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6-term Mississippi senator to seek re-election


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JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - Sen. Thad Cochran of Mississippi will seek a seventh term in 2014, setting up a Republican primary that pits an established incumbent who has brought billions of dollars to his home state against a tea party-backed challenger who says federal spending is out of control.

Cochran, who turns 76 Saturday, told The Associated Press that he plans to serve the full six-year term if he's re-elected.

"Indeed, that's my intention. I haven't thought seriously about any alternative," Cochran said in a phone interview Friday from Washington.

He is the second longest-serving Republican senator, behind Orrin Hatch of Utah. Cochran's announcement ended months of speculation that he might retire and create a once-in-a-generation opening for one of Mississippi's Senate seats.

Cochran has been in the Senate since 1978 and he's the top Republican on the Agriculture Committee and a senior member of the Appropriations panel.

"We must work to defend our national security interests, roll back burdensome policies like Obamacare, continue the fight to reduce our national debt and create opportunities for more jobs and economic growth," Cochran said in a statement Friday.

The candidate with tea party support, state Sen. Chris McDaniel, 42, announced in October that he'd seek the seat, regardless of what Cochran's decision. The primary is in June.

Political scientist Marty Wiseman, director of the Stennis Institute of Government at Mississippi State University, said Cochran, by bringing federal dollars to one of the poorest state in the nation, has built a strong base that crosses lines of party, race and geography.

"I have always thought of him as being the most unbeatable politician in Mississippi," Wiseman said of Cochran.

Republicans need to gain six seats in the Senate to regain control after the 2014 elections. Democrats would welcome a polarizing Republican primary in Mississippi because it could help the party compete in a state that has long backed Republicans in federal elections, but even they acknowledge Cochran would be difficult to beat. The last Democrat to win a U.S. Senate election in the state was John Stennis, who served more than 50 years before choosing not to seek re-election in 1988.

With his election to the Senate in 1978, Cochran became the first Republican since Reconstruction to win a statewide office in Mississippi.

Cochran is a past chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee and steered billions of federal money to the state for military bases, universities, local schools, highways and a wide variety of other projects. The spending has made Cochran many friends and brought sharp criticism from people who see it all as pork.

Cochran has a home in Oxford. He was an Ole Miss cheerleader in the 1960s and is an attorney, piano player and state history aficionado. He's such a fixture in Mississippi politics that he's recognizable by his first name.

Cochran has had to break a sweat only once since being elected to the Senate: It was during his first re-election campaign in 1984, when he defeated former Democratic Gov. William Winter. Since then, Cochran has easily defeated challengers.

Conservative and tea party groups such as the Club for Growth have rallied behind McDaniel, pressuring Cochran to retire. Conservatives have criticized Cochran's support of spending bills, Mississippi projects and his willingness to work with Democrats on some issues. Cochran was the first Republican, for example, to back former Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel to be defense secretary.

The anti-tax group Club for Growth and the Senate Conservatives Action, the super PAC arm of a group founded by former South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint, have been airing television ads in Mississippi introducing voters to McDaniel and presenting him as an outsider who would curb the federal debt.

Cochran is holding nearly $804,000 in campaign cash. He had raised only about $48,000 from July through the end of September, sparking speculation among some that he planned to retire.

Cochran told AP he gave "due care and concern" to the decision to run again, but "I didn't wring my hands ... didn't go through mental gymnastics."

____

Associated Press writer Andrew Taylor in Washington contributed to this report.

(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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