New PAC stirs GOP rivalries, tea party angst

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House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Va. gives a major policy address entitled: "Making Life Work." Tuesday, Feb. 5, 2013, at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
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Amy Kremer of the Tea Party Express, however, said the new group "wants to push the Tea Party out and replace them with the failed strategies of 2008 and 2012."

Another group, Tea Party Patriots, told supporters: "In a misguided attempt to 'appeal to moderates', Rove and his ilk have alienated conservatives within the Republican Party."

Chris Chocola of the conservative Club for Growth also questioned the new PAC's intentions. "Electability matters," he said, "but it has to be coupled with something else, like principle."

An early target of the new Rove group might be Rep. Steve King of Iowa, a tea party favorite. He's eyeing the Senate seat being vacated next year by Democrat Tom Harkin.

King has won five re-elections handily, despite a knack for incendiary remarks. He said, for instance, that Barack Obama's election in 2008 would have al Qaida "dancing in the streets."

Some Republican leaders have gently urged King not to run for Senate. But they concede there's little they can do, given King's tea party support and an Iowa Republican Party organization that's largely run by allies of libertarian hero Ron Paul.

"It's a total free-for-all," said Doug Gross, a fundraiser allied with GOP Gov. Terry Branstad.

The new Rove-affiliated PAC may be able to pour millions of dollars into selected primaries. That could buy a lot of TV ads, mailings and ground troops. But history shows it's often hard for party leaders to control primaries, which tend to be dominated by ideological voters.

Establishment favorite Mike Castle, for instance, spent heavily in the 2010 Delaware Senate primary, but tea party activist Christine O'Donnell prevailed. She then lost to a Democrat who was considered a near-certain loser to Castle.

Tea party activists note that some prominent mainstream Republicans also have lost competitive Senate races, including those last fall in North Dakota and Montana.

Democrats struggle with primaries as well. Obama and other top Democrats tried to clear the Pennsylvania Senate nomination for Republican-turned-Democrat Arlen Specter in 2010, warning congressman Joe Sestak he'd be crushed if he challenged Specter. Pennsylvania Democrats nominated Sestak, who lost to Republican Pat Toomey.

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