By The Prowler on 8.22.02 @ 12:21AM
Live by conspiracy, die by conspiracy. Also: Clinton gives Georgia the eye. Plus: McCain prepares to roll.
VASTER THAN SHE KNEW
Rep. Cynthia McKinney loves a good conspiracy. So
it's fitting that her defeat in the 4th Congressional District
Democratic primary was brought about, in part, by one.
And unlike her fanciful "Bush knew about September 11th before
it happened" tale, McKinney was right on with her claim of a
campaign conspiracy against her. The day before the election, she
told reporters that she was well aware that Republicans in her
district, which includes parts of Gwinnett and DeKalb counties,
were going to vote on the Democratic ballot in support of her
opponent, Judge Denise Majette.
McKinney's father, Billy McKinney, a state
representative, saw an even grander conspiracy against his
daughter's re-election bid, and spelled it out -- literally:
"J-E-W-S." He too failed to win outright victory in his re-election
bid, though unlike his daughter and he has survived to face a
runoff election.
It will take some time before it's known just how much
Republican support Majette received in the final voting. The state
GOP had made it clear that it thought it was a good idea for party
loyalists to vote to toss out McKinney. But Majette's defeat of
McKinney was so sound that it's doubtful she needed much Republican
backing. Initial reports out of Georgia had voter turnout in the
4th District at better than 45 percent, the highest turnout
anywhere in the state.
"Democrats around here were just as embarrassed by her as
Republicans were," says a Georgia Democratic Party grassroots
organizer. "Some of us were getting out the vote to ensure Majette
won. We were going to toss her with or without Republican
help."
McKinney had always enjoyed strong support in her district, but
the final straw may have been her father's Jewish crack. "It just
capped off an ugly, ugly race," says the Democratic operative.
Further ugliness involved McKinney's use of endorsements made
for her in earlier races. Last week, she ran ads citing the support
of former Atlanta mayor Andrew Young. But Young
didn't endorse McKinney for her 2002 bid. That support was given
back in 1998.
But she did have support from those people you'd expect: many of
the black leaders who have cozied up to Arab and Arab-American
money. Louis Farrakhan endorsed her. Jesse
Jackson visited McKinney's district two weeks ago and
campaigned for her. Martin Luther King III
appeared at last-minute get out the vote rallies on her behalf. In
the end, nothing helped, not even the 200 or so homeless people
McKinney hired to help organize the election celebration and to
pass out leaflets at polling places.
According to the Democratic operative, McKinney knew she was a
loser by early evening. But McKinney, perhaps hoping another
conspiracy -- say, the mysterious appearance of ballot boxes
stuffed with 30,000 votes for her -- would save her, refused to
concede until well after midnight. By then, her homeless helpers
were getting antsy. They had not been paid and believed that there
were being stiffed by McKinney's staff. The homeless started an
impromptu protest that brought further embarrassment to McKinney's
campaign.
VACATION UPDATE
Bill Clinton may have been on vacation, but that
didn't mean he wasn't interested in one particular primary election
on Tuesday. And it wasn't even a Democratic election. Clinton, who
thus far had shown little interest in the primary battle between
Rep. John Linder and Clinton archnemesis Rep.
Bob Barr, asked to be updated on the vote on
Tuesday evening.
No word on whether or not Clinton took glee in the sound beating
that Barr received at the hands of his congressional colleague. But
the Prowler is pretty sure a self-satisfied smile washed across
Clinton's mug.
THE AMERICAN GROWLER
If you've been missing Sen. John McCain in your
morning paper, expect to see him exploding on newsprint next week.
That's because the Federal Election Commission will be taking up
hearings leading up to its laying down rules on issue-oriented
advertising in elections. The hearings are all part of the FEC's
following through on the passage of the McCain-Feingold campaign
finance reform legislation. The commission is mulling over rules
that will affect everything from what role union members can play
in assisting the Democratic Party to the mechanism by which a
special-interest group, say, the National Rifle Association, can
buy radio or TV time to press an issue important to them around
election time.
McCain has already expressed unhappiness at the way the FEC has
been going about what he perceives to be his business. "This is his
legacy in many ways," says a Republican Senate staffer for a
Western state Republican. "He's let everyone know that he's
monitoring the FEC's activities, and the activities of his
colleagues when it comes to supporting campaign finance reform.
He's become a watchdog." A Doberman?
topics:
John McCain, Bill Clinton, Business