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Supporters for U.S. Sen. Thad Cochran, R-Miss., during the primary on Tuesday.
Rogelio V. Solis / AP
Mississippi’s GOP Senate primary goes to a runoff
Neither McDaniel nor incumbent Cochran received the majority needed to avoid a vote in three weeks
June 5, 20142:12AM ET
Sen. Thad Cochran and tea party challenger Chris McDaniel on Wednesday formally headed to a Republican Senate primary runoff in Mississippi, launching what is expected to be an expensive and bitter three-week campaign sprint.
With all precincts counted in Tuesday's primary, both candidates fell just short of the 50 percent needed for victory. McDaniel had 49.5 percent of the vote to Cochran's 49 percent, giving him a nearly 1,400-vote edge out of more than 310,000 cast.
A little-known third candidate, Thomas Carey, drew 1.5 percent of the vote, keeping one of the two leaders from a clear win.
Carey, a real estate agent who ran a low-budget campaign, was eliminated from the race.
The Republican nominee will face Democrat Travis Childers and the Reform Party's Shawn O'Hara in the Nov. 4 general election.
The result followed a contentious primary battle that gave conservative tea party activists their best chance for an upset of an incumbent senator after a string of high-profile primary losses this year.
Outside conservative groups spent more than $5 million to back McDaniel in the primary and pledged to keep it up in the June 24 runoff, while many of Cochran's business-friendly establishment backers also promised to stay involved. Cochran, a six-term senator, has been praised by top Republicans for bringing billions of dollars to Mississippi since he was first elected to the Senate in 1978.
The runoff will be a test for Cochran, 76, who has not faced a tough re-election battle in decades. If he loses, Cochran, who ran a lackluster campaign, will be the first incumbent U.S. senator unseated in a primary this year.
The first-place finish by McDaniel, a state senator, was "a clear sign of the groundswell of energy behind his campaign to bring a true conservative agenda to Washington," said Noel Fritsch, a spokesman for him.
The race was dominated in the closing stretch by a controversy involving a local blogger who sneaked into a nursing home to photograph Cochran's bedridden wife, who suffers from dementia. McDaniel has called the incident reprehensible and said he had nothing to do with it, but four of his supporters face criminal charges in the incident.
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