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ANKARA: Turk-American candidate loses primary for House Seat in US

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  • ANKARA: Turk-American candidate loses primary for House Seat in US

    Turkish Daily News
    September 14, 2006 Thursday

    TURK-AMERICAN CANDIDATE LOSES PRIMARY FOR HOUSE SEAT



    Osman "Oz" Bengur, the only Turkish-American seeking to win a seat in
    the House of Representatives in November's congressional elections,
    lost the Democratic Party's primary in Maryland's third district on
    Tuesday

    After counting was complete in more than 63 percent of the precincts,
    Bengur was able to garner only about 4 percent of the vote, coming
    sixth in a tight race involving eight candidates. He was competing in
    Maryland's largest district, including the capital Annapolis and
    Baltimore, the state's largest and most important city and a key
    commercial port

    John Sarbanes, a Greek-American and son of Maryland's senior
    Democratic Senator Paul Sarbanes, was leading the Democratic primary
    with nearly 31 percent of the vote as counting was continuing on
    early Wednesday

    Peter Beilenson, a former health commissioner in Baltimore, was a
    strong runner-up with 25 percent after more than 63 percent of the
    votes were counted

    The elder Sarbanes, who has been championing Greek, Greek Cypriot and
    Armenian causes against Turkey in Congress for decades, has already
    announced that he will not seek re-election in November.

    This was Bengur's second loss in four years in his pursuit to become
    the first Turkish-American to enter Congress. This time his
    performance was worse than in 2002, when he narrowly lost the
    Democratic primary in the same district

    Like in 2002, the area's small Turkish-American community supported
    Bengur, but his efforts to draw a larger backing apparently failed.

    Bengur, 57, is the grandson of Turkish immigrants who arrived in the
    United States in the 1920s. He had served as treasurer of the
    Maryland Democratic Party

    Bengur, whose son Noah, a Marine captain and fighter pilot recently
    fought in Iraq, has sought to boost his chances by bashing Republican
    President George W. Bush's Iraq policies. But other Democratic
    contenders also had similar strategies

    One-third of the Senate, Congress' upper chamber, and the whole of
    the House of Representatives, the lower chamber, will be renewed in
    the November elections.

    The Republican Party presently has command of both congressional
    chambers, but following a steep drop in Bush's public support because
    of the unpopular Iraq war and a poor government response during and
    after last year's hurricane Katrina, the Democratic Party is likely
    to regain majority in the House in November, many political observers
    suggest

    Maryland's third district is viewed as a Democratic bastion, so the
    winner in Tuesday's Democratic primary, most likely to be the younger
    Sarbanes, is expected to defeat the Republican rival and grab the
    House seat in November.

    John White was leading the Republican primary in the same district
    with 38 percent of the vote.

    A native of Maryland, Bengur is a graduate of public schools in
    Montgomery County, Maryland and Washington, D.C. He graduated from
    Princeton University and holds a graduate degree in criminology from
    Cambridge University. He lives in Towson, Maryland.
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