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Blumenthal defeats wrestling mogul for Senate

(AP) — Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal was elected to the Senate on Tuesday in a bruising cage-fight of a campaign against pro wrestling mogul Linda McMahon, extending the Democrats' hold on the seat.

Blumenthal, one of Connecticut's best-known politicians, withstood an advertising onslaught funded by tens of millions of dollars from McMahon's own pocket and survived a scare last spring when it was reported that he falsely claimed or implied on repeated occasions that he served in Vietnam.

With 3 percent of precincts reporting, Blumenthal had 51 percent of the vote to 47 percent for McMahon, a Republican political novice who touted her business experience in the world of wrestling.

Blumenthal, 64, will fill the seat held by Democrat Chris Dodd since 1981. Dodd decided not to seek a sixth term back in January amid lackluster poll numbers.

Blumenthal, attorney general for two decades, won despite a furor that erupted last spring, when The New York Times reported that he repeatedly told audiences he served in Vietnam, when he actually remained stateside with the Marine Reserve. He told voters he "misspoke" and never intended to mislead anyone.

The McMahon camp boasted that it was responsible for the story and called Blumenthal a liar, but the controversy all but died down.

For her part, McMahon was dogged by questions about her role at World Wrestling Entertainment, a company she and her husband, Vince McMahon, transformed into a global behemoth that is traded on the New York Stock Exchange.

In the final month of the campaign, Blumenthal and other Democrats ran TV ads accusing McMahon of being a bad CEO who didn't care about the welfare of her employees. Her critics also made an issue of steroid abuse in pro wrestling and the WWE's raunchy shows.

McMahon performed on the WWE several times, taking part in some of the elaborately scripted back stories that play out like violent soap operas. She was surely the only candidate in the nation who had to answer questions like: Did you really kick that guy in the you-know-what?

McMahon, 62, is believed to have spent at least $50 million of her own money on her campaign.

She portrayed herself as a different kind of a candidate — a business executive, not a career politician, and someone who knows how to create jobs and shake things up in Washington.

In the closing days of the campaign, after she had been criticized by some as too aggressive, she ran TV ads and sent out mailers accentuating her feminine side, pointing out that she is a mother and grandmother.

Both she and Blumenthal sparred over what to do about the Bush-era tax cuts. While Blumenthal supported extending the cuts for those earning $250,000 or less, McMahon contended that all the tax cuts were necessary, including those for higher-income earners. She argued those would help small businesses hire more workers.

They also clashed over the Wall Street bailout — he opposed it, she supported it with certain conditions.

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