By The Prowler on 9.25.06 @ 12:09AM
Democrat bigotry is becoming a worry among the shaky Democrat leadership.
DIRTY DIRTY POLITICS
With Democrat hopes to retake the House and Senate seemingly
crumbling by the day, both Senate minority leader Harry
Reid and House minority leader Nancy
Pelosi have grown increasingly alarmed about the growing
anti-Semitic and racist tone of their party's base, say House and
Senate Democrat leadership staff.
"They have been monitoring the [Ben]
Cardin and [James]
Webb races and they are extremely concerned," says
a Senate Democrat leadership aide. "On both campaigns' staffs and
on the Internet we are hearing and reading an ugliness that we
haven't seen in probably decades. It's embarrassing, but we're
chalking it up to a small segment of young people who are
frustrated at constantly losing and are lashing out. To think
otherwise raises too many uncomfortable questions about our
party."
Apparently the House and Senate leaders are more uncomfortable
than their party's most visible leader, because according to
Capitol Hill sources, both Reid and Pelosi have pressed Democrat
National Committee chairman Howard Dean to
renounce the racist and anti-Semitic language and campaign tactics
employed by those most closely associated with Dean's wing of the
party, but Dean has refused to do so.
"He doesn't think it's a problem," says a DNC source. "This is
something dreamed up by desperate Republicans. If Dean were to
speak out, it would undercut the morale of a party that is on the
verge of a historic victory. He's not going to take that away."
In fact, the DNC may actually be encouraging it.
In the past two weeks, the DNC and Democrat Party have been
embarrassed by racist and anti-Semitic attacks against Republican
Senate candidates Michael Steele and Sen.
George Allen. In the case of Steele, it was racist
blogging posts. In Allen's it was planted questions in the media
about his Jewish heritage. Within minutes of Allen's addressing the
issue of his family's Jewish roots, popular Democrat-leaning sites,
such as the Daily Kos, Daily DD, and MoveOn.org, were inundated
with such posts as:
"George Allen's New Jew Revue"
"They seriously want us to believe that Allen never knew why his
grandfather was thrown in a concentration camp?"
"[Allen has] something against Jews."
"... 1) he's an anti-Jewish bigot, or 2) he's afraid he'll lose
the bubba vote if people think he's a Jew."
"George Allen has a nasty, sadistic, vicious, violent streak...
"
"What did [George Allen's mother] tell her son all these years,
that her father was imprisoned by the Nazis because he was gay or a
gypsy?"
WEBB TOO
Supporters of Virginia Senate Democrat candidate Jim
Webb apparently aren't satisfied with pushing the story to
reporters about Sen. George Allen's Jewish
heritage. Late last week they were trying to attack his
children.
According to DNC sources, some Webb staffers deployed to the
campaign by the party have been mentioning to reporters that it's
"interesting" that Allen purportedly named his son, Forrest, after
Nathan Bedford Forrest, a legendary Confederate
general. But that isn't their only point.
"Bedford was a founding member of the Ku Klux Klan, and these
Webb supporters were working reporters to push the KKK angle and
link it to Allen's desire to have his son named after him," says a
DNC source. "This is opposition research our own staff pulled
together. Some of us are uncomfortable with it, others here
aren't."
Allen, who had dealt with a series of controversies related to
race, religion and family heritage, has never commented on whom his
son was named after, if anyone.
Some DNC insiders have been monitoring the Webb campaign closely
due to concerns about the influence MoveOn.org and other far-left
organization have been having on some campaigns, Webb's
included.
Recently, Ben Cardin, Maryland's Senate
Democrat candidate, had to
fire a relatively new, low-level aide, who posted racist and
anti-Semitic remarks on her blog. She came to the campaign via
MoveOn.org and the DNC.
Cardin's campaign disavowed the remarks, and has attempted to
weed out other staffers on the campaign who might place the
campaign in more embarrassing situations. "Anyone who came to us
via the party of outside groups is being re-vetted," says a
Maryland state party consultant. "It's an embarrassing situation
for us."
Other Democrats silent on the matter are the two men responsible
for recruiting House and Senate Democrat candidates, Sen.
Chuck Schumer and Rep. Rahm
Emanuel. Both men have thus far refused to repudiate the
words of their base. "That they won't is embarrassing and
perplexing," says a House leadership aide. "Both of them have been
strangely silent on the matter, and there are some of us who would
like to know why."
Part of their silence might be tied to their need to keep what
they perceive to be their critical base happy and focused on
victory. "Our party has changed," says a Democrat consultant. "It's
not what it was five years ago. The Internet, and young people who
can hide behind screen names online, have changed us. Dean ushered
in the Internet age for fundraising for us, now we're seeing the
ugly part of the Internet, but no one wants to talk about it."
LEADERSHIP SHAKES
With Democrat Party polls confirming that takeovers of the House
and Senate were slipping away, both House minority leader
Nancy Pelosi and Senate minority leader
Harry Reid are steeling themselves for challenges
to their position in January.
Just six weeks ago, Pelosi -- and even her potential opponents
-- believed that her position was safe. But no more.
"She had a majority of votes locked in for her," says a House
Democrat leadership aide. "People weren't thinking of anyone else,
but you can sense that things are changing a bit."
For months, the office of House deputy minority leader
Steny Hoyer has been denying that he has had his
eye on moving up the leadership ladder. All the time, however, his
outside consultants and allies have been fundraising and meeting
with Washington lobbyists, impressing upon them that Hoyer would be
a more receptive leader to their interests if he were leader of the
party in the House.
Now, according to House Democrat insider, there is talk of Hoyer
attempting to line up support from Rep. Rahm
Emanuel, who serves as head of the House Democrat campaign
committee.
Reid is in a slightly better position. Beyond those who would
like to see Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton take his
seat, he doesn't believe there is a legitimate challenger to his
position. But both Sens. Dick Durbin, his deputy,
and Chris Dodd have expressed interest in his
job.
topics:
Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, Religion