In what has been called a “Super Tuesday” of U.S. Senate campaign debates, Democratic hopefuls in Colorado, Georgia, North Carolina and West Virginia faced a relentless assault from their Republican opponents tying them to President Obama and accusing them of being his “rubber stamp.”
All four debates sounded like re-runs of each other, as GOP candidates marched in lockstep, discrediting Democrats with voters who are unhappy with the Obama Administration.
“Barack Obama even said this week that his polices are on the ballot,” said Georgia Republican David Perdue, a line repeated by his Republican counterparts in Colorado, North Carolina and West Virginia.
“I am absolutely running against Barack Obama and Harry Reid,” Perdue told his opponent Democrat Michelle Nunn. “No amount of false advertising will remove the fact that Barack Obama hand-picked you, he hand-funded you, and he’s mentoring you.”
Nunn told Perdue that it’s her name on the ballot and not the President’s, while also reminding voters that the President’s tenure is limited.
“We have two more years of President Obama and then we will have another President,” she said.
West Virginia Secretary of State Natalie Tennant used her opening statement to warn voters about Republican Shelley Moore Capito’s incoming attack lines.
“Every time you hear the Congresswoman say something about Harry Reid or Barack Obama, I want you to ask yourself, ‘What is she hiding?’” Tennant said.
“She supported him twice in his election and gave him money for his inauguration,” responded Capito. “He said point blank, ‘Every single one of my polices are on the ballot,’” she said. “Who is his representative on the ballot? The Secretary.”
Back in Georgia, Nunn emphasized bipartisanship as she stuck to the narrative that she’s a centrist Democrat in the mold of her father, former U.S. Senator Sam Nunn, who taught her that bipartisanship is key.
“Dad said he never passed a meaningful piece of legislation without GOP support,” she said. “We need to send people to Washington that aren’t about attacking and not about paralyzing and polarizing our government.”
“I don’t know about y’all, but I’m getting a little bored of hearing this ‘I’m going to work across the aisle’ talk’,” Perdue shot back. “Your first vote will be for Harry Reid as majority leader.”
Nunn slammed Perdue for the revelations that he acknowledged outsourcing thousands of jobs in the private sector claiming he would be “the only senator who has built a career around outsourcing jobs.”
“I was building an organization in Georgia while you were outsourcing Georgia jobs,” she said.
Foreign Policy was also at the forefront in Tuesday night’s debates. Republicans Perdue, Capito, Cory Gardner in Colorado, and Thom Tillis in North Carolina blamed President Obama for creating a vacuum that has allowed the rise of ISIS. Perdue said the President doesn’t have a plan while Tillis criticized the President for advocating for “peace through weakness.”
Gardner also ridiculed President Obama for not having a plan and leading from behind but held Udall accountable for those policies because he “votes with the President 99% of the time.”
“You are tied hooked line and sinker with the President who said his policies are on the ballot,” Gardner told Udall.
Nunn claims that she warned about the threat in Syria over a year ago when Perdue said nothing at the time.









