Tales from the Trail

Castle rules out write-in race

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Congressman Mike Castle will not launch a write-in campaign for the U.S. Senate seat he once was heavily favored to win. Castle had been considering the option of running as a write-in candidate since he lost to Tea Party favorite Christine O’Donnell in Delaware’s Republican primary election.

“While I would have been honored to represent Delaware in the U.S. Senate, I do not believe that seeking office in this manner is in the best interest of all Delawareans. Therefore, it’s time for Jane (his wife) and me to begin thinking about the next chapter of our lives,” Castle said in a statement Wednesday evening.

Castle, who’s had a long political career (nine-term Representative, governor, lieutenant governor and state legislator), said he had been encouraged by people in his state who wanted him to fight on and that he had carefully considered their viewpoints.

“I understand why people care so deeply about this election,” said Castle, one of the last Republican moderates in Congress.

O’Donnell’s primary campaign got a big boost with support from the conservative Tea Party and an endorsement from former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin.

Tom Ross, chairman of the Republican Party of Delaware, had been one of O’Donnell’s most outspoken critics and complained about “folks from out of state” who swooped in to back her. The party establishment had been counting on  Castle to coast to victory in November, giving Republicans an additional seat in the U.S. Senate.  O’Donnell’s prospects for winning the seat once held by Democrat Joe Biden are not as clear.

UPDATE to fix pronoun in second paragraph.

Republican Mike Castle seeks Biden’s old Senate seat; Will Biden’s son run too?

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Republican Mike Castle ended months of speculation on Tuesday by saying he will run to fill U.S. Vice President Joe Biden’s unexpired Senate term from Delaware.

The announcement raised again the questions: Will Biden’s son, Beau, run for it, too? And if so, when will Beau announce?

Beau Biden recently returned from a nearly year-long deployment in Iraq as a member of the Delaware National Guard. He is back at his job as Delaware’s elected attorney general.

The younger Biden has been widely expected to seek the Senate seat ever since his dad vacated it to become vice president. The seat is now held by Ted Kaufman, a former Joe Biden staffer, who has said he will not run to finish the term that expires in 2014.

A campaign between Beau Biden and Castle — a nine-term member of the U.S. House of Representatives and a former Delaware governor — would likely set up one of the most hotly contested and expensive Senate races in the nation.

Stakes are high.

The contest will help determine if Democrats retain their 60-vote majority in the 100-member Senate — one big enough to clear Republican procedural hurdles.