Political Hotsheet
By

Stephanie Condon /

CBS News/ September 21, 2012, 2:49 PM

Akin seeks to move past "legitimate rape" controversy

Akin, McCaskill AP Photo/Jeff Roberson

(CBS News) Going up against Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill in the first debate of Missouri's hotly-contested Senate race, Republican candidate Todd Akin on Friday sought to move past his comments on "legitimate rape" that have significantly hurt his campaign.

"I don't believe this election overall is about talk," Akin said, after the first question in the debate asked the candidates to address whether Akin's controversial remarks should matter to voters.

"It's really about two visions of what America is," he continued. "Are we going to go down the path of Greece... or are we going to go down the path America has always been on where we allow freedom... It seems to me what a senator should be doing is taking the common sense that you and I know in Missouri and taking that to Washington, D.C."

Akin, a six-term Republican congressman, came under fire last month after suggesting in a local interview that women are unlikely to become pregnant if they are victims of "legitimate rape." The national Republican party is no longer financially supporting his campaign, and several Republicans have called on Akin to bow out of the race, but he's maintained he's not dropping out.

Even though McCaskill is one of the most vulnerable senators up for re-election this year, she appears to have an edge over Akin in the polls.

In the debate, Akin cast McCaskill as a close Obama ally who supports big-government solutions for problems best left to the private sector. "It's your choice," he told voters, "more freedom or more Washington."

McCaskill, meanwhile, described herself as a moderate and characterized Akin as a Tea Party-aligned extremist only interested in giving tax breaks to the wealthy. She said that Missouri voters should "pay attention" to his remarks about rape because they illustrate how "out of the mainstream" he is.

"It's not what he said that's the problem, it what he believes that's the problem," she said.

Akin said he believes in moving "away from the concept that government has to do everything, solve everything." He pointed to health care as the prime example, arguing that Missouri voters, like him, don't want "the efficiency of the federal government and the compassion of the IRS running our health care."

If elected to the Senate, he said, "I'll be the one to ensure [President Obama's health care law] gets repealed totally."

Akin advocated for allowing "choices" for seniors who benefit from Medicare, while McCaskill blasted him for supporting a "voucher" program that she said would leave seniors out to dry. "Once you spend your voucher, you're on your own," she said.

The senator did say she supported "more aggressive means testing" for Medicare. "I don't think we can afford to buy Donald Trump's prescription drugs," she said.

McCaskill stressed her cooperation with Republican senators, listing off the conservatives she's worked with, including her Missouri colleague Sen. Roy Blunt and Sens. John McCain, Jim DeMint and John Thune. She blasted Akin for joining House Republicans in holding up bipartisan legislation like the farm bill.

"Thats the kind of gridlock we don't need in Washington," she said.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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BvLTiv says:
Akin did NOT say that "women are unlikely to become pregnant if they are victims of "legitimate rape." He actually said the opposite. This is the quote: "If it's a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down." Clearly, he meant "legitimate rape" in the sense of "actual rape", as opposed to a woman choosing to have sex and then claiming afterwards to have been raped. Akin's point is medically indefensible, but he did NOT say that women can be legitimately raped, in the sense that Condon implies.

Sloppy reporting, but then again, this was written by Stephanie Condon ...
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TJphoto says:
I don't like anyone in Congress. Article 1, Section 8 states that only Congress can borrow & spend money. So why are all these members blaming the President for this 15 Trillion Dollar Debt??? This two party system has failed!
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bluejacket2-2009 says:
Akin is a bigot of proportions rarely seen in modern politics.. Moreover he's just plain stupid.. If Missouri elects him to the Senate then shame on those people, those supposed people of God..
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CitizenUSAfreeman says:
Did you guys forget that there was another candidate on stage? What kind of great democracy do we have if the media is biased and does not allow voters to know about all the candidates?
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TheLondonPerspective says:
Atkin is a disgusting old arrogant dinosaur. Imaging having that reactionary right-wing rubbish representing families with young daughters.

SICK SICK SICK! Give him the SACK SACK SACK!
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