Acuña’s Bat Flip
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Two first-time candidates, both Republican women, have attracted the majority of outside spending support in the crowded special election in Eastern North Carolina’s 3rd Congressional District.
Celeste Cairns, an accountant from Emerald Isle, and Kinston pediatrician Joan Perry are among 17 Republican candidates vying to replace the late Rep. Walter Jones, who died in February. And despite their lack of name recognition or political experience in a field that includes six elected officials, Cairns and Perry have lapped the field in outside money.
The April 30 primary for Republicans, Democrats and Libertarians is expected to be a low-turnout contest. As of April 23, 13,515 votes had been cast in the primaries. Primary runoffs can be held if the top vote-getter does not eclipse 30 percent of the vote. The district, won by President Donald Trump with 60.5 percent of the vote in 2016 according to a Daily Kos analysis, is considered a safe Republican seat.
Cairns, 52, earned the endorsement of the Club for Growth, whose political action committee has backed her campaign with $58,643 in independent expenditures, according to the Federal Election Commission. Awake Carolina, a newly established PAC headed by individuals who worked for President Donald Trump, also poured in more than $104,000 on Carins’ behalf, most of it on advertising.
“Frankly, I’ve been disgusted with what I’ve seen mostly from the Democrats, but also some Republicans who seem to be a little squishy sometimes,” said Cairns, who touts herself as “the conservative choice.”
“I’m trying to be the conservative female voice that stands up to these radical policies. ... I’m looking forward to having (House Speaker Nancy Pelosi) swear me in. I enjoy imagining that picture.”
Club for Growth and its Action Fund were instrumental in propelling Rep. Ted Budd to victory in a 17-way primary in North Carolina’s 13th District in 2016, investing $500,000 in TV ads on his behalf. Budd is now in his second term in the U.S. House.
https://www.newsobserver.com/news/politics-government/article229576794.html