Category Archives: Politics: US: 2006 Election

Advertising I Like

I love funny campaign ads, and this independent campaign ad attacking Sen. Burns by the Public Campaign Action Fund is pretty funny.

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Experts Agree: Sen. Allen is a Pig

I’ve been a politics junkie since I was twelve and I’ve never in my life heard of such a blatant Senatorial amendment heist right in plain sight on the floor of the self-styled world’s greatest deliberative body:

George Allen STEALS an Amendment! Washington, DC — U.S. Senator George Allen today stole a Department of Defense appropriations amendment written, printed and prepared by Senator Dick Durbin (D-Ill), and then announced the amendment as his own, moments before Durbin was prepared to introduce the amendment on the Senate floor.

I don’t think this will help Sen. Allen get re-elected.

Update (Sept. 6): If you have a very strong stomach, read Sen. Allen, Lose the Noose, a meditation on what nooses mean in Virginia, and what we can infer from the fact that the future Senator chose to hang up a noose as a decoration in his law office.

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Perhaps Not What Thurgood Marshall Would Have Chosen

The political bloggers are having a nice chuckle about the continuing and well-deserved pain being inflicted on Sen. George Allen for his on-camera racist remark. Couldn’t happen to a nicer guy. The latest two chapters are that the Senator undercut his own apology by saying that “no one cares” about the issue — it’s all the media’s fault — and now by feeling compelled to turn down an award for “Leadership” offered by Thurgood Marshall Scholarship Fund

But wait a minute: how on earth did it come to pass that the Thurgood Marshall Scholarship Fund ever came to offer any sort of honor to such a notorious champion of the Confederate flag?

I’m pretty sure if Justice Marshall were alive today he’d have something earthy to say about it.

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More Dirt on Sen. Allen

Gov. Dean called Sen. George Allen unfit for public service. Here’s more evidence that he is.

And I think modern Virginia has gotten to a point where overt racism is a real political disadvantage.

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Sen. Allen Moves to Steps Three and Four

Having failed to defuse a media typhoon by first swearing at reporters, and then second claiming that the boss didn’t know what he was saying (see That’s a Defense?), Sen. Allen moved on to step three, the non-apology apology. (And also the non-denial denial.)

Since that didn’t work, we are now on to step four, the pathetically unpersuasive explanation:

I also made up a nickname for the cameraman, which was in no way intended to be racially derogatory. Any insinuations to the contrary are completely false.

It was just a nickname. See? Nothing vicious here. I just happened to pick a nickname for the sole dark face in a white crowd that just happens to be the same as a common racial epithet. Could happen to anyone, right?

Sounds like Step Two all over again to me.

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That’s a Defense?

Senator George Allen has a notoriously dubious history, one that pretty strongly suggests that he’s some kind of racist. Given that history, what is one to make of his explanation for yesterday’s antics?

You can see the film of Sen. Allen making at least a xenophobic if not racist comment about an aide to Democratic challenger Jim Webb — the clip is embedded in the Washington Post’s description of the gaffe, Allen Quip Provokes Outrage, Apology. S.R. Sidarth, a volunteer with the Webb campaign, was dogging the Allen campaign when Sen. Allen called the him a “macaca” — presumably a derogatory reference to either his dark skin or his Indian ancestry.

OK. That’s pretty dumb. On camera. But what really caught my eye was how the Allen campaign reacted to reporters’ questions.

Step one: “Allen’s campaign manager dismissed the issue with an expletive and insisted the senator has “nothing to apologize for.”

Step two: when it becomes clear this isn’t going away. Issue a statement described as an apology:

“Not many people in southwest Virginia would think it is derogatory,” Griffith said. “I didn’t have a clue what it meant, and I doubt Allen did, either.”

That’s right — one of the names often mentioned as a leading right-wing presidential candidate is explaining away his offensive remarks by saying he goes around giving public speeches saying stuff he doesn’t “have a clue what it meant.” (The other part, suggesting that people in a part of the state not noted for progressive racial views wouldn’t have a problem isn’t exactly an apology either.)

George Allen not only admits he doesn’t have a clue, he admits he says stuff he doesn’t understand.

Nah. Looks to me that the George Allen of old — the guy who used to affect a racist redneck persona, the guy who kept not just a Confederate flag but a noose in his office — got down to southern Va. and let down his hair. He relaxed among the good ol’ boys — Mr. Sidarth was the only dark face in the crowd — and let it rip.

Posted in Politics: US: 2006 Election | 4 Comments