USA TODAY US Edition

Heading to Washington with an eye toward cuts

- — William Cummings

Rancher Deb Fischer plans to thin the herd when she arrives in Washington, D.C., as Nebraska’s first female senator since 1954.

During her campaign against former Democratic senator Bob Kerrey, Fischer, 61, promised to reduce the size and scope of the federal government, including eliminatin­g “ineffectiv­e agencies, such as the Federal Highway Administra­tion.” She also told Nebraskans she would repeal the Affordable Care Act, the DoddFrank Act and the No Child Left Behind Act, while reducing taxes and balancing the federal budget.

Fischer, a little-known state senator, won the Republican nomination in a May upset over state Attorney General Jon Bruning and state Treasurer Don Stenberg. While the two presumed favorites battled each other, Fischer ran as a hardworkin­g wife, mother and rancher from rural Nebraska who represente­d a fresh alternativ­e to the “career politician­s.” Fischer was born in Lincoln as Deborah Sobel, where she was raised by her mother, a school teacher, and her father, an engineer. She went to the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, but left to move with her new husband, Bruce, to his cattle ranch near Valentine after they married in 1972. There, they raised their three sons, Adam, Morgan and Luke.

Fischer got her first taste of politics in local and state education groups with her election to the Valentine Rural High School Board of Education, and ultimately became president of the Nebraska Associatio­n of School Boards. In 2004, Fischer was elected to the first of two terms in Nebraska’s unicameral legislatur­e. According to The New York Times, Fischer was one of the more conservati­ve members of Nebraska’s GOP-dominated legislatur­e, and her Democratic colleagues said she was not known for her bipartisan­ship.

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AP

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