The impostor

Ask Republicans in Nevada. Some are accusing Jon Scott Ashjian, a new Tea Party candidate running for U.S. Senate, of being a fake. The allegation? He was put in the race by agents of Senate Majority leader Harry Reid to siphon votes from the GOP.

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“No doubt about it”, says Danny Tarkanian, one of the many Republican senate candidates hoping to challenge Reid in November. “Nobody in the Tea Party knows who he is. He didn’t know any of the principles of the Tea Party,” Tarkanian tells CNN. He even accuses “Harry Reid’s staff, campaign, whatever” of picking Ashjian because he’s Armenian, as is Tarkanian. He explains, “They know the Armenians are very close they’ll vote for each other.”

Sue Lowden, the Republican front-runner in the Senate primary according to recent polls, is the former Nevada Republican Party chair and seems to be the Republicans’ best hope of unseating Harry Reid in November. Or at least she did, until Ashjian got into the race. Lowden says she’s been very active with Tea Party groups in Nevada. “I am a Tea Party voter, absolutely.” Which is why she tells us she finds it “a little strange” that Ashjian is emerging now. “I don’t know who this person is. He’s never been involved with anything that I’m aware of in this state.” She doesn’t know if he’s a spoiler. “We’ll find out for sure,” she promises, adding “I’ve never seen him at one of our tea parties, by the way.”

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