Eric Cantor Booed, Heckled By Tea Partiers In His Home District

Cantor Booed, Heckled By Tea Partiers In His Home District
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House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Va., and GOP leaders face reporters, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2014, after a weekly House Republican Conference meeting. The Republicans tied the recent stagnant employment reports to the policies of President Barack Obama and Democratic lawmakers. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Tea party activists heckled and booed House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) Saturday at a GOP event in the congressman's home district.

Republicans in Virginia's 7th District gathered Saturday at a convention to elect a new committee chairman for the district. According to vote totals by conservative blog The Bold Elephant, incumbent chairman and key Cantor ally Linwood Cobb narrowly lost his reelection bid to tea party-backed Fred Gruber.

Tea party activists touted Gruber's victory as a bellwether of the showdown between Cantor and his primary rival, Dave Brat. An economics professor at Randolph-Macon College, Brat is challenging Cantor from the right, picking up endorsements from a number of conservative groups. As Politico reported last month, Cantor's camp has taken the challenge seriously despite Brat's slim chance of victory.

Speaking at Saturday's event, Cantor called Brat out over "inaccuracies" in his campaigning.

Any sign that Cantor’s support has slipped among the region’s most active Republicans could spell a tougher challenge during next month’s election. And some of the crowd’s reaction Saturday when Cantor took a shot at Brat made clear that the Republican majority leader has not yet fully shored up support.

“When I sit here and I listen to Mr. Brat speak I hear the inaccuracies — my family’s here.” Cantor said. As he was interrupted by the raucous crowd, Cantor’s anger was evident: “That’s enough — we are a country of free speech, so decency’s also part of this.”

Former lieutenant governor Bill Bolling (R), who left the 2013 Virginia governor's race as tea party favorite Ken Cuccinelli's candidacy picked up momentum, said he was "extremely disappointed" in Cobb's defeat as chairman.

“Clearly, there is a battle taking place for the heart and soul of the Republican Party,” he said in a statement, according to the Post.

Virginia's primary will be held June 10.

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Before You Go

House Majority Leaders Through The Years
Eric Cantor (R-Va.) (01 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 112th Congress (2011-present) (credit:(MANDEL NGAN/AFP/GettyImages) )
Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) (02 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 110th & 111th Congress (2007-2011) (credit:(Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images) )
John Boehner (R-Ohio)(03 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 109th Congress (2006-07). Boehner was elected by the Republican conference in Feb. 2006, replacing Roy Blunt. Blunt served as interim Majority Leader after Tom DeLay stepped down in Sept. 2005. (credit:(Photo by Allison Shelley/Getty Images))
Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) (04 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 109th Congress (2005-06). Blunt was elected as interim leader in Sept. 2005 after Tom DeLay stepped down. (credit:(Photo by Brendan Smialowski/Getty Images) )
Tom DeLay (R-Texas) (05 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 108th & 109th Congress (2003-05). DeLay stepped aside in September 2005. (credit:(Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images))
Dick Armey (R-Texas) (06 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 104th-107th Congress (1995-2005) (credit:(RICHARD ELLIS/AFP/Getty Images) )
Dick Gephardt (D-Mo.) (07 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 101st-103rd Congress (1989-95). Gephardt was lifted to the role of House Majority Leader in June 1989, when Tom Foley took over the role of Speaker of the House. (credit:(Photo by Michael Smith/Newsmakers) )
Thomas Foley (D-Wash.) (08 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 100th & 101st Congress (1987-89). Foley was elevated to Speaker of the House in June 1989 after James Wright resigned. (credit:(TORU YAMANAKA/AFP/Getty Images) )
James C. Wright Jr. (D-Texas)(09 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 95th-99th Congress (1977-87) (credit:(AP Photo/Marcy Nighswander) )
Tip O'Neill (D-Mass.) (10 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 93rd & 94th Congress (1973-77) (credit:(AP Photo) )
Hale Boggs (D-La.) (11 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 92nd Congress (1971). Boggs (pictured middle) was presumed dead in an Oct. 1972 plane crash. (credit:(AP Photo))
Carl Albert (D-Okla.) (12 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 87th-91st Congress (1962-1971). Albert was elected to the post after John McCormack's Jan. 1962 rise to Speaker of the House. (credit:(AP Photo) )
John W. McCormack (D-Mass.)(13 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 76th-79th Congress (1940-47), 81st & 82nd Congress (1949-53), and 84th-87th Congress (1955-62). After the death of Sam Rayburn, McCormack was lifted to a new role in Jan. 1962 as Speaker of the House. (credit:(AP Photo/Bob Schutz) )
Charles Halleck (R-Ind.) (14 of24)
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(Pictured center) House Majority Leader, 80th & 83rd Congress (1947-49, 1953-55). (credit:(AP Photo/Henry Burroughs) )
Sam Rayburn (D-Texas) (15 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 75th & 76th Congress (1937-40). Elected Speaker of the House in September 1940 after the death of William Bankhead. (credit:(AP Photo) )
William Bankhead (D-Ala.)(16 of24)
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(Pictured far right) House Majority Leader, 74th Congress (1935-36). Elected Speaker of the House after the death of Joseph Byrns. According to Congressional records, John J. O'Connor served the final 14 days of Bankhead's term, but was never formally elected. (credit:(AP Photo))
Joseph W. Byrns (D-Tenn.)(17 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 73rd Congress (1933-35). In Jan. 1935, Byrns was sworn in as House Speaker. (credit:(AP Photo) )
Henry Rainey (D-Ill.) (18 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 72nd Congress (1931-33) (credit:(AP Photo))
John Tilson (R-Conn.)(19 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 69th-71st Congress (1925-31) (credit:(Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images) )
Nicholas Longworth (R-Ohio)(20 of24)
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(Back row, 2nd from right) House Majority Leader, 68th Congress (1923-25) (credit:(AP Photo) )
Frank Mondell (R-Wyo.) (21 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 66th & 67th Congress (1919-23) (credit:(Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images) )
Claude Kitchin (D-N.C.)(22 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 64th & 65th Congress (1915-19) (credit:(Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images) )
Oscar Underwood (D-Ala.) (23 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 62nd & 63rd Congress (1911-15) (credit:(Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images) )
Sereno Payne (R-N.Y.) (24 of24)
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House Majority Leader, 56th-61st Congress (1899-1911) (credit:(Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images) )