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Politics : Bill Clinton Scandal - SANITY CHECK -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jlallen who wrote (39451)3/19/1999 8:50:00 AM
From: Les H  Respond to of 67261
 
Liberal With Ties to White Racist Group

Gephardt Tied to White-Rights Group

Carl Limbacher
March 18, 1999

House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt spoke before a prominent
St. Louis white-rights organization during his first run for Congress
and attended two of the group's picnics after his election, says
Gordon Baum, head of the Council of Conservative Citizens.

Interviewed Monday by NewsMax.com, Baum explained that
Gephardt had come to a meeting of the Metro South Citizens
Council to debate his primary-election opponent.

"The hall was adorned on one side of the speaker's platform with
the Confederate flag, and on the other side was the American flag,"
said Baum. "And Dick Gephardt addressed the group and asked
them openly for their endorsement."

"Gephardt is one of many local officials who dropped by the Metro
South Citizens Council's gatherings in the early 1980s," according to
a March 7, 1999, report in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

Baum told NewsMax.com that the Metro South Citizens Council
was a group concerned primarily with "states' rights" and forced
busing. When it disbanded, many of the members joined his
Council of Conservative Citizens, which, Baum says, addresses
broader interests like taxes, gun control, and general moral decay.

But groups like the Southern Poverty Law Center, the
Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, and the National
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee contend that the
CCC's conservative message is just camouflage for a hidden white
supremacist agenda.

And many of Gephardt's House colleagues apparently agree, though
they don't seem to know about the Missouri Democrat's past
association with the group.

Last year, in the heat of the impeachment battle, Harvard law
professor Alan Dershowitz defended the president by linking
Republicans favoring Clinton's conviction to Baum's group. Rep.
Bob Barr, Georgia Republican, and Sen. Trent Lott, Mississippi
Republican, were singled out by Dershowitz for having contact with
the CCC in the recent past.

Both Barr and Lott distanced themselves immediately from the
group's philosophy, but Democrats continue to criticize the pair for
what Dershowitz calls their "racist" affiliations. The two
Republicans were raked over the coals for months on the nation's
op-ed pages and on political TV chat shows, with some pundits
calling for their resignation.

But the press and Dershowitz have failed to note Gephardt's almost
identical connection to the more extreme precursor to the CCC.
NewsMax.com faxed the Post-Dispatch report to the Harvard law
professor's office early Monday with a request for comment. As of
press time, the usually vocal and combative champion of racial
tolerance had declined to respond.

In 1988 then-presidential candidate Gephardt denounced the
organization, the Post-Dispatch reported last week, noting that he
couldn't recall his own visit to the Metro South Citizens Council.

But Baum says, "If he denounced us back then, he must have whispered it in somebody's ear, 'cause it was never covered down
here."

The St. Louis paper reported that two weeks ago the Missouri
Democrat issued a statement saying that any group "who practices a
brand of racially motivated politics has no place in the country we
live in today." But nothing in Gephardt's statement clarifies his own
contacts with the St. Louis white-rights group.

One source familiar with the matter told NewsMax.com that
Gephardt privately does not dispute the allegations but that his press
office is very unhappy that the issue has been revived at this late
date. A Monday call requesting comment from Gephardt
spokesperson Laura Nichols went unreturned.

Last month, the House minority leader dropped his plans to seek
the presidency in the year 2000, hoping instead that presumptive
Democratic nominee Vice President Al Gore will help win back the
House and make Gephardt speaker. On Monday, Gore welcomed
Gephardt's formal endorsement, though it is not clear whether the
vice president is aware of Gephardt's history with the white-rights
group.

Prompted by media outrage targeting Barr and Lott, Rep. Robert
Wexler, Florida Democrat, has introduced a House resolution
condemning the Council of Conservative Citizens. Apparently
unaware of Gephardt's onetime cultivation of a related group,
Wexler's proposal attacks the CCC for providing "access to, and
opportunities for the promotion of, extremist neo-Nazi ideology and
propaganda that incites hate crimes and violence."

Baum told NewsMax.com that the rhetorical broadsides directed
against his group are overblown and inaccurate. He insists, "We
don't hate anybody." And he defended the Missouri Democrat's
right to address the Metro South Citizens Council, explaining that
"there was nothing wrong with Gephardt coming to speak to us.
Politicians came to us because we represented a significant
percentage of the voters."

But the CCC chief believes the press was wrong to single out
conservative Republicans while giving Gephardt a pass, telling
NewsMax.com that journalists used his group as a partisan billy
club:

"The only reason they used us to beat up on guys like Barr and Lott
is to save Clinton. It's just another case of liberal media hypocrisy,"
said Baum.