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Janice Hahn Takes Early Lead In Special Congressional Election

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A special congressional election Tuesday in California gave Republicans a surprising opening to seize a House seat in a Democratic stronghold and send a powerful message nationally going into 2012.

Democrats hold a commanding 18-point registration edge in the district where Barack Obama notched a 31-point win in 2008, but the likelihood of a meager turnout, combined with widespread voter anxiety over the economy, could make for a tight finish.

Republican businessman Craig Huey has been attacking President Barack Obama relentlessly, arguing the nation needs deep tax, debt and spending cuts to drive job growth. Democrat Janice Hahn has cast Huey as an extremist and sought to link him to Sarah Palin. She is still the favorite given the large registration edge for her party.

She took an early lead late Tuesday over Republican Craig Huey in an unofficial tally of mail-in ballots in the 36th Congressional District special election. Hahn had 21,365, or about 54 percent, to Huey's 18,025, or about 46 percent in early returns. More than 340,000 registered voters are in the district.

GOP activists say a Huey upset could be a signpost for U.S. national elections next year, and they have been calling the race the West Coast's "Scott Brown moment" -- a reference to the shocking 2010 Republican victory in the Senate race in the Democratic stronghold of Massachusetts.

Tallies of mail-in ballots suggest a potentially close finish in California. In a little-noticed election on a mid-summer day, turnout will be the key to winning the seat vacated when longtime Democratic Rep. Jane Harman resigned to run a nonpartisan think tank in Washington.

Each campaign has pooled over $1 million for the contest and plowed much of it into sharp-edged advertising: Hahn refers to her opponent's agenda as "extremist," while Huey has derided Hahn as a career politician with ties to a troubled gang-intervention program.

There are other signs of a tight contest in the district, which runs from the famous Venice boardwalk through the beaches south of Los Angeles International Airport.

Bill Clinton recorded automated phone messages for Hahn. Organizing for America, the group that provides Democratic Party's foot-soldiers, asked supporters to make thousands of phone calls.

One unknown factor is the role of independent voters, who account for 22 percent of the district's electorate. Statewide, voters who decline to state a party preference typically side slightly more with Democrats than Republicans, but also tend to be unpredictable and more fiscally conservative than typical Democrats.

Hahn, a Los Angeles councilwoman, is counting on a strong push from organized labor. Huey, who owns marketing and advertising companies and has largely bankrolled his campaign with personal funds, has tea-party activists working on his behalf.

In May, Democrats snatched a New York congressional seat in a heavily Republican district after capitalizing on fears over a Republican plan to roll back Medicare and Social Security benefits.
That has made the GOP eager to turn the tables in California, a reliably Democratic state in national elections.

GOP activists say a Huey upset could send a message nationally, but it's likely to have little meaning for 2012 in California because legislative and congressional districts are being redrawn by an independent commission.

Hahn, 59, supports abortion rights; is eager to see the end of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; and supports growth in the alternative-energy industry. Huey, 61, opposes abortion rights and gay marriage, and wants government regulation rolled back.

Hahn's campaign suffered a shock it didn't expect Monday: the death of the candidate's 86-year-old mother. She abruptly suspended her schedule to join her grieving family, but staffers said it would not change the campaign's long-set plans to get voters to the polls.

"We understand that Janice needs to be with her family but the campaign will move forward -- as her mother would have wanted," senior adviser John Shallman said.

Staffers in both campaigns said the death was unlikely to have any political ramifications on election day. As of Friday, nearly 40,000 mail-in ballots had been received, which could be as much as half the vote.

Hahn and her brother, former Los Angeles Mayor James Hahn, said they were devastated by Ramona Hahn's death.

"Continuing without her will be difficult," they said in a statement, which did not mention Tuesday's congressional election.

(© Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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