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Carter's son wins U.S. Senate primary
SCOTT SONNER Associated Press Writer
August 16, 2006

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RENO - Jimmy Carter's son, Jack Carter, won the
Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate in Nevada on Tuesday and said
he's out to show that Republican Sen. John Ensign has been too cozy
with the White House.
"You know he's voted for the Bush administration 96 percent of the time," Carter said after winning with 78 percent of the vote.
With most the votes counted, Ensign had 90 percent in defeating Ed "Fast Eddie" Hamilton, a former Chrysler Corp. supervisor.
Carter
defeated Ruby Jee Tun, a middle school science teacher from Carson
City, who had 10 percent, with 12 percent voting for "none of the
above."
Carter, an investor who moved to Nevada three years ago,
acknowledged that he'd have more contacts to support his candidacy if
he had lived in the state longer.
"On the other hand, as a senator, the people that
I'm going to be dealing with are going to be people who don't live in
Nevada," he told KLAS-TV in Las Vegas.
"And there I have a lot
of contacts already. I was a member of the first family. I know a lot
of the senators who are in office already. I've got business contacts
around the country and around the world and those are the kind of
things that I view as bringing something to Nevada," he said.
Rich Atkinson, a union worker in Sparks, said he turned out to vote for Carter.
"I think his dad did a great job, and what I've
seen of him and heard from him, I like it. I'm a Democrat, and he seems
to be thinking the way I'm thinking," Atkinson said.
But he said he fears Carter faces an uphill battle against Ensign.
"Ensign has such a following, and the state is so pro-Republican," Atkinson said.
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