Democrat Lincoln on green group’s ‘Dirty Dozen’ list
The other candidate to make the list is former Rep. Steve Pearce (R), who is running for his old seat, now held by Rep. Harry Teague (D-N.M.).
With an LCV voting record of 3 percent, Pearce probably doesn’t care all that much. (“He accidently voted for the environment a couple of times in his career,” Massaro said.) Pearce campaign is in part based on Teague’s support of a cap-and-trade bill the House passed in June.
But Lincoln, who rates at 49 percent on LCV’s scorecard, could be more concerned. LCV is among the more politically active environmental groups, and the Dirty Dozen determines in large part how it distributes its not inconsiderable resources on political advertising. (The group bought $350,000 in political advertising before the Massachusetts special election in support of Democrat Martha Coakley, who nevertheless lost to Republican Scott Brown.)
Asked if LCV would spend money to defeat Lincoln in a general election against a Republican opponent, however, Massaro hedged, saying that the group doesn’t spend money automatically in opposition to the Dirty Dozen members. But he described the race in Arkansas as up in the air and hinted LCV may support a primary opponent if one emerged.
Lincoln’s campaign said it would release a statement. I’ll post it when it comes in.
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