March 5, 2014
Pension, Gay Marriage Votes Stir Primary Contests
Jason St. Amand READ TIME: 1 MIN.
Several state lawmakers face challenges in the March 18 primary election because of high-profile votes for cutting state worker retirement benefits or legalizing gay marriage.
In each case, unions or other interest groups are working against their re-election bids.
The targeted challenges are among the toughest primary races in a year in which all 118 House seats and a third of the 59 Senate seats are on the ballot. Overall, there are 27 House primary contests, and just two in the Senate.
Democrats have a good chance of holding their veto-proof supermajorities in each chamber this year. But experts say intra-party challenges and interest group influence could alter the makeup of each caucus.
Democrats have 71 seats to Republicans' 47 in the House, and a 40-19 margin in the Senate.