethattree.com