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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">van, businessman Gabriel Gomez and state Rep. Daniel Winslow,
former legal counsel for ex-governor and 2012 presidential nominee Mitt
Romney.Gomez, 47, has tried to portray himself as the new face of
the Republican Party. The son of Colombian immigrants, Gomez learned English
in kindergarten, then went on to become a Navy pilot and SEAL,
earn an MBA at Harvard and launch a private equity career.The 54-year-old
Winslow said he's the only candidate with experience in all three branches
of the government.After 12 years as a private attorney, Winslow was appointed
to a judgeship on the state's district court in 1995. He served
eight years and left to join Romney's administration as chief legal counsel.Sullivan,
58, has pointed to his national security resume, which includes helping
investigate the Sept. 11 attacks and the failed attempt to blow up
an airliner using shoe bombs.Sullivan's law enforcement and criminal justice
background was critical for Peter Bochner, a 60-year-old Wayland voter who
cast his ballot for Sullivan and said he wasn't surprised at the
relatively low turnout."Law enforcement gets the short shrift in political
elections," he said. "I just think it's not a sexy election. I
don't think primaries, unless they are hotly contested, get a big turnout."Massachusetts
Secretary of State William Galvin has said fewer than one in five
registered voters could end up casting ballots.Polls close at 8 p.m. The
special Senate electi
a's second term.Watt represents the
Charlotte area, home base of behemoth Bank of America Corp. He becomes
yet another high-profile African-American and the second North Carolinian
nominated by Obama in three days to a top government post. On
Monday, Obama nominated Anthony Foxx, mayor of Charlotte, to head the Transportation
Department.Watt, who has a consistently liberal voting record, is expected
to face Republican opposition to his confirmation and Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn.,
was among the first to express disappointment.The White House was already
lining up supporters who might hold some sway with GOP senators."This gives
new meaning to the adage that the fox is guarding the hen
house," Corker, a member of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs
Committee, said in a written statement. "The debate around his nomination
will illuminate for all Americans why Fannie and Freddie failed so miserably."Corker
added that the administration should "explicitly lay out" its plans for
dissolving the government-sponsored lending companies before anyone is considered
for the FHFA's top job.The administration put forward a plan in 2011
to slowly dissolve Fannie and Freddie, with the goal of shrinking the
government's role in the mortgage finance system. But Congress has yet to
decide how much the government's role should be reduced.Erskine Bowles,
a fellow North Carolinian and former White House chief of staff under
President Bill Clinton, pra
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