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McKinney/Majette debate - Streaming LIVE!
Georgia Public Radio ^ | 8.9.02

Posted on 08/09/2002 4:20:35 PM PDT by mhking

Georgia Public Radio - http://www.gpb.org/gpr/GPRLive.asx (Windows Media Player)

Just found the feed!


TOPICS: Breaking News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Georgia
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To: LarryLied; dennisw; SJackson
The GOP is the stupid party.

No the GOP is the moral party and we don't like people who imply GW Bush "knew" about 9-11.

There are some stupid people in the GOP, or they claim to be GOP at any rate.

Details here.

Nobody cares. We want McKinney OUT.

121 posted on 08/09/2002 6:54:00 PM PDT by veronica
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To: veronica
Ya gotta love it--old LL/V shows up to do a little propaganda for his honey, Jihad Cindy, pal (and employer) of members of the Nation of Islam, embraced by Louis Farrakhan and supporter of Robert Mugabe and Saddam Hussein.
122 posted on 08/09/2002 8:06:16 PM PDT by Catspaw
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To: LarryLied
I have sympathy for what you are saying. McKinney is am embarrasment to the Democrats and therefore it is in the Republicans interest to keep her there.

However, I am an American before I am a Repiblican. I want the terrorist loving Commie out more than I want the lightening rod wacko to stay.

In the end McKinney's defeat just might cause the type of people who support her to sour on the Democrat party and stay home.

123 posted on 08/09/2002 8:21:16 PM PDT by SoCar
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To: SoCar
Repiblican = Republican, obviously!
124 posted on 08/09/2002 8:23:05 PM PDT by SoCar
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To: rastus macgill; Chunga; All
Any locals that want to get actively involved in this race, freepmail me.
125 posted on 08/09/2002 8:29:26 PM PDT by FreedomPoster
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To: Howlin
Moose-lums?

Yep. That's what they should be called. Moose-lums. Plus, remember, Islam is a religion of peas.

Visualize whirled peas.

I caught the tail end of the debate where McKinney was admonishing Majette for Majette's not supporting reparations. That alone seals the deal for me. Any candidate who supports reparations has got to go.

The McKinney campaign has also been persistently anti-Semitic -- the charges and counter-charges about that fly back and forth at each election. While Cynthia hides it somewhat, her father is rather blatant in his anti-Semitism. He's been a legislator in the Georgia state legislature. Once, he pulled a knife on a fellow legislator in the legislative assembly. The other legislator refused to press charges, unfortunately. That's the kind of mentality of the Cynthia McKinney campaign -- Arabia's and Islams' best representative in Congress.

126 posted on 08/09/2002 8:42:40 PM PDT by Jay W
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To: SoCar
The Democrats who are out to get McKinney are just as bad as she is. They support Mugabe and are profitting off his looting of Zimbabwe. Check out this too:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/723695/posts?q=1&&page=201

If the only choice is between two Democrats, McKinney in congress helps, not hurts, conservativism.

127 posted on 08/09/2002 8:44:41 PM PDT by LarryLied
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To: Jay W
Hey, don't forget that Billy called a bunch of us FReepers "racist Nazis" when we went down to protest his daughter at her "Veterans's Town Hall Meeting". If Cynthia's like the people with whom she surrounds herself, and I have no reason to think otherwise, she's a nasty, evil, hateful racist. Majette at least seems like someone who can reasonably talk with a white person.
128 posted on 08/09/2002 8:48:17 PM PDT by FreedomPoster
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To: LarryLied
This is the equivalent of Democrats helping conservatives rid the Republican party of John McCain.

What's wrong with that? Sounds like a good idea to me.
129 posted on 08/09/2002 9:19:55 PM PDT by plain talk
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To: plain talk
They would never do it. Democrats want McCain in the GOP. Democrats tried to get McCain the GOP presidential nomination.

Good little Republican sheep are helping Democrats rid their party of problem candidates however.

130 posted on 08/09/2002 9:29:24 PM PDT by LarryLied
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To: LarryLied
Nothing worng with getting a less wacko Democrat. Better than what we have in that district.
131 posted on 08/09/2002 10:43:29 PM PDT by plain talk
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To: FreedomPoster
AJC endorsements:

In the 4th, incumbent Cynthia McKinney's irresponsible -- indeed, wildly irrational -- rhetoric has alienated many of her constituents. So it is no surprise that she has drawn a strong challenger, former DeKalb State Court Judge Denise Majette.

Majette is more than just "not McKinney." With a Yale law degree, she is bright and thoughtful, a moderate candidate who can well represent the needs of a diverse district.  

[ The Atlanta Journal-Constitution: 8/10/02 ]

 

Democrats fire away in debates
Majette, McKinney agree on little

By RHONDA COOK
Atlanta Journal-Constitution Staff Writer

alt
alt
WILLIAM BERRY/AJC
Denise Majette (left) and U. S. Rep. Cynthia McKinney after Friday's debate.


alt
Cynthia McKinney showed. And the sparks flew.

 

In their first head-to-head confrontation Friday night, the combative 4th District congresswoman and her challenger squared off over campaign contributors with terrorist connections, Republicans, affirmative action and reparations for slavery.

McKinney and Denise Majette, a former DeKalb County state court judge, stood at separate lecterns about 5 feet apart in Georgia Public Television's studios and fielded questions from reporters. They rarely looked at each other during the 30-minute verbal sparring match.

"Quite frankly, my outspokenness is loved by my constituents," McKinney said at one point. "You will see that on Election Day."

Organizers of the debate were unsure whether McKinney would participate until she and her entourage arrived at the GPTV studio about 20 minutes before the debate was to begin.

McKinney caused a storm earlier this year by suggesting President Bush might have known about the Sept. 11 attacks but did nothing so his associates could make money in the ensuing war.

The congresswoman implied during the debate that she has been vindicated because a House committee was created to look into the Sept. 11 attacks.

Majette accused McKinney of being an ineffective lawmaker, bringing only $356 million to her district during her 10 years in congress, while U.S. Rep. John Lewis brought five times that amount to the neighboring 5th Congressional District.

She also said McKinney had taken campaign contributions from Arab terrorists on Sept. 11. McKinney touted herself as the "defender of the weak and the poor."

"We don't racially profile our contributors," McKinney shot back. "My opponent has a lot of Republican money flowing into her coffers."

Majette was asked if she would be beholden to Israel since some of her contributions came from Jewish donors.

"I'm not beholden to anyone except the people of the 4th District," Majette said.

McKinney accused Majette of "flip-flopping" on affirmative action because she does not favor reparations for slavery. Majette said better schools and adequate salaries for teachers are the best way to "level the playing field" and make up for past wrongs.

Majette complained McKinney had distributed campaign ads filled with "misrepresentations and lies." McKinney countered by resurrecting a 1990s court case in which a woman appeared before Majette for a speeding ticket.

McKinney waved a hand-written note that she said proved Majette had tried to withhold court documents from the woman, who was appealing her conviction.

"What she requested were informal notes," Majette said. "She got what she asked for, like she got what she asked for when she asked for a jury trial."

-- Staff writer Jim Tharpe contributed to this article.

132 posted on 08/10/2002 4:18:03 AM PDT by Catspaw
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To: mhking
Just a quick point. Majette should have named the donors' names, the pro-PLO donors. McKinney either knows or knows of these people. People like Alamoudi and Turaani have a paper trail. It's not a matter of profiling. The donors own words speak for themselves.
133 posted on 08/10/2002 4:20:13 AM PDT by mewzilla
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To: FreedomPoster
'Crossover' voting push on to oust McKinney
Rhonda Cook - Staff
Friday, August 9, 2002

Some Republican voters have a strategy for defeating U.S. Rep. Cynthia McKinney that may feel like political treason: voting in the Democratic primary.

Georgia politics, from talk radio to cyberspace, is buzzing with talk of GOP-leaning 4th District voters "crossing over" in the Aug. 20 primary to vote for McKinney's Democratic challenger, Denise Majette. With polls showing a close race, an e-mail being circulated by a group called New Leadership for DeKalb estimates Republican voters can swing the vote to Majette if 3,000 to 5,000 vote a Democratic ballot.

It's going to feel odd for a staunch Republican like Phil Kent to vote for a Democrat, but Kent is planning to cast a ballot for Majette. Kent, president of the Southeastern Legal Foundation, a conservative advocacy group, said it will be the first time he has voted in the Democratic primary. Though there are three candidates running in the GOP's 4th District primary, Kent realizes a Republican is unlikely to win the heavily Democratic district. He says McKinney must go, no matter what.

"I was horrified when I landed in Cynthia McKinney's district," said Kent, who lives in north DeKalb. "I just made the decision [that] if I feel strongly about it, I'm going to make a change. She's probably one of the worst, out-of-control, left-wing people in Congress."

Kent can cross over because of Georgia's open-primary system. Voters do not register with a political party here, as they do in 29 states. So Georgians can choose to vote in either the Republican or Democratic primary on Aug. 20 --- though not both. When a voter who typically votes in one primary strategically chooses to vote in the other, they are said to have "crossed over." Crossover voting is mostly seen in presidential primaries, experts say, and rarely is widely practiced or well-organized.

New Leadership for DeKalb is trying to make the 4th District an exception to that rule.

Mark Davis, a Gwinnett County Republican voter and one of the effort's leaders, said the organization has raised about $15,000 through www.goodbyecynthia.com.

It plans to set up a phone bank that will put out calls to about 15,000 Republican primary and other voters encouraging them to vote for Majette in the Democratic primary. The group also plans to send out 30,000 to 40,000 flyers in the district next week.

The numbers may make their task difficult. In the 2000 primary, just 8,689 votes were cast for the two Republicans running in the 4th District, though the DeKalb-centered district has been reconfigured slightly. McKinney, running unopposed, drew 40,629 votes in the Democratic primary.

McKinney, at a campaign stop Thursday, dismissed the crossover campaign, saying that Majette appeals to Republican voters because she is, in essence, a Republican. "She votes Republican. She gives her money to Republicans. Republicans are giving her money," McKinney said.

McKinney and Majette have been invited to debate, but McKinney has not decided if she will participate in a 4th District debate scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today on Georgia Public Television.

Voting a Democratic ballot has a downside for dedicated Republican voters --- they won't be able to choose among GOP candidates for governor, U.S. Senate or in other races. That's why some --- including McKinney's campaign manager --- dispute the notion of a large crossover vote.

"I don't believe that primary voters in either the Republican or Democratic Party will cross over," Bill Banks said. "The reason is you have two major [statewide] races in terms of the primary . . . The primary voter . . . is mainly concerned with winning that part of the primary."

But Norman Ornstein, congressional scholar at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, said opposition to McKinney has created an ideal climate for crossover voting. "It's a reflection of the degree that Cynthia McKinney has become a lightning rod," he said. Still, he suggested McKinney could overcome a strong crossover vote if she is able to energize her Democratic base --- as she has done in the past.

Crossover proponents explain their actions by noting, among other things, McKinney's statements suggesting the Bush administration might have known the Sept. 11 attacks were coming yet did nothing to stop them.

Also, last October, McKinney penned an apology to Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal after then-New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani turned down the prince's offer of $10 million to help the families of Sept. 11 victims. Giuliani was offended by the prince's suggestion that the United States' pro-Israel policy helped cause the attacks.

Davis, a businessman whose father once ran for governor as a Republican, does not live in the 4th District but says he has clients there. He doesn't know if the crossover campaign will work but says it's worth the effort.

"I view [McKinney] as a traitor, and I'm ashamed to have her representing our state in Congress, whether it's my district or not," he said.

134 posted on 08/10/2002 4:25:38 AM PDT by Catspaw
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To: FreedomPoster
The link to Goodbyecynthia.com
135 posted on 08/10/2002 4:30:38 AM PDT by Catspaw
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To: Catspaw
Thanks for posting all those. Yes, I resemble that last AJC article, though we're not part of Mark Davis' group. Cynthia arouses so much ire, there's more than enough room for multiple groups springing up independantly. ;-)
136 posted on 08/10/2002 4:34:28 AM PDT by FreedomPoster
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To: mhking
Majette: 'I'm Her Worst Nightmare'
137 posted on 08/10/2002 4:52:32 AM PDT by CFW
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To: FreedomPoster
The website I posted (out of the story) barely scratches the surface in Jihad Cindy, but it'll do :-)

138 posted on 08/10/2002 5:12:48 AM PDT by Catspaw
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To: Catspaw
Some letters from today's AJC:

Voters, send her home to daddy

Oh, how I wish that I could vote against Cynthia McKinney. This anti-American abomination of a congresswoman has embarrassed this state and this nation too many times. She has never met a Communist that she would not cuddle up with, never smelled a Hamas campaign dollar that she wouldn't take, never passed up an opportunity to criticize the very nation that allows her the opportunity to impersonate a member of Congress.

It is probable that a Democrat will win in her district. The goal of voters, be they Republican or Democrat, should be to defeat McKinney. Republicans, please cross over in the primary and vote for [Denise\] Majette. It is time to send that loud-mouthed buffoon of a congressional impersonator home to her daddy, [state Rep. James\] "Billy" [McKinney\].

MARK CULPEPPER, Cumming

Let AJC article be a wake-up call

The article regarding Cynthia McKinney's acceptance of campaign funds from known supporters of terrorist groups, of which she claims to be "unaware," should be a wake-up call to all those who live in her in district to finally eject her from the office she has used to promote her blatant race-baiting and anti-Semitic agendas.

Her campaign representative's comment that these donors with links to known terrorist groups are merely acting to influence politics in "the American way" --- just like "the Jewish community" --- further illustrates McKinney's purely racist, divisive and twisted views.

Send her packing.

STACY L. EDELSTEIN, Atlanta


139 posted on 08/10/2002 5:18:09 AM PDT by FreedomPoster
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To: FreedomPoster
YOW! If I were McKinney, I'd be in a bunker for the next 10 days.

Both letters are great, each for their own reasons.

140 posted on 08/10/2002 5:22:07 AM PDT by Catspaw
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