Scott Bruhn/DN Hagel defeats Nelson inUJS. Senate race HAGEL front page ! ; * [ for the post-election rally at AKsarben. From the releasing of the first re turns just minutes after the polls closed, Hagel grabbed his 10-point advantage and never gave it up. For many at Hagel’s rally, the early lead was stunning. ”1 expected this to be somewhere in between 51 and 53 percent,” Omaha Mayor Hal Daub said. “It’s turned into a blowout.” Tammi Reichel, co-chairwoman of die University of Nebraska-Lincoln Students for Hagel, said long hours and Saturdays at football games paid off surprisingly well. *1 never would have thought in a million years that Chuck would have won this big,” she said. Hagel, an Omaha investment banka1, was a political unknown in Nebraska when he announced his can didacy in March 1995 and ran in the Republican primary against Attorney General Don Stenberg. A decorated Vietnam veteran, Hagel spent the 1970s and '80s in Washington D.C.— fust as a staffer for U.S. Rep. John Y. McCollister and eventually as the deputy director of the Veterans Affairs administration. Hagei married ms wire Linnet in 1985when they were still in Washing ton. Hagei then got out of government service to be one of the founding mem bers of Vanguard Cellular Systems, a cellular telephone company. After working for the World USO, Hagei and Lilibet came back to Ne braska, mainly to spend more time with their children, Allyn and Siler, now ages 6 and 4. Hagei was asked to run against U.S. Sen. Bob Kerrey in 1993, but he re fused. When James Exon’s seat opened up last year, however, he took the plunge. Using grass-roots organization and a nonstop campaign schedule, Hagei upset Stenberg for the Republican nomination in May. That same orga nization turned out to make the differ ence against Nelson, a 52-year-old McCook native. Hagei repeatedly thanked his vol unteers and supporters and said the ’' • i - ' ' m work had paid off. ? = “What we have done tonight is his toric, and it’s because of you,” Hagel told supporters before Nelson had con ceded the race. Deb Fiddelke, Hagel’s spokes woman, joined the campaign in De cember 1995, when Hagel faced an uphill battle against Stenberg. She said victory came the same way in both elections — organization. “It’s overwhelming the way (sup porters) responded in die general (elec • tion),” she said. Fiddelke said Hagel visited every county in his first year on the trail, starting organizations of supporters in each one. Hard work from those vol unteers carried the election, he said. Daub also credited Hagel’s orga nization as key to his success. “They didn’t take the voter for granted,” he said. “He campaigned essentially one farmer, one worker, (me housewife, one family at a time.” Andy Abboud, executive director of the Nebraska Republican party, said many had doubts in May when Hagel had only Nelson to run against. “I knew we had the opportunity,” he said. “But we had 24 years of losses that made some people cynical. “(Hagel) ran an incredible cam paign. We finally did what die Demo crats always did to us. We had a great candidate. We outworked them. We outspent mem. Abboud was obviously pleased. “The last time I was this happy was the fourth quarter of the Orange Bowl in Miami when we beat Miami,” he said. “This is above and beyond that.” A huge part of Hagers win, Abboud said, was Stenberg calling for Republican party unity. Stenberg said Hagel ran a well planned campaign and ‘he and his staff deserve a lot of credit” However, he said, it was hard to gauge how much party unity meant to die result. Abboud said Stenberg’s work brought Republicans back to me GOP who had voted for Nelson in the gu bernatorial race. Abboud also warned that the Democrats will “get them back over my dead body.” TOP LEFE MORE THAN 700 people came out TUesday night to cheer Republican U.S. Senate candidate Chuck Hagel on to victory. ABOVE: REPUBLICAN SENATORIAL candidate Chuck Hagel shakes hands with supporters after his victory speech Tuesday night. Negative ad campaigns aided loss, Nelson says By Chad Lorenz Senior Reporter OMAHA — A gloomy and tired Gov. Ben Nelson conceded his candi dacy in the race for U.S. Senate Tues day night, saying Nebraska voters ob viously wanted to keep him as gover nor. “Maybe they weren’t saying no as senator,” he said. “Maybe the voters woe saying yes to governor.” Nelson, 52, and his supporters woe surprised at what berth sides predicted would be a close race. Early estimates put Hagel in the lead and kept him there until early this morning, when unofficial results showed the Repub lican with 57,7 percent of the vote. Nelson said there was “no doubt about it” that $1 million in negative attacks from third parties caused him to lose to Republican businessman Chuck Hagel. “Negative ads work,” Nelson said. “And quite frankly, that’s something the people of Nebraska need to lock at” Nelson was referring to television advertisements by the National Repub lican Senatorial Committee and a mass-mailing campaign paid for by Victory ’96, a state Republican com mittee. Nelson said Republicans probably focu8edon the congressional races be cause they suspected their presidential candidate Bob Dole would lose. “There’s always the danger of the 150,000 Republicans to deal with,” Nelson said. “In Nebraska, this sort of thing can happen to you.” Republican odds were stacked against Nelson, as Nebraskans gave Dole more than 52 percent of the popu lar vote. Nebraskans also elected Re publicans into the U.S. House of Rep resentatives. Throughout the campaign, Repub licans confronted Nelson with a prom ise he made when running fbr gover nor two years ago. He signed* pledge card stating he Would sore his full four-year term as governor. Republicans have said Nelsoi's campaign for U.S. Senate has shown his word cannot be trusted. Nelson said he r*n for the Senate seat to give Nebraskans a choice to hold him to the pledge. They could keep him in die governor’s office or send him to Washington. Nelson, a native of McCook, said he thought he could do his best work in the nation’s capital. Even though Nelson's rigorous campaign didn’t send him there, he said, it made a bold statement at home. “Our battle has been fought to do what’s right for our children, to do what’s right for our senior citizens,” Nelson announced to supporters. During the Democratic Party rally at the Ramada Inn in downtown Lin coln, Nelson talked to supporters while the bulk of early returns were reported. When 8 p.m. results showed Hagel winning by a 10-point margin, televi sion networks called the race a Repub lican victory. Nelson told the news media not to count him out. “It’s a little too eariy to call it,” Nelson said. “I’ve been in close races before, and you just have to wait these things out. The trend has been that way in the past. ‘Tve got nerves of steel, and it’s not going to bother me.” GOV BEN NELSON looks on as Lt. i defeated by Republican Chuck Hagel Some said the early results showed a sad outcome. Other supporters said the news networks were foolish for declaring the race before most votes were counted. Democratic supporters scattered throughout the rally admitted early that Nelson’s chances looked pom:. Nebraska State Sen. Don Wesely said he was disappointed Hagel’s tac tics would win over Nelson’s solid political background and commitment to Nebraskans. Wesely said Hagel had a weak po- ! litical reputation coming to Nebraska from another state. He said it was not fair that Hagel could clinch the Ne braska Senate seat using outside Re publican groups* money, a charge Hagel has denied. “If that’s the formula here, it’s kind of scary,” Wesely said. The outside attacks pounded the property tax issue so hard, he said, it was bound to change some voters’ minds.