
“In fact, when I was out in Missouri just a few weeks back, I told some students down in Cape Girardeau—and they seemed to enjoy the story—about the fellow who was running for office as a Republican in a heavily Democratic State. He stopped by a farm to do some campaigning. And when the farmer heard he was a Republican, his jaw dropped, and he said, “You wait right here while I get Ma. She’s never seen a Republican.” [Laughter] So, he got Ma. And while they were gone, the candidate looked around for a podium from which to give his speech.
And the only thing he could find was a pile of that stuff that Bess Truman took 35 years trying to get Harry to call fertilizer. [Laughter] So, he got up on that mound, and when they came back, he gave his speech. At the end of it, the farmer said, “That’s the first time I ever heard a Republican speech.” The candidate said, “That’s the first time I’ve ever given a Republican speech from a Democratic platform.”- Ronald Reagan, Republican Governors Club Dinner, 1988
And, to this day, that is all the Democrats are offering.
FoxNews.com reports that
Alabama GOP Senate candidate Roy Moore said Friday that allegations that he had sexual contact with underage girls in the late 1970s and early 1980s was “completely false” and “based on a lie supported by innuendo.”
Moore made the comments in an extensive new written statement and in an interview on the “Sean Hannity Radio Show.”
On Thursday, a Washington Post report alleged that Moore initiated sexual contact with a 14-year-old girl in 1979, when he was a 32-year-old assistant district attorney in Gadsden, Ala. The report also included claims by three other women that Moore asked them out on dates — and in two cases, kissed them — when they were between the ages of 16 and 18. The legal age of consent in Alabama is 16.
“I have never provided alcohol to minors, and I have never engaged in sexual misconduct,” said Moore in his statement, referencing a claim by one of the women that he gave her wine when she was below Alabama’s legal drinking age, which is 19.
“As a father of a daughter and a grandfather of five granddaughters,” Moore went on. “I condemn the actions of any man who engages in sexual misconduct not just against minors but against any woman.”
In the radio interview with Hannity, Moore denied ever knowing Leigh Corfman, who told the Post he made sexual advances toward her when she was 14. However, he did not deny dating teenagers as young as 16.
“You understand this was 40 years ago,” Moore said. “And after my return from the military, I dated a lot of young ladies.”
When asked by Hannity if he dated teenagers when he was in his 30s, Moore said “It would have been out of my customary behavior,” and added that he didn’t “remember dating any girl without the permission of her mother.”
In his statement, Moore implored “the Washington Post, and everyone involved [in the story], to tell the truth.” But on the radio, Moore said he was “sure in the next four weeks, they’re gonna come out with another article.” He also said that his campaign had “some evidence of collusion,” but did not elaborate.
“I trust that the people of Alabama, who know my record after 40 years of public service, will vouch for my character and commitment to the rule of law,” Moore’s statement concluded.
The allegations have caused an outcry from national Republican leaders, who have called on Moore to drop out of the race if the allegations are proven true. On Friday, the Senate GOP’s campaign arm formally ended its fundraising agreement with Moore.
The GOP’s 2012 presidential nominee Mitt Romney condemned his colleagues’ caveat — only if the allegations are true.
“Innocent until proven guilty is for criminal convictions, not elections. I believe Leigh Corfman,” Romney said. “Her account is too serious to ignore. Moore is unfit for office and should step aside.”
However, the former state Supreme Court justice has emphatically refused to leave the race, telling Hannity if candidates step aside due to accusations, “you might as well not run, because when you run you’re going to get allegations.”
Despite the allegations, Moore also has the support of several Republican officials in Alabama.
“Humphrey Bogart started dating Lauren Bacall when she was a teenager,” said state Auditor Jim Ziegler, referring to the then-19-year-old actress.
Paul Reynolds, Alabama’s Republican National Committeeman, called it “a firestorm designed to shipwreck a campaign in Alabama. I think it’s sinister.”
As I wrote yesterday, this whole matter stinks to high heaven like a page out of the Democratic Playbook of Dirty Tricks.
Setting up a political newcomer on the national scene to take a fall in a hotly contested political race is as old as recorded history. There is nothing new about this…and the Democratic Party Hierarchy are experts at it.
All you have to do, is find events in someone’s past that could be twisted around to be perceived as being unseemly, get your political operatives (in this case the Propaganda Arm of the DNC, the Main Stream Media) to pay some “witnesses” to step forward and tell their lurid tales, the steamier the better, until they sound like the kind of sexual fiction in old copies of “men’s magazines” found under young boys’ beds back in the 1960s.
The further back in the candidate’s history, the better. Just so long as you can keep the less-than-angelic lives of your “witnesses” out of the public eye.
This is exactly what it happening to Judge Roy Moore.
But, hey, it is as big a part of Democratic Political Strategy as the Machiavellian Schemes born in the backrooms of restaurants and bars in Chicago.
Speaking of Chicago…
Allow me to relate a little story to you of another Senate Race (courtesy of information found at americanthinker.org):
In 2004, Illinois State Senator Barack Hussein Obama decided to run for The United States Senate.
As the campaigns entered their closing rounds, the news ”happened to be” leaked to media outlets that both Hull and Ryan [his opponents] had “personal scandals” in their past. The timely release of this news wiped out both of their campaigns, leading to an easy victory for Obama in the primary and then in the general election.
The New York Times Magazine revealed that David Axelrod, Obama’s chief political and media adviser, may well have been behind the leak of the story that doomed the Hull candidacy as the primary reached its home stretch.
As he has shown over the years, Axelrod was right at home operating in this gray area, part idealist, part hired muscle. One can not bring up Axelrod’s name in certain circles in Chicago without the matter of the Blair Hull divorce papers coming up. Approaching the 2004 Senate primary, it was clear that it was a two-man race: the millionaire Liberal, Hull, leading in the polls, and Obama, who was the figurehead of an impressive grass-roots campaign. One month before the vote, The Chicago Tribune “just happened” to reveal, at the end of a long profile of Hull, that during a divorce proceeding, Hull’s second wife filed for an order of protection. This revelation proceeded to erupt into a full-fledged scandal. This scandal destroyed Hull’s campaign and handed Obama an easy primary victory.
The Tribune reporter who wrote the story later admitted in print that the Obama camp had “worked aggressively behind the scenes” to push the story. However, a lot of folks in Chicago believe that Axelrod leaked the initial story. They will tell you that before signing on with Obama, Axelrod interviewed with Hull. They also point out that Obama’s TV ad campaign just happened to start at almost the same time. Axelrod swears up and down that “we had nothing to do with it” and that the campaign’s television ad schedule was in the works for a long time.
Axlerod’s explanation?
An aura grows up around you, and people assume everything emanates from you.
Is anybody else getting a strange feeling of Deja Vu? Or is it just me?
Until He Comes,
KJ







