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McCain supporters heckle early voters

By Christina Bellantoni on Oct. 20, 2008 into Bellantoni

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PRINCETON, W.Va. — Over the last few days I've been through Southwest Virginia, down in North Carolina and now back up into the mountains on the West Virginia side near Bluefield for some stories about the political climate in red states.

 

Sen. Barack Obama has set up a massive organization across the country, and especially in North Carolina.

 

The campaign has given supporters lists with hours and locations of early voting sites, and collected the names, e-mail address and cell phone number of each attendee at the Fayetteville rally Sunday afternoon. (There were a few thousand who had to listen to his speech from the parking lot after the coliseum hit about 10,000 capacity.)

 

An organizer at the rally rattled off the addresses of early vote sites nearby that would be open after the event.

 

Photographer Joe Eddins and I headed over to the closest one and found a steady line of voters hoping to cast ballots early. Most seemed to be Obama supporters and several had come from the rally. Nearly all the voters were black.

 

Also at the polling site was a group of loud and angry protesters who shouted and mocked the voters as they walked in. Nearly all were white.

 

As you can see from these videos, no one held anything back. People were shouting about Obama's acknowledged cocaine use as a young man, abortion and one man used the word "terrorist." They also were complaining that Sundays are for church, not voting.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The first video closes with Roger Farina (who won NHL fan of the year in 2003) going into detail about why he was heckling the voters.

 

I sent Stephen Dinan a quote from Farina about former Secretary of State Colin L. Powell's endorsement of Obama yesterday. Read his story wrapping up that news and Sen. John McCain's reaction here.

 

At the voting site, I asked a local sheriff monitoring the scene if the protesters were allowed. "They're fine," he said. I asked if he'd ever seen anything like that and he said he'd never seen Sunday voting.

 

Most voters in line ignored the hecklers but a few heckled back. One black woman told me she was deeply saddened to see people protesting the most fundamental right of democracy.

 

I also spoke to a McCain supporter who was voting early even though he also had been protesting across the street.

 

One group was handing out fliers "comparing" McCain and Obama on social issues such as abortion and gay marriage. Among those listed on the sheet were:

 

Opposes gay pride? McCain YES Obama NO

Supports human cloning? McCain NO Obama YES

 

The flier is a lie, Obama does not support cloning. Also, I know the McCain camp would dispute him "opposing gay pride."

 

I have a story in today's paper taking a look at Obama's TV ad strategy, aided in part by his record fundraising haul.


ROANOKE, Va. | In the span of one hour, voters here are told - twice - that good Virginia jobs have vanished because "Washington sold them out with the help of people like John McCain."

Sen. Barack Obama's fundraising juggernaut has steamrolled his Republican rival, burying voters with ads - many of them negative - that he can afford to broadcast into the living rooms of red-state voters. There's no chance it will let up, as the campaign announced Sunday that Mr. Obama had raised more than $150 million in September alone.

The Obama ad attacking Mr. McCain as responsible for trade deals that led to job losses was one of nine 30-second spots that voters could see Friday during the 6 p.m. news.

Mr. Obama's ads that night painted him as someone who will fight for the American dream, who has a centrist health care plan and who will uphold gun rights. They portrayed Mr. McCain as an ally of President Bush whose health care plan would harm families.

The positive health care spot was Mr. Obama's largest buy - it ran more than 20,000 times across the country from mid-September through mid-October, according to Campaign Media Analysis Group.

In this Southwest Virginia region, just two of every 10 ads played Friday were positive. Two Obama attacks on Mr. McCain came in quick succession during the broadcast of "The Late Show" with David Letterman, followed by a Republican National Committee spot depicting Mr. Obama as inexperienced.

All the Republican ads shown Friday were negative, and an independent pro-Democratic veterans group ran a whopping six spots slamming Mr. McCain for his voting record.

 

Read the full story on campaign ads here.

 

The spending overload hurt Obama during the primary season, with many voters saying they were seeing too much of the Illinois senator. But he has the cash to play offense on a wide electoral map - adding Kentucky and West Virginia to his TV advertising schedule recently - and quickly defend any attacks that may come his way in the final days of the campaign.

 

On Sunday, I also shot this video of these young girls detailing their support for the Democratic nominee:

 

 

 

—Christina Bellantoni, national political reporter,
The Washington Times

 

Please bookmark my blog at
http://www.washingtontimes.com/weblogs/bellantoni


Find my latest stories here and visit my YouTube page

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There are 37 Comments

Pendamon

Here is one question that no one has been able to answer: How is Obama going to create jobs? ---I know the Obama campaign doesn't like questions, and having asked this one, they will probably (along with their media thugs) be checking into my background and harrassing me in front of my house, but can they answer this one? ---So they buy the votes of people by offering some giveaways, some welfare money---the kind of kickbacks the Obama team got from Fannie and Freddie, or real estate sweatheart deals like from Rezko. I know that's Chicago-style politics---to just buy votes. But how will that create JOBS (that all important THREE-LETTER WORD) ???? ---After the couple thou is spent on groceries, car payments,utilities, mortgage,health insurance or medical bills,etc. THEN WHAT? WHERE'S THE REST OF THE MONEY GOING TO COME FROM? ---During the Great Depression Unemployment hovered around 20%. FDR couldn't create jobs---not until the US went to war in WWII. So,is that what Obama will have to do to create jobs--go to war? We're already in a war, a war he wants to get OUT OF IN DEFEAT. ---Obama cannot create jobs. In fact, jobs will leave the US in droves under an Obama administration. Businesses will close down or move to Ireland or somewhere that is business friendly. ---So, get ready for the soup-lines, the flop-houses, and the homeless in the streets. "Happy days are here again".
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dyarbrough

One feature of North Carolina early voting is that it is totally one stop - voters can register and vote at a single visit. Cumberland County's decision to open polls near this rally immediately after it will bring mindless voters into the polls. Pendamon is right - Obama is ready to lead this country into an unprecedented decline, at the hands of his political machine and the unions. I may just move to Ireland myself!
Mark as offensive

ubicomp

Thank you so much for that detailed analysis of today's political problems, Penamon. BTW, JOBS is a four-letter word. Nothing like a mob of Repubs to remind me why I'm not one.
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ApostasyUSA

Pendamon I'll tell you how Obamas plans will create jobs. Retooling Detroit to build the cars of the future will create thousands of jobs. Also: Fanning the flames of change in the energy sector to support the building of factories that manufacture solar panels and wind turbines and all the supporting equipment RIGHT HERE IN THE US. Give the tax breaks to companies that keep their facilities in the USA, lean higher taxes on those companies who ship jobs oversea for cheap labor. For those of you who wish to move to Ireland, so be it. Republicans have been reduced to conspiracy theories. I'm voting for Democrats and decided this years ago.
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MediaWatch

For months now I have been reading the political comments posted by readers online and I have noticed that the extreme conservative Republicans are especially hateful, and most of them fill their comments with Rush Limbaugh sound bites. Rush Limbaugh has had way too much "freedom of speech" during these last 8 years, encouraged and allowed to do so by the Republican administration. Limbaugh has poisoned a large bloc of Republican citizens, keeping them trapped in an attitude 25 years out of date. He stokes their fears and amplifies their worst characteristics, driving them to see an enemy in everything out of the conservative box. This prevents these people from accepting the changes and advances of 21st century America, isolating them and making it harder and harder for them to live productive and happy lives. It is my hope that the Obama administration will rein in the poison conservative talk show culture, and the people who follow it and live by it can be healed of their unwarranted hate and bigotry. To these people I say: there is no reason to be so hateful and fearful! Rush has it all wrong! This is a great country, full of good people, patriots all, and great possibilites for a happy and prosperous life. That neighbor whose views differ from yours is not a terrorist or a socialist or a communist, he's just the fellow American next door. Learn to feel love and hope and generousity. Stop fearing and hating. God bless America!
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RogerFarina

As I said on another blog comment sheet, it is good to see your hybrid blog with text. I want to point out that you missed the whole reason why the McCain supporters were out in force on Sunday. It wasn't to disenfranchise voters but to protest the board of election's opening early voting on a Sunday. . There had previously published a schedule of early voting over the course of the next few weeks leading up to election day that included weekdays and Saturdays but no Sunday early voting. The board of election placed the Sunday early voting on the books after Obama announced he would be holding a rally here in Fayetteville. This happened I believe on Thursday. Click here to read the Fayetteville Observer article: http://www.fayobserver.com/article?id=307741 . To me, this is an indication of partisan support by the Cumberland County Board of Elections. That is why I was out there protesting. That is why I believed those people to be cheating. Understand that I was chanting as anyone walked out the door. One of the people next to me said, "What if it is a person votng for John McCain?" I answered, "Cheating is cheating, no matter if it is a Obama supporter of a McCain supporter." . The question that I want answered is why is it that everything that the Obama campaign touches is there an air of deceipt, deceptions and lies? From ACORN, his inter-personal/professional associations to where is all his campign donations coming from? Thanks Christine for showing up and reporting on the event.
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MG

RE: How is Obama going to create jobs? By defeating John McCain's elitist political ideologies.
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Moderate

I just wanted to clarify the premise that the protesters were out giving their opinion about voters voting on Sunday is not well-founded for the following reason/s: 1) http://www.sboe.state.nc.us/content.aspx?id=17 (click on the link above, you will find state board of elections, locations and times open to public voting). 2) I'm a resident of Yadkin County, NC and on my local news channel WXII 12 it was announced by the board of elections, they were prepared for early voter turnout (wait until the following week if you just registered during the week of October 10th) and that registration and voting can be done at the same time at any location listed for your area and in some areas there will even be early voting on Sundays. 3) Early voting is non-partisan,any circumstance that encourages qualified voters to come out and vote should be supported, not discouraged or frowned upon. It could easily work for/against any party. It's non-partisan. 4) Many worshippers in churches are often strongly advised and encouraged to vote along conservative lines based on their particular 'religious' biased. They are equally entitled to vote immediately upon leaving services. I'm a former Sunday school teacher. I'm very familiar with church protocol during election time. Even though they are acting within their rights of free speech, that the tone of the protest is unjustified and unwarranted.
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RogerFarina

MODERATE: The point of the rally yesterday wasn't to protest early voting or even early voting on Sunday. . It was to protest Cumberland County's Board of Election adding the extra time at the last minute to coincide with the Obama rally here in Fayetteville. I am for early voting, however when a blatant act of partisanship is laid upon us, I feel I need to respond. Why is this so hard for people to see? Perhaps this press release can explain it better: http://ncgop.org/press/pr/2008/101908-cumberland-obama.html
Mark as offensive

Ytram

I don't understand. If these people are protesting the fact that the elections office allowed early voting on Sunday, why are they harassing the VOTERS? The voters didn't do it. The voters are just exercising their right to vote. Why harass them?
Mark as offensive

iamfunei

"Obama cannot create jobs. In fact, jobs will leave the US in droves under an Obama administration. Businesses will close down or move to Ireland or somewhere that is business friendly." That might be the funniest thing I've read all day, for two reasons. One, it capitalizes on McCain's line in the debates about how low the business taxes are in Ireland. Have you ever been to Ireland?? The land has no raw materials, other than rock. It has no real labor force. It's AN ISLAND. The cost of moving a business there would far outweigh any tax benefit. Two, if you have apparently missed the hemorrhaging of jobs to China under Bush's term in office, I'd love to see a picture of the rock you've been living under.
Mark as offensive

Nielekane

To Roger Farina - Why are you and your buddies so intent on taking the USA back to the racism of 50 years ago? What is your problem with giving people every chance to vote? In a democracy, people get every chance to vote. In a totalitarian state, people get harassed when they try to vote. In a totalitarian state, people try to prevent others from voting. You and your Republican buddies are trying to create a totalitarian state and you should be ashamed with yourself.
Mark as offensive

RogerFarina

NEILKANE: Who said anything about racism? The only people taking about racism are you and other people. I never brought it up. CONUNDRUMM brought up the KKK. WOW, that blows my mind. Nice though - real nice. Have you read through my posts? Go read my posts and then come back and ask the question if you dont understand my point of view.
Mark as offensive

Nielekane

Roger, when a group of white people, shout, scream, and try to intimidate a group of African-Americans who are legitimately exercising their right to participate in the voting process, racism is involved. That you are incapable of realizing it says quite a bit about your ignorance. I've read what you wrote. That you're participating in a Republican effort to suppress legitimate voters is part of a larger effort by Republicans to intimidate African-Americans. It's part of a long history of racism by Republicans and you're just an ignorant pawn who doesn't understand the bigger picture. Your ignorance about what ACORN does shows that you're just spouting Republican talking points. Do you understand the difference between voter registration and voting? Do you know that ACORN is required by law to submit all voter registration forms they receive and that they are required by law to identify any registrations that appear to be false? Do you know that ACORN has fully complied with the registration laws and has not been charged with any crimes? Do you know that the only person charged with voter registration fraud is a Republican? What about Palin's direct connections to the anti-American Alaska Independence Party? What about McCain's direct relationship with G. Gordon Liddy? Liddy is a felon who has advocated violence against the US federal government. What about McCain's associations with Keating? As for transparency about donations, Obama better than McCain http://www.opensecrets.org/ shows that McCain has failed to disclose information on more than 10% of his donations, compared to just 5% for Obama. Why didn't McCain reveal the donations by Verizon and ATT for the special deal he got on cell phone towers on his Arizona property? If you think you're on the right side when it comes to transparency of the two campaigns, you are seriously ignorant of the facts.
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Moderate

rogerfarina, it was distinctly stated that the people voting were cheating and the reason they were cheating is because it was on sunday, it was added that it was also determined it was a last minute decision. i found out about the early voting much before i found out about the rally in fayetteville by obama...i'm sure the average citizen is in the same predicament since i'm an average citizen. please don't justify or rationalize protesters of voters voting within their right to vote. they are not illegally voting, they are carrying out their right to vote by the means presented to them. no one complained prior to any rally of any particular candidate about early voting being available on sundays when most services are held on sundays and the opportunity presents itself for conservatives to vote directly after sunday service. you are not subjecting yourself to rationale that transcends party lines. i'm still standing on the grounds you and your associates are not justified or warranted in your heckling and intimidation tactics on qualified voters.
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