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Sen. Chafee Says He'll Stay Republican
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Tuesday, Nov. 9, 2004
WASHINGTON – Republican Sen. Lincoln Chafee, who flirted with changing political parties in the wake of President Bush's re-election victory, says he will stay in the GOP.

"My Republican colleagues have let me know that they want me in their caucus," the U.S. senator from Rhode Island said Monday. "They value the voice I bring and they have made it very clear to me that they respect and want that voice to be heard."

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  Chafee had said last week he would consider switching party affiliation if Bush won because he thought the president was taking the party too far to the right. He said he got a flurry of phone calls from Republican leaders over the weekend, including Senate Majority Whip Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and a key White House staff member, urging him to stick with the GOP.

A moderate Republican who often votes with the Democrats on environmental matters and some tax issues, Chafee said he wanted to press his views from within the party. He said he would be able to better serve Rhode Island as a member of the party that controls Congress and the White House.

His decision preserves the 55-44-1 Republican advantage that resulted from last Tuesday's elections. Sen. James Jeffords of Vermont had earlier switched from Republican to independent.

Chafee spokesman Stephen Hourhan said he was not aware if Republican leaders offered the senator anything to secure his loyalty.

A member of one of the state's better-known Republican families, Chafee was appointed to the Senate in November 1999 to fill the seat when his father, John, died.

© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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