NORFOLK, NE -
Nervous? No, Deb Fischer says she's confident about the November election.
"It will be quite evident that people support me, there is broad base support, you know I was very fortunate in the primary to have so many Nebraskans step forward. We're seeing that now too," she said.
But will it be enough? Her opponent, Democrat Bob Kerrey, has already started running ads against her.
But Fischer says those commercials aren't true.
"I'm here in Nebraska; I've put on 54,000 miles on my vehicle traveling the state of Nebraska. Nebraskans know I'm here, I'm here in Norfolk, I was in West Point all day, I started out in Omaha, we're always traveling the state," Fischer said.
And Fischer is not a fan of external fundraising committees known as super PACs.
"It makes it difficult to run the campaign I want to run, when you have these outside groups come in," she said.
That's why she hopes those groups will spend their money elsewhere.
"I'd like to see it spent on something that's going to help the future of our state, that's going to help the future of our country, on education, on public safety, on infrastructure, on helping to grow businesses," she said.
And Fischer says, in the next four months, she plans on focusing on the issues and running a competitive campaign against Kerrey.
Fischer says if elected, she will vote to repeal Obamacare. She told us, she hopes to do this in a step by step process, where the House and Senate work together to find a solution.