Democrat Ann Kirkpatrick announces bid to challenge McCain for Senate seat

Democratic Arizona Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick said Tuesday she will challenge Republican John McCain for his Senate seat next year.

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Ross D. Franklin/AP/File
Then-Democratic Congressional candidate, now-Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick (D) of Arizona is seen in Casa Grande, Ariz., Oct. 8, 2008.

Democratic Arizona Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick said Tuesday she will challenge Republican John McCain for his Senate seat next year, launching an uphill bid to unseat the five-term senator in the GOP-leaning state.

Kirkpatrick is serving her third House term in a district she has won narrowly. She was already being targeted by Republicans for what was expected to be her House re-election bid in 2016.

McCain was his party's unsuccessful 2008 presidential candidate, losing to Barack Obama. A Navy flier who was held prisoner during the Vietnam War, McCain has long been one of his party's most influential voices on military and foreign policy issues and is chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

"I respect John McCain's service to our nation," Kirkpatrick said in a video her campaign released. "I just believe our state's changing."

The former prosecutor's video also emphasized her roots in the state, including pictures of boots she says she purchased with tips from waitressing.

"I'm not naive," she says. "I know that Washington insiders are already trying to dig up dirt. But having grown up here, a little mud on my boots is part of life."

McCain announced his intention to seek re-election in April, when he said in a prepared statement, "There is so much worth fighting for today."

Andrea Bozek, spokeswoman for the National Republican Senatorial Committee, the Senate GOP's political arm, criticized Kirkpatrick for backing Obama's health care and other programs.

"Ann Kirkpatrick has been part of the problem in Washington and Arizonans are paying the price," Bozek said.

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