WEST POINT, Miss.(AP)
Democratic congressional candidate Travis Childers isn't
afraid to get dirty to win.
"Let me tell y'all something mighty quick because I
know y'all didn't come to a cow sale to hear a
politician," Childers said recently as he stepped into a muddy
stockyard pen, wearing a suit and black dress shoes. "I'll
be responsive to the needs of north Mississippians."
Childers _ a socially conservative county official from the far
northeastern corner of the state _ is trying to wrest a
congressional seat away from the Republicans in the deeply
conservative state.
Actually, he's trying to win the seat twice.
Childers faces Republican Greg Davis, the mayor of Southaven, in
a May 13 special election runoff to serve the final months of a
seat vacated by Roger Wicker, a Republican appointed to the U.S.
Senate when Trent Lott resigned.
After the runoff, Childers, Davis and two other candidates will
be on the Nov. 4 general election ballot, seeking a two-year term
that starts next January. The runoff winner will be the incumbent
with a likely advantage in fundraising and name recognition.
Democrats are hoping for a repeat of this past Saturday's
congressional election in Louisiana, where a conservative Democrat
won a seat long held by a Republican.
In both Deep South states, the Republicans have tried to hurt
the Democratic congressional candidates by tying them to
presidential candidate Barack Obama and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
The Democratic congressional candidates, running on opposition to
abortion and support of gun rights, say their races are not a
referendum on the national party.
Despite the strong conservative leanings in a state that has
voted Republican in every presidential race since 1980, political
scientist Marty Wiseman said Mississippi's 1st District is
"a very winnable district" for the Democrats this year _
partly because of Democrats' apparent momentum in the
presidential race.
The race also has drawn attention from the highest levels: The
White House said Vice President Dick Cheney will appear at a Davis
campaign rally May 12, the day before the special election.
The 1st District, with about a 75 percent white voting-age
population, stretches from the Delta flatlands on its western edge
to the Appalachian foothills in the northeast. The area's
furniture manufacturing industry has eroded over the past two
decades, but a new Toyota plant is being built near Tupelo.
Childers has signed a pledge not to approve any international
trade agreements if he's elected, saying that deals such as
NAFTA have made jobs disappear.
Davis, for his part, has signed a pledge not to increase taxes.
"I'm a firm believer that the people in this district know
better what to do with their money than government," Davis
said.
The winner of the runoff will serve the final months of the
two-year term Wicker started in January 2007. Republican Gov. Haley
Barbour appointed Wicker to the U.S. Senate this past December
after Lott's resignation.
Childers, 50, is chancery clerk in Prentiss County and is
getting help from the Blue Dogs, a group of conservative
congressional Democrats.
Davis, 42, lives on the western end of the district and is mayor
of Southaven, a fast-growing bedroom community just south of
Memphis, Tenn.
In the air-conditioned bar overlooking the manicured 10th tee of
the Tupelo Country Club one day last week, Davis mingled with an
after-work crowd waiting to hear from the new University of
Mississippi football coach.
People were largely receptive to Davis' small-government
message as he and his wife, Suzann, chatted them up during the
cocktail hour before the coach's speech. But Davis met some
resistance, not because of his issues but because of the tone of
the campaign.
As Greg Davis bought Ole Miss raffle tickets, Suzann Davis tried
to solicit a vote for her husband.
"You don't want a Democrat to win, now do you?"
Suzann Davis asked the seller with a smile.
The seller, Salley Agnew, didn't respond.
In an interview after she walked away from Davis, Agnew _ a
34-year-old homemaker and part time saleswoman _ said she usually
supports Republicans. But she said she voted for Childers in the
special election and plans to support the Democrat again in the
runoff.
"I feel like both candidates are Republican, even though
one of them is registered as a Democrat," Agnew said. "To
be registered as a Democrat doesn't mean you're a Nancy
Pelosi Democrat _ not in Mississippi."
___
On the Net:
Childers:
http://www.childersforcongress.com
Davis:
http://gregdavisforcongress.com
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