WASHINGTON — The Senate's longest-serving Republican, Alaska's Ted Stevens, heads into a primary election today at a time when he is fighting for his political life and his party is struggling to hold onto its Senate seats.
.... The possibility of a solidly Republican state going to the Democrats underscores the party's precarious position in the Senate this year. Republicans have a little more than half the money and nearly twice as many Senate seats to defend than the Democrats, who are expected by non-partisan experts, such as the Cook Political Report, to increase their one-vote majority.
Cook Political Report senior editor Jennifer Duffy predicts Democrats will gain five to seven seats — including possibly in Alaska, which the Cook Report rates as leaning Democratic. "I don't dismiss the possibility that it could be higher, but that's the very likely scenario," Duffy said.
The stress on the Republican side showed last week, when the head of the GOP Senate fundraising committee lashed out at his colleagues for not raising enough money...........
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