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Republicans shocked by racial attacks — on each other

Republicans shocked by racial attacks — on each other


by digby

So, Republicans are upset about other Republicans using race to tar an opponent. Imagine that:

Missouri GOP Chairman Ed Martin e-mailed letters to Priebus and RNC members Tuesday afternoon expressing concerns over ads reported by Britain’s Daily Mail newspaper that sought to link McDaniel to a Ku Klux Klan ally, suggested that the tea party has “racist” ideas and warned that a vote for McDaniel could mean losing food stamps and other government programs.

Martin’s concerns came a day after Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) slammed the “D.C. machine” for “racially charged false attacks” against McDaniel. And they arrived as McDaniel’s campaign was gearing up to challenge the results of the election, which were certified Monday.

“Last week, the Clarion-Ledger was able to tie McDaniel’s campaign to an ally of the Ku Klux Klan,” said the narrator of one of the ads reported by the Daily Mail, an apparent reference to a newspaper report about a McDaniel supporter named Carl Ford, who reportedly had Klan ties. The same narrator said in another commercial that “if the tea party with their racist ideas win, we will be set back to the ’50s and ’60s.”

Martin, who said he was neutral during the primary and runoff, said his concern is that Republican National Committee member Henry Barbour could be partially responsible for the ads. The Daily Mail report suggested that Barbour, who ran a pro-Cochran super PAC, could have ties to the group that ran the ads, Citizens for Progress. The group has no record at the Federal Election Commission.

“We cannot object to the Left smearing conservatives with such labels if we do not rebuke those on our side who sink to such tactics,” Martin wrote in his letter, which was obtained by The Washington Post.

In an interview, Barbour said his group ran no racially charged radio ads and that he has no idea who sponsored the commercials cited in the Daily Mail report, which he said he has not heard.

“We ran no radio ads that had anything to do with the KKK or race, or anything like that,” Barbour said.

That would be terrible if they did that. Don’t they know that there are rules about these things?

This is how it’s done:

You know, subtle …

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