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Last updated on May 29, 2012 at 23:59 EDT

Iraq war veteran wins Congress primary race

March 22, 2006
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By Michael Conlon

CHICAGO (Reuters) – An Iraq war veteran who lost both legs
in the conflict narrowly won her bid to run for the U.S. House
of Representatives as a Democrat in a district held by
Republicans for 32 years, returns showed on Wednesday.

Tammy Duckworth, 37, is among several Iraq veterans running
for the U.S. Congress this year in a challenge to President
George W. Bush’s Iraq policy and the traditional perception
that Democrats are weaker on national security issues.

With 98 percent of the ballots counted she squeezed out a
win, holding a 1,080-vote lead over her closest opponent for
the right to face Republican Peter Roskam, a state senator, for
whom Vice President Dick Cheney made a campaign appearance.

She will be a long shot in November to take the seat in a
heavily Republican suburban Chicago district being given up by
Rep. Henry Hyde, who is retiring after 32 years in Congress.

Duckworth, a former officer in the Illinois Army National
Guard, was wounded in 2004 when a rocket-propelled grenade hit
the helicopter she was piloting. She is one of nine Iraq war
veterans running for Congress this year. Eight are Democrats
and the ninth is a Republican running in Texas who backs the
Bush administration over the war.

Duckworth has argued that the decision to invade Iraq in
2003 was wrong and that the administration has mismanaged the
war. She was backed by big name Democrats, including Illinois’
two U.S. senators, Dick Durbin and Barack Obama.

Voters in Tuesday’s primary also chose the state’s
Republican treasurer to face first-term Democratic Gov. Rod
Blagojevich in November’s race for the governorship, returns
showed.

Judy Baar Topinka, the only Republican holding statewide
office, beat four challengers to win a primary contest slowed
by the introduction of new touch screen and scanned paper
ballot voting systems.

Blagojevich, the state’s first Democratic governor in a
quarter century, had only token opposition in seeking
nomination for a second term.


Source: reuters