Even some Repugnicans say Enough!
http://www.forward.com/main/article.php?ref=kessler200405191004
Throughout the country for the past three years there has been a tremendous rise in anti-immigrant sentiments and anti-semitism as the Center for New Community and the Southern Poverty Law Center have well documented. Now, apparently even some repugnicans can't take the bigotry as well. Will wonders never cease?
Forward Newspaper Online
Lone Star Rep Rips GOP Foe For 'Extreme' Conservatism
By E.J. Kessler
May 21, 2004
In one of the most expensive House races in the country, the lone Jew in
Texas's congressional delegation is lashing out at his opponent by linking
him to an anti-immigration group producing racially charged ads, and to
conservative anti-tax activist Grover Norquist, who has compared the estate
tax to the Holocaust.
The goal for Rep. Martin Frost, a veteran Democratic congressman from Dallas
forced to run in a new district by the Lone Star State's contentious
redistricting plan, is to paint his Republican foe, incumbent Rep. Pete
Sessions, as "insensitive" - the campaign's word - on matters relating to
the Jewish community. Frost's campaign also portrays Sessions as being so
conservative as to stand outside the mainstream, even in the Republican
Party. The Sessions campaign disputes these contentions.
Frost's press secretary, Justin Kitsch, called the Forward to point out that
Sessions was "one of six" congressmen who contributed to the primary
campaign of "ultraconservative" Rep. Patrick Toomey, who unsuccessfully
challenged Senator Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, the nation's senior Jewish
Republican lawmaker, in a primary last month.
"It shows how extreme [Sessions] is and how he'll support an extreme
conservative over a moderate, Jewish senator," Kitsch said.
The North Dallas district, which Sessions has represented for one term, has
the highest concentration of Jewish voters in the city, by many estimates,
and Democrats are seeking a high turnout among Jews and the district's
minority population to swing the Republican-leaning district toward their
candidate. Frost, a former chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign
Committee, has been a prominent target of House Majority Leader Tom DeLay,
who engineered the redistricting plan in order to strip the Texas delegation
of most of its Democrats.
Frost's contentions about Sessions started last month after the
anti-immigration group, the Coalition for the Future American Worker, began
running ads, since stopped, attacking Frost on several local television
stations. The ads depicted dark-skinned people in ways that suggested they
were breaking immigration laws, according to press accounts, and made claims
about Frost's record that his campaign called "factually inaccurate and
racially inflammatory." The coalition has denied the Frost campaign's
assertions, saying it was merely pointing out Frost's "bad record."
In an interview with The Dallas Morning News, Frost declared that Sessions
was hiding "behind the white sheets of white supremacy" for not demanding
that the coalition stop the ads. Sessions's campaign manager, Chris Homan,
told the newspaper at the time that Sessions had no knowledge of or
involvement with the ads and that he was "not going to engage groups like
this in any capacity."
The matter ended in a kind of truce: Sessions and Frost recently signed a
"clean campaign" pledge renouncing any help from outside groups. Homan told
the Forward that the campaign did not denounce the ads earlier on the advice
of a campaign lawyer. Now that it has signed the pledge, he said, "We are
happy to say we didn't want the ads, didn't like the ads. The ads were
divisive and we wish they had never run."
In any event, Frost's campaign has continued to try to paint Sessions as
"insensitive." In a recent press release, Frost's campaign chairman, Marc
Stanley, excoriated Sessions for "the insensitive manner in which [he]
chooses to define himself," seizing on a government-funded mailing issued by
Sessions containing a photo of Sessions receiving the "Hero of the Taxpayer"
award from the famously fire-breathing Norquist, the president of Americans
for Tax Reform. The release reprinted several of Norquist's more memorable
bons mots, including his equation of the estate tax with the Holocaust and
bipartisanship with "date rape."
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