spurster
12-03-2008, 12:31 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/03/us/politics/03georgia.html
Republican Wins Runoff for Senator in Georgia
By ROBBIE BROWN and CARL HULSE
Published: December 2, 2008
ATLANTA — Saxby Chambliss, a first-term Republican senator, was re-elected by Georgia voters on Tuesday in a substantial victory, ending Democratic hopes for a 60-vote majority in the Senate that would make it difficult for Republicans to filibuster the Obama administration's legislative agenda.
With 96 percent of the state's precincts reporting in the runoff election, Mr. Chambliss had 57.5 percent of the vote, and his Democratic challenger, Jim Martin, 42.5 percent. The margin was far greater than the three percentage points that separated the two men in the Nov. 4 election, when neither won the required 50 percent. Many of the Democrats who turned out last month in enthusiastic support of Barack Obama apparently did not show up at the polls on Tuesday.
...
A little more than two million people voted in the runoff, compared with 3.7 million on Nov. 4.
...
Many voters interviewed Tuesday said the balance of power in the Senate had been an important factor in their choice of a candidate.
...
Republican Wins Runoff for Senator in Georgia
By ROBBIE BROWN and CARL HULSE
Published: December 2, 2008
ATLANTA — Saxby Chambliss, a first-term Republican senator, was re-elected by Georgia voters on Tuesday in a substantial victory, ending Democratic hopes for a 60-vote majority in the Senate that would make it difficult for Republicans to filibuster the Obama administration's legislative agenda.
With 96 percent of the state's precincts reporting in the runoff election, Mr. Chambliss had 57.5 percent of the vote, and his Democratic challenger, Jim Martin, 42.5 percent. The margin was far greater than the three percentage points that separated the two men in the Nov. 4 election, when neither won the required 50 percent. Many of the Democrats who turned out last month in enthusiastic support of Barack Obama apparently did not show up at the polls on Tuesday.
...
A little more than two million people voted in the runoff, compared with 3.7 million on Nov. 4.
...
Many voters interviewed Tuesday said the balance of power in the Senate had been an important factor in their choice of a candidate.
...