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Rep. Akin 
rebuilds after rape remark

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Since then, Akin has raised nearly $600,000 through a small-dollar, online appeal that has cast his candidacy as an anti-establishment crusade against both Republican Party bosses and President Barack Obama’s administration. Former Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee has aided the Internet fundraising drive. But Gingrich’s event Monday — at $500 a person or $750 per couple — will be Akin’s first prominent headliner for a traditional fundraiser in at least five weeks.

“This is an act of conscience on my part — I didn’t like seeking a guy getting beaten up by the power structure,” Gingrich said.

But Gingrich also is pragmatic.

“If the Republicans are going to win control of the Senate, they need Missouri,” said Gingrich, who led the Republican takeover of the U.S. House in 1994.

Others also are considering coming to Akin’s aid, including Sen. Jim DeMint, of South Carolina, who has built the Senate Conservatives Fund into a formidable fundraising organization for its favored candidates.

Republicans need a net gain of four seats in the November elections to take control of the Senate. But Republican-held seats in Maine and Massachusetts are jeopardy, and losses there would increase the number of seats the GOP must wrest away from Democrats. Missouri had been considered one of the Republicans’ best chances for a pick-up until Akin’s rape remark undercut his campaign.

Regardless, Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus flatly reiterated on Sunday he would be sending no resources to aid Akin’s campaign.

“We’re not going to play in Missouri with Todd Akin, I can tell you that. So it’ll be yet to be seen whether he stays in or not,” Priebus told ABC’s “This Week.”

Republican consultant John Hancock, who worked for one of Akin’s opponents in the primary, said outside groups had been expected to spend about $15 million to support a Republican Senate candidate in Missouri. Even then, a Republican candidate likely needed to chip in $6 million or $7 million from his own campaign to offset the money from McCaskill and Democratic-aligned groups, Hancock said.

Under that model, a typical candidate would need to be holding about two, $500-a-plate fundraisers a week and as many as five, $2,500-a-plate fundraisers a month, including some out of state, Hancock said.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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