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REGION: North America
TOPIC: Politics
Online NewsHour
UPDATE Posted: November 19, 2008, 1:00 PM ET   

Stevens' Defeat Ends Long Political Career, Brings Democrats Closer to 60 Seats

With a stunning victory in the Alaska Senate race declared late Tuesday, Democrats took another major step toward their target of reaching a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate.
Ted Stevens is pursued by the media Tuesday; AP

As vote counting continued a fortnight after Election Day, embattled Alaskan political icon Ted Stevens, the longest-serving Republican in the history of the Senate, trailed Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich by an insurmountable tally of 3,724 votes with only about 2,500 overseas ballots left to be counted.

Stevens, whose political career pre-dates Alaskan statehood, couldn't survive a conviction on federal corruption charges last month. His defeat to Begich moves Senate Democrats within two seats of a 60-vote majority that could prevent any GOP attempt to filibuster legislation.

Stevens' ouster on his 85th birthday marks an abrupt realignment in Alaska politics and will alter the power structure in the Senate, where he has served since the days of the Johnson administration while holding seats on some of the most influential committees in Congress.

"I wouldn't wish what I'm going through on anyone, my worst enemy," he lamented to reporters earlier Tuesday. "I haven't had a night's sleep for almost four months."

Last month just days before the election, Stevens was convicted by a federal jury in Washington of lying on Senate disclosure forms to conceal more than $250,000 in gifts and home renovations from an oil field services company.

His defeat allows Republican senators to sidestep the task of determining whether to kick out the longest-serving senator of their party for his corruption conviction.

Stevens was esteemed for his ability to secure billions of dollars in federal aid for transportation and military projects. The Anchorage airport bears his name; in Alaska, it's simply "Uncle Ted."

Tuesday's tally of just over 24,000 absentee and other ballots gave Begich 146,286, or 47.56 percent, to 143,912, or 46.76 percent, for Stevens.

Stevens did not immediately concede the race. He could request a recount, but he would have to pay for it if the current vote margins hold, the New York Times reported.

Gaining nearly half the votes after his conviction is a testament to Stevens' popularity in the state.

In a statement, Begich said, "I am humbled and honored to serve Alaska in the United States Senate. It's been an incredible journey getting to this point, and I appreciate the support and commitment of the thousands of Alaskans who have brought us to this day."

Begich repeatedly refused to make an issue of Stevens' corruption trial and didn't even call for him to resign after his conviction. That unconventional approach proved successful for the 46-year-old mayor, who ended the four-decade reign of the longest-serving Republican in Senate history.

Federal charges accusing Stevens of concealing more than $250,000 in gifts and home improvements from an oil fields services company executive were referred to by Begich simply as his opponent's "challenges."

The climactic count came after a series of tumultuous days for a senator who has been straddling challenges to his power both at home and in Washington. Notwithstanding all that turmoil, Stevens revealed Tuesday that he will not ask President George W. Bush to give him a pardon for his seven felony convictions, the Associated Press reported.

Democrats have now picked up seven Senate seats in the Nov. 4 election to hold 58 seats, counting two independents who align with them. Races remain undecided in Minnesota and Georgia where two Republicans are trying to hang onto their seats.

"With seven seats and counting now added to the Democratic ranks in the Senate, we have an even stronger majority that will bring real change to America," Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, said in a statement.

Stevens routinely brought home the highest number of government dollars per capita in the nation -- more than $9 billion in 2006 alone, according to one estimate.

With Stevens gone "it's a big gap in dollars -- billions of dollars -- that none of the other members of the delegation, Begich, whoever, could fill," Gerald McBeath, chair of the political science department at University of Alaska Fairbanks, told the AP. "There is no immediate replacement for him."

The trial in Washington not only left Stevens a felon, it deprived him of time to campaign in his home state. Stevens refused pleas from his own party leaders to step down after the verdict, including Sen. John McCain, the GOP presidential nominee who said the Alaska senator had "broken his trust with the people."

Begich will be the first Democrat to represent Alaska in the Senate in nearly 30 years. He is the son of Nick Begich, Alaska's third congressman, who died in a plane crash 1972 while running for re-election.


---- Compiled from wire reports and other media sources

ONLINE NEWSHOUR LINKS

October 28, 2008
After Conviction, Stevens Remains Committed to Re-election as Support Crumbles


October 27, 2008
Jury Finds Longtime Alaskan Sen. Ted Stevens Guilty of Corruption


July 29, 2008
Longtime Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens Faces Criminal Charges


July 31, 2007
Federal Agents Raid Home of Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens




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