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Ed Gillespie, Former Adviser to Bush and Romney, Wins Virginia Republican Nomination for U.S. Senate
Republican senatorial candidate Ed Gillespie speaks to the crowd as he accepts the nomination at the Virginia GOP Convention in Roanoke, Va., Saturday, June 7, 2014. Gillespie will face Sen. Mark Warner in the fall election. (AP Photo/Steve Helber) AP Photo/Steve Helber

Ed Gillespie, Former Adviser to Bush and Romney, Wins Virginia Republican Nomination for U.S. Senate

"I will lead us to victory in the fall and we can turn our great country around again."

ROANOAKE, Va. (TheBlaze/AP) — Ed Gillespie, former adviser to President George W. Bush and presidential hopeful Mitt Romney, won the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate Saturday and will face Democratic Sen. Mark Warner in the general election in November.

Gillespie won the nod at the Virginia Republican Convention in Roanoke to challenge Warner, a former Virginia governor and early favorite in the race. Gillespie is also a former Republican National Committee chairman, Capitol Hill aide, and has been a corporate lobbyist.

Republican senatorial candidate Ed Gillespie speaks to the crowd as he accepts the nomination at the Virginia GOP Convention in Roanoke, Va., Saturday, June 7, 2014. Gillespie will face Sen. Mark Warner in the fall election. (Image source: AP/Steve Helber)

In a speech to thousands of GOP delegates prior to the convention vote in which he was the favorite, Gillespie promised to fight for lower taxes, fewer restrictions on energy production and to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

"I will take our fight to Mark Warner, I will lead us to victory in the fall and we can turn our great country around again," Gillespie said.

Gillespie beat out three rivals for the nomination: insurance salesman and former Air Force pilot Shak Hill; congressional staffer Tony DeTora; and Chuck Moss, owner of at a network consulting business.

Republicans are waging a fight against supporters of Democratic President Barack Obama to gain the six U.S. Senate seats required to secure control of that chamber. Warner however, is an early favorite.

A race between Gillespie and Warner pits two multi-millionaires from northern Virginia who both worked as political operatives early in their careers.

Warner made his fortune as a cell phone pioneer. Gillespie worked as an aide to former U.S. House Majority Leader Dick Armey and was part of the GOP's conservative "Contract with America" congressional movement in the 1990s. He later worked as a lobbyist and consultant for several Fortune 500 companies.

Hill tried to make the case that Gillespie's past as a lobbyist made him unelectable against Warner.

"I have the moral authority to challenge Mark Warner; not everyone in this race can make that claim," Hill had said.

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