BATON ROUGE, La. — In the last election of the 2014 midterms, Louisiana voters Saturday decide the political fate of Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu, who is struggling to win a fourth term against a wave of GOP gains across Southern states.
Nation's last Senate race being settled Saturday, with Democrat Mary Landrieu the underdog
By MELINDA DESLATTE
Republican Rep. Bill Cassidy was the front-runner in the runoff election, after portraying his candidacy as a way for voters to cast another ballot against the policies of President Barack Obama, who is highly unpopular in Louisiana.
If Cassidy is successful, his win would add a ninth Senate seat pickup for the GOP, pushing their new majority to 54 seats in January and costing Democrats their last Senate seat in the Deep South.
Polls officially closed at 8 p.m. local time.
Landrieu, 59, whose family has been a New Orleans political dynasty, fought throughout her campaign to make the election a referendum on her own performance rather than on the president. But her votes for Obama's signature health care overhaul and other policies supported by the president were hammered by Cassidy, who repeatedly said the Democratic incumbent voted with Obama "97 percent of the time."
Cassidy, 57, a Baton Rouge doctor, stuck to the near-singular message, after it worked for Republicans who ousted Democratic incumbents earlier this year in North Carolina, Arkansas and Alaska. He spent little time on the campaign trail in the runoff, as his campaign sought to keep him from making any missteps, while Landrieu crisscrossed the state in appearances as she tried to hang onto her job.
Cassidy skipped public events in advance of his post-election party. But as voters went to the polls, Landrieu stood street-side in New Orleans, smiling and waving to motorists as about a dozen supporters danced and waved signs.
"I'm very proud of the campaign that we've run, trying to stay focused on the issues that matter to the people of Louisiana. His team has just tried to make this a national referendum. Well, that national referendum came and went. It's over with," Landrieu said.
She added that she hoped voters cast ballots for a senator who has "delivered for this region time and time again."
But attempts by Landrieu's campaign to respond to the Cassidy criticism and shape a different focus for the runoff were undermined by national Democrats' near total abandonment of the senator. Of every dollar spent by outside groups since Louisiana's Senate race headed into its final month, 97 cents were paid to help Cassidy.
Landrieu was largely left to fend for herself, with assistance from individual colleagues and the state Democratic Party as her only boost.
Her party's lackluster performance nationally on Nov. 4 undermined the central theme of Landrieu's campaign, that her clout was invaluable to Louisiana. With Republicans gaining control of the Senate in the new year, Landrieu would lose her energy committee chairmanship.
A last-ditch attempt to show that she could break through congressional gridlock and pass the long-delayed Keystone XL pipeline fell one vote short of the support she needed from her own party to pass, dealing another blow to Landrieu's campaign narrative.
As the underdog in the race, Landrieu lobbed a series of attacks against Cassidy, accusing him of being unfit for office, highlighting his awkward speaking style and painting him as taking repeated votes against Louisiana's interests.
In the final days, Landrieu centered her criticism on Cassidy's work as a doctor for the LSU hospital system that cares for the poor and uninsured. She said Cassidy appeared to have been paid a $20,000 taxpayer-funded annual salary for doing little or no work, and she suggested he falsified the few timesheets that LSU had produced for the congressman's work. Cassidy tossed aside the criticism as a desperate attempt to revive Landrieu's faltering campaign and said he did nothing wrong.
The race has been the most expensive Senate election in Louisiana history, with $30 million spent by the two candidates and millions more from national organizations. Landrieu raised at least $5 million more than Cassidy, but she also spent at a heavier clip for the Nov. 4 primary, leaving her with fewer resources than her challenger in advance of Saturday.
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MELINDA DESLATTE
While the focus was on Vice President Kamala Harris in their first media interview of the presidential campaign, Walz was asked if voters could take him at his word.