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Obama adviser compares Bill
Clinton to McCarthy for patriotism
comment
By THE
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SALEM, Oregon - A retired Air Force general
compared former President Bill Clinton to Joseph
McCarthy, the 1950s communist-hunting senator,
after Clinton seemed to question Democrat Barack
Obama's patriotism.
Merrill "Tony" McPeak, a former chief of staff
of the Air Force under Clinton and President
George H.W. Bush and currently a co-chair of
Obama's presidential campaign, said he was
disappointed by comments Clinton made while
campaigning for his wife, Sen. Hillary Rodham
Clinton, in a speech Friday in Charlotte, North
Carolina.
"I think it would be a great thing if we had an
election year where you had two people who loved
this country and were devoted to the interest of
this country," Clinton said. "And people could
actually ask themselves who is right on these
issues, instead of all this other stuff that
always seems to intrude itself on our politics."
McPeak learned of the remarks while at an Obama
rally in Salem, Oregon. Afterward, he called
Clinton's statement horrible and compared it to
McCarthy, the Republican senator from Wisconsin
who held hearings on suspected Communist
sympathizers in the 1950s.
"It sounds more like McCarthy," McPeak said. "I
grew up, I was going to college when Joe McCarthy
was accusing good Americans of being traitors, so
I've had enough of it."
Clinton campaign spokesman Phil Singer rejected
the comparison.
"To liken these comments to McCarthyism is
absurd," Singer said. He said McPeak was "clearly
misinterpreting" the remarks and suggested that
might be an intentional effort to divert attention
from a recent controversy involving controversial
statements by Obama's former pastor.
In a post on Hillary Clinton's Web site Friday,
the campaign said the former president was simply
talking about the need to keep the race focused on
issues, "rather than falsely questioning any
candidate's patriotism."
McPeak was skeptical.
"It's a use of language as a disguised insult.
We've seen this before, this little clever spin
that's put on stuff," McPeak said. "I have no idea
what his intentions are, but I'm disappointed in
the statement. I think Bill Clinton is, or ought
to be, better than that."
The former president has attracted criticism
over earlier comments during the heated Democratic
primary race. Following South Carolina's primary
in January, he was accused of fanning racial
tensions for appearing to cast Obama as little
more than a black candidate popular in state with
a heavily black electorate.
He also criticized the news media for making a
race story out of his
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