Elizabeth Dole, fighting for her political life, is out with a
new TV ad highlighting that her Democratic challenger for the
North Carolina Senate seat, Kay Hagan, attended a fundraiser
co-hosted by a board member of the Godless Americans political
action committee. Personally, I'm not a fan of the ad, because I
don't like the idea of religious tests for office, and at the end
an unidentified woman's voice can be heard declaring, "there is
no God" -- almost suggesting that Hagan herself is an atheist,
which shouldn't matter even if she were.
Of course, it doesn't matter what I think, but how the voters of
North Carolina react. Beyond the God issue, it reinforces the
fact that while Hagan is running for office in a conservative
Southern state, she's raising money in Boston with Massachusetts
liberals. In this sense, Hagan's
defense that, "the fundraiser in question had more than 40
hosts, including Sen. John Kerry," doesn't seem particularly
helpful. (Kerry lost NC by 12 points.) On the other hand,
the ad could backfire on Dole by coming across as a desperate
negative attack, like when George Allen released salacious
excerpts from Jim Webb's novels as part of a last ditch effort to
save his Senate seat.
In any event, the ad certainly gets its point across.
paul serrano| 10.29.08 @ 9:04PM
"On every issue I always take the highest possible ground; it's always the least crowded spot."
Charles De Gaulle