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Ga.Republican Senate hopefuls cite differences

By The Associated Press
Posted 8:09AM on Tuesday 28th January 2014 ( 10 years ago )
ATLANTA (AP) - Georgia's Republican U.S. Senate candidates take similar if not the same positions on most of the matters that tie Congress in knots.

But six of the GOP hopefuls used a Monday forum sponsored by the Georgia Municipal Association to insist that their differences matter, even if it's not obvious when they talk about President Barack Obama's health care overhaul, the Democratic Senate's immigration bill or most anything to do with regulations and the federal budget.

Former Secretary of State Karen Handel, mindful of the audience full of municipal leaders from around the state, emphasized her time on the Fulton County Commission. She said he helped cut spending and worked with local leaders who successfully pushed to create new municipalities in the county.

Eugene Yu pointed to his business success after emigrating from Korea and insisted, repeatedly, that he is "one of a kind" with a "common-sense approach" now in short supply on Capitol Hill.

David Perdue, the former top executive of Dollar General and Reebok, noted that he's never run for office before, unlike Handel and three U.S. House members seeking the Senate seat. All other issues, Perdue said, pale in comparison to a $17 trillion national debt. "Our career politicians have caused it and can't be trusted to fix it," he said.

Yet those congressmen - Paul Broun, Phil Gingrey and Jack Kingston - all argued that their records in Washington prove they'd be a reliable conservative and productive member in the Senate.

Broun, a favorite of tea party activists, insisted that he's the most consistent conservative of the total eight Republican candidates. He spoke of federal government "tyranny" and argued that "the mayors and the county commissioners and the state officials should have more power than we have in Washington."

Gingrey repeated his promise to repeal the Affordable Care Act during his first term or "go home," though he also recalled serving previously in the Georgia General Assembly when Democrats still ran state government. "I can work with anybody," he said.

Kingston said he's backed up his philosophy on frugal government by cutting his office budget and trimming certain programs as a member of the House budget committee.

The Republicans will meet in a May 20 primary, with an expected runoff scheduled for July 22. Michelle Nunn, daughter of former Sen. Sam Nunn, and Atlanta psychiatrist Branko Radulovacki, whose family emigrated from Yugoslavia when he was a child, are the expected Democratic candidates. Nunn is the heavy favorite and has national party backing, but she didn't attend the Monday forum, instead leaving Radulovacki to speak alone after the Republican's hour-long affair.

The eventual winner will succeed Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss, who is retiring. Holding the spot is key for Republicans as they try to pick up six seats to regain Senate control.

As the Q&A; exposed some distinctions among the GOP field, it also highlighted the tightrope candidates walk as they try to yield no ground on their conservative credentials.

Yu stood out on immigration saying "amnesty

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