The Republicans got the press, but the Democrat got the votes in the special election in New York's 23rd Congressional District.Polls taken on the weekend of Scozzafava's announcement showed Hoffman beating Owens by five to 17 points. But the Republican's surprise exit clearly upended the race, which she had led as recently as six weeks ago.
Although she nabbed the Republican nod this summer, it came through a vote of 11 local GOP representatives, not a traditional primary contest that would have tested her positions on an increasingly restless conservative base, both in her district and around the country.
After eight years of government-growing under George W. Bush, Scozzafava's candidacy served as a rallying cry for conservatives about exactly what they think is wrong with the national party: inside deals, squishy priorities, and Republicans In Name Only, who do little in office to advance the first principles they champion.
National Republican Campaign Committee chairman Pete Sessions called the result a "temporary victory for Democrats," but conservatives declared the Owens win a victory for their cause. Erick Erikson at RedState.com said the NY-23 race was an example for Republicans of what will happen to their candidates without the support of the far right. "The GOP now must recognize it will either lose without conservatives or will win with conservatives," he wrote.
By pulling Republican Congressman John McHugh out of his congressional seat to make him Army secretary, President Obama set in motion a series of events that gave conservative activists a testing ground for their messages and transformed a placid corner of New York into Ground Zero in the Battle for the Soul of the Republican Party.
Although a Democrat won the battle, only time will tell if Obama helped himself or his opponents more by opening the field for the not-so-civil war.





