Backlash over a TV ad by Texas Gov. Rick Perry has exploded into
public accusations and recriminations, with the leader of a gay
Republican group declaring that a longtime GOP pollster is secretly
homosexual.
In an evident attempt to appeal to social conservatives in Iowa,
Perry’s presidential campaign this week unveiled a TV ad - which
Aaron
Goldstein of The American Spectator described as
“peculiar” - that referenced the recent repeal of the Pentagon’s
“don’t ask, don’t tell” policy. In the ad, Perry says there is
“something wrong in this country when gays can serve openly in the
military but our kids can’t openly celebrate Christmas or pray in
school.”
There were reports that some of Perry’s campaign staff -
including pollster Tony Fabrizio - opposed the ad’s message. Jimmy
LaSalvia, co-founder of the gay Republican group GOProud, gave an
interview to the Huffington Post and published Twitter
messages in which he used
a slur to identify Fabrizio as homosexual.
GOProud subsequently issued a statement declaring: “Rick Perry
should be embarrassed and the people around him who are the
architects of this strategy, particularly people like Tony
Fabrizio, should be ashamed.”
The controversy could hardly have come at a worse time for
Perry, who has been struggling to salvage his campaign, which
tumbled out of contention for the Republican nomination after a
series of disastrous debate performances. Some had described his
pitch for social conservatives in Iowa as a
“last ditch” strategy for the Texan.
Beyond bad publicity for the Perry campaign - barely three weeks
before the crucial Jan. 3 caucuses in the Hawkeye State - there
were further political repercussions, as
Andrew Breitbart resigned from the board of GOProud, expressing
a “zero tolerance attitude” toward the practice of “outing”
homosexuals. The popular conservative blogger known as Ace of Spades described such
tactics as the work of “Stalinists and blackmailers.”