Saturday, March 24, 2007 Walberg: I'm not racist, honest!
Ah, more on Congressman Walberg's poorly-chosen words regarding Iraq and Detroit. Remember, folks, this is the story that defines the rest of the country's perception of our district.
Just to recap, this is what he said: Walberg: "In talking with people who have been on the ground overOn the one hand, this is just a sign of how incredibly out-of-touch Walberg is with the actual state of affairs in Iraq and with the wishes of the American people. That in and of itself is worth discussing. But then there's this whole other dimension to it. Why did he pick Detroit, Chicago, and then Harvey, Illinois? Here's what the mayor of Harvey, Illinois had to say: So was it a hint of racial bias shining through? Mayor Kellogg isn't the only one to have that thought. A couple people sent me links to this: ... And it continues from there. At the Lincoln Day dinner for the Jackson County Republicans (where, incidentally, Walberg was introducing none other than Karl Rove, President Bush's top political strategist), Walberg took a moment to defend himself. Reporter Susan Demas (apparently at the Battle Creek Enquirer now, after working with the Jackson Citizen Patriot previously) brings us this: JACKSON — After winning kudos from Rush Limbaugh and appearing on Fox News Channel this week, U.S. Rep. Tim Walberg said Saturday the firestorm over his comments comparing Iraq to Detroit is “overblown.”I'm just going to interject that, if I were a politician that in any way hoped to appeal to moderate voters, I wouldn't want Rush Limbaugh to praise me for anything. Really. “No apology is necessary,” Walberg said at the Jackson County GOP Lincoln Day Dinner. “I have no reason to.”[...] “There was nothing racist about it,” Walberg said. “I meant it as a compliment to people in Detroit and Chicago. Aren’t there white people in Chicago? Aren’t there white people in Detroit?”And that's his defense. There are white people there, too, and he's gonna raise a lot of money. Hm. I'm not going to try to speculate on the racial side of this. I will, however, say that it's really terrible timing on his part to say all this the same week that he voted against a bill to help low-income (and often African American) victims of Hurricane Katrina. It just sort of sends the wrong message. This is also the wrong thing to say: “No apology is necessary,” Walberg said at the Jackson County GOP Lincoln Day Dinner. “I have no reason to.”So I pose a few questions to you, the residents of the 7th District and readers of the blog:
UPDATE: I forgot to mention this comment from the Enquirer story, by a user named bccurmudgeon: I honestly can't remember a time before when I was in agreement with Carolyn Kilpatrick, but this is it. Labels: Iraq, Issues, Race Relations, Tim Walberg
Comments:
The fact that Walberg brought up Schwarz in Jackson is very encouraging and a sign he's running very scared.
Schwarz has been very cool since November has pretty much taken a vow of silence, although he's had many opportunities and reasons to lash out. He hasn't even mentioned Walberg's name in public or made any comments whatsoever and yet Walberg brings him up in front of the Jackson faithful. That tells me Walberg is scared shiftless about a primary challenge. I find this very positive for Schwarz and a good Democrat. Maybe voters will have a real choice in 2008.
From today's CIT PAT:
U.S. Rep. Tim Walberg, R-Tipton, who found himself amid controversy last week when he said Iraq is as safe as Detroit, introduced Rove as "a warm, huggable guy that does what he has to do." This guy is totally delusional. What Rove "has to do" is carry out character assassinations on behalf of GW and destroy Republicans who don't go along with the "agenda." Rove is the classic example of the tail wagging the dog. Walberg is just pawn in a much bigger game.
Walberg's comments solicited an "entry" on Huffingtonpost.com. Many of the bloggers had statements to the effect that we (the voters of the 7th District) must be stupid idiots to elect this guy. Sadly, what can we say in our defense, it is embarressing.
Post a Comment
Hopefully, Stephen Colbert will get him on The Colbert Report's "Better Know a District" and make him look more idiotic than he already is. Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom] << Home ArchivesAugust 2006 September 2006 October 2006 November 2006 December 2006 January 2007 February 2007 March 2007 April 2007 May 2007 June 2007 July 2007 August 2007 September 2007 October 2007 November 2007 December 2007 January 2008 February 2008 March 2008 April 2008 May 2008 June 2008 July 2008 August 2008 September 2008 October 2008 November 2008 |