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It was in August, at a parade in New Bedford. "I went up to introduce myself and said, 'Nice to meet you,'" Bielat recalls. "He said, 'I wish I could
say the same, but you've made this personal. You've been attacking me.'
Then he turned and walked away."
Bielat remembers thinking that was a little odd, since at that very moment Frank's Web site featured plenty of attacks on Bielat. But the brief encounter set the tone for
what has become an increasingly contentious campaign. The nervousness
plaguing Democrats nationwide has touched even Frank, a 14-term
incumbent who hasn't faced a serious challenger in years.
Bielat is 35 years old, a Marine who spent four years on active duty and is now a major in the Reserve. He's a graduate of Georgetown
University with a master's from Harvard and an MBA from Wharton. He's
devoted a good portion of his professional life to manufacturing the
high-tech robots that defuse improvised explosive devices in Iraq and
Afghanistan. In other words, he's a serious man.
In the spring and summer of 2009, Bielat watched in dismay as Barack Obama and Democrats in Congress pursued one big-government initiative after
another. He began to think about running but didn't make a final
decision until Jan. 19, when a certain Republican won election to the
Senate from Massachusetts -- and did it by winning in Frank's district.
"When Scott Brown won the 4th Congressional District, it became clear
that not only could a Republican win here," says Bielat, "but there was a
case to be made nationally to donors and supporters that this is
winnable."
National support is key, Bielat believes, given that his opponent is chairman of one of the most powerful committees on Capitol Hill and can raise virtually all the money he wants. But Frank
is also one of those liberal Democrats who conservative Republicans love
to hate. If GOP donors across the country think there's a chance to
beat him, they'll start giving. So far, support has been steady but not
overwhelming. Bielat has raised about $600,000; Frank has pulled in many
times that.
Bielat is a relative newcomer to the 4th District. He grew up around Rochester, N.Y., and in addition to his military service has worked or gone to school in Chicago, Washington, D.C., and
Philadelphia before settling in the district in 2007. Given that, it's
not a surprise that a poll taken by his campaign in mid-September found
that 43 percent of voters have never heard of Bielat. Everyone --
literally everyone -- knows Frank.
But Bielat is still heartened by the poll's main finding, which shows him trailing Frank by just 10 points. Frank's supporters say the lead is bigger, but Bielat believes
he's within striking distance.
Ask Bielat to name the three worst things Frank has done in office and you get an idea of what his focus would be, if elected. "You've got to start with Freddie and Fannie
and his unending push to expand homeownership," Bielat says. "He
definitely played an enormous role in getting us where we are today in
terms of the real estate bubble and the ensuing financial collapse."
Number two? "Financial reform, because it doesn't address Fannie and Freddie and vastly expands oversight of the financial services sector."
Three? "His view on what government should and should not do." Simply put, Frank wants an always-expanding federal government, and Bielat
doesn't.
Bielat is particularly concerned about runaway entitlement spending, which is something few Republicans other than Rep. Paul Ryan are willing to take on. (Bielat is a big Ryan fan.) When
asked about his party's new Pledge to America, Bielat sounds less than
dazzled. "I think it's fine, but I'm not running on it," he says. "I
wish it had addressed entitlement reform."
You have to classify a Bielat victory as unlikely. Frank usually wins re-election with between 65 percent and 75 percent of the vote -- and that's when Republicans
even bother to field a candidate against him. That's a strong record.
Still, this is no usual year. The fact that Bill Clinton -- the Democratic Party's biggest gun -- recently came by to campaign for Frank
suggests party leaders don't believe Frank is a shoo-in. Republicans
across the country should take notice, Bielat says: "This is one worth
watching."
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