Republicans seek nomination to succeed Tancredo
By STEVEN K. PAULSON, Associated Press Writer Wed Aug 13, 12:42 AM ET
DENVER - With his opponents conceding Tuesday's primary, Republican Secretary of State Mike Coffman looked set to succeed Rep. Tom Tancredo, the five-term Colorado congressman whose forceful opposition to illegal immigration vaulted him to national prominence.
Primaries were also held Tuesday in Nevada, which decided nominations for three House seats, and in Connecticut, where Democrats selected a former banker to challenge Republican Rep. Christopher Shays.
In Colorado, the primary race to succeed Tancredo included Coffman and two state senators, Ted Harvey and Steve Ward. Also in the field was businessman Wil Armstrong, son of powerful former Sen. Bill Armstrong.
With 78 percent of the vote counted, Coffman led with 42 percent, followed by Armstrong with 32 percent, Harvey 15 percent and Ward 12 percent.
Armstrong said Coffman will provide a thoughtful voice on the war in Iraq and other conservative issues, including lower taxes and support for businesses. Ward also said Coffman's experience as a veteran of the first Iraq war will be a big asset in Washington. "I'm glad to have a man in Congress who knows how to wear a pair of combat boots," he said.
Tancredo's district is heavily Republican and Coffman was favored to defeat Democrat Hank Eng in November's general election.
Tancredo built a long-shot presidential campaign on opposition to illegal immigration but abandoned the White House bid in December after consistently polling at the bottom of the Republican field.
He declined to seek another term representing Denver's southern suburbs but hinted he would consider running for the Senate. Colorado will have an open Senate seat next year when Republican Wayne Allard retires.
In Nevada, three incumbent congressmen and two top Democratic challengers coasted to easy victories Tuesday.
In the congressional district encompassing urban Las Vegas, five-term Democrat Shelley Berkley easily advanced to the general election.
Republican Kenneth Wegner, a disabled veteran, won the chance for a rematch against Berkley in November after winning just 31 percent of the vote in 2006. This time he had about 35 percent of the vote with 50 percent of the precincts reporting.
Rep. Jon Porter beat back token opposition from within his own party in his quest for a fourth term representing a sprawling suburban Las Vegas district that is expected to be among the most hotly contested battlegrounds in the nation in November.
Porter's opponent will be Democratic state Sen. Dina Titus, a well-known college professor and failed gubernatorial candidate. She had 85 percent of the vote in early returns.
In northern Nevada, Rep. Dean Heller won the GOP nomination for a second term with solid party support.
His Democratic opponent, former state party chairwoman and university regent Jill Derby, was unopposed in her primary race. She lost to him two years ago, but showed surprising strength in historically Republican territory.
Elsewhere in Nevada, two judges in Clark County, which includes Las Vegas, were seeking re-election amid allegations of wrongdoing pending before the state Commission on Judicial Discipline.
District Court Judge Elizabeth Halverson allegedly created a hostile work environment, fell asleep on the bench, improperly communicated with jurors and mishandled trials. She had only 11 percent of the vote with about half of the county's votes counted.
Family Court Judge Nicholas Del Vecchio is accused of sexually abusing a woman when she was a minor, sexually harassing her as an adult, and making racially and sexually disparaging comments to court employees.
Also in Nevada, a rural county prosecutor was running for the district court bench despite being issued a drunken driving summons after crashing two cars in June. Nye County District Attorney Robert Beckett wrecked the vehicles in the span of six hours in June on a desert highway in California.
In Connecticut, former banker Jim Himes defeated substitute teacher Lee Whitnum for the Democratic nomination to take on Shays in the fall.
Himes, the vice president of an affordable housing organization, was the party's preferred candidate. With 100 percent of precincts reporting, he had 87 percent of the vote.
Himes has already raised a significant amount of money to face Shays, whose support for the Iraq war nearly cost him re-election in 2006. He was the only House Republican from New England to keep his seat as Democrats swept to power.
Shays plans to focus his campaign on energy issues, including foreign oil dependency and the high cost of home heating oil.
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Associated Press writers Scott Sonner in Reno, Nev.; Oskar Garcia in Las Vegas; Susan Haigh in Hartford, Conn.; contributed to this report.



