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Walsh, Duckworth still battle in diverse district

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It’s also a place where some of Walsh’s controversial statements have turned off some voters. In recent months he’s been criticized for saying that the Democratic Party’s “game” is to make Latinos dependent on government just like “they got African-Americans dependent upon government.” At another point, he said radical Muslims are in the U.S. “trying to kill Americans every week,” including in Chicago’s suburbs.

It was those comments that prompted 74-year-old Azhar Habib, a Pakistani immigrant in Rolling Meadows, to begin rallying support for Duckworth. Most registered Asian voters are Pakistani or Indian, according to an advocacy group’s estimates.

“There are good people and bad people in every community,” said Habib. “I’m sure we’re not 100 percent clean. But he picked up one particular community and he was pinpointing us. He is not good for us.”

Others also accuse Walsh of trying to divide Hindus and Muslims, pointing to his efforts to secure a diplomatic visa for Narendra Modi, a right-wing Hindu leader in India who has been criticized for not doing more to stop religious rioting. The Indian Americans For Freedom super PAC has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars against Duckworth recently on an ad in an Indian newspaper that reads: “If you love Modi, send Walsh back to Congress.”

Walsh’s supporters praise him for reaching out and say he’s building on his tea party support. His aggressive last-minute campaign, dubbed a “sprint to freedom,” boasts of 15-hour days.

“I don’t want a career in politics – I want to fix our problems and get government off our backs. That’s why I’ve focused on meeting with the people I work to serve,” Walsh said in an email to supporters.

Duckworth’s challenge, however, has also been fending off critiques of her campaign style as lackluster, despite the engaging story she has to tell about being a helicopter pilot who lost both her legs in a rocket-propelled grenade attack in 2004 and now using prosthetic limbs and a wheelchair.

“No matter how she looks on paper, Tammy Duckworth has not exactly set the world on fire,” said Illinois Republican strategist Doug O’Brien, a veteran of congressional campaigns.

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 This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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