Tea Bagger Movement Not Racist? Judge for Yourself

source: Huffington Post


Tea Party's Favorite Historian Claims Expertise In Black History


David Barton's Tax Records Boast Expertise In Black History

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David Barton
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WASHINGTON -- David Barton, the Republican establishment’s favorite amateur historian, claims in tax records reviewed by HuffPost to be something of an expert on African-American history.

In filings with the Internal Revenue Service, Barton’s nonprofit, Wallbuilder Presentations, Inc., justified its tax-exempt status by highlighting among its "accomplishments" a video project “of the moral heritage and political history of African Americans."

It’s a curious claim for the Tea Party favorite, who has twice given speeches in front of white supremacist groups -- protesting later that he was ignorant of the groups' professed racist ideology.

But Barton can’t boast ignorance of his more controversial lobbying. The Texas-based former school principal once advocated that Thurgood Marshall be removed from the state’s text books and that Martin Luther King, Jr. got too much credit as a civil rights leader.

Barton has claimed that Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower was the powerful influence of the civil-rights movement. He argued that African-Americans couldn’t have had much impact since they weren’t the majority. “Only majorities can expand political rights in America’s constitutional society,” Barton has said.

“I call it historical creationism,” said Rob Boston, senior policy analyst with Americans United for Separation of Church and State. “All I can tell you is everything that Barton does is to promote ultra conservative politics and to persuade people to vote for extreme conservative Republicans.” It’s a strategy that has worked.

Barton’s selective editing of African American history hasn’t hurt his stock among the GOP elite and Tea Party favorites. In recent months, he has received the kind of backing not usually associated with amateur historians. Barton’s evangelical reading of history--arguing that the Founding Fathers never intended for a separation of church and state--and his trove of historical "documents" have proven catnip to the Tea Party generation light on history and policy experience. More established heads also find his right-wing document dumps credible.

"I think David Barton is one of the most knowledgeable teachers on American history," said Rick Tyler, spokesperson for presidential hopeful Newt Gingrich. “When he shares information about American history, it is more than likely that he held the actual document from [which] he got his research. We’ve done many things together over the years.”

Tyler added that Gingrich has sought out Barton’s advice and research. Barton serves as a board member in Gingrich’s evangelical nonprofit Renewing American Leadership.
Potential presidential candidate Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) championed Barton as a would-be Constitutional scholar for new members of Congress. Mike Huckabee and Glenn Beck have also given the man heavy rotation and book-blurb worthy endorsements.

In early May, the New York Times declared the 57-year-old former school principal had “built a reputation as a guiding spirit of the religious right.”

You can blame Barton’s guiding spirit for at least one recent Bachmann gaffe. Speaking before an anti-tax group in Iowa, the congresswoman claimed that the Founding Fathers worked “tirelessly” to end slavery. But she was merely channeling Barton’s own controversial and inaccurate writings.

There are, of course, more Barton ramblings on race that Bachmann and others have surely digested. On his Wallbuilders website, Barton devotes an entire section to African American history. In it, he disputes the relationship between Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings and argues that Republicans deserve true credit for the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

His history lesson essentially ends there. "The material that I’ve seen that he puts out aimed at African Americans is typical Barton," explained Boston. "It’s almost as if Lyndon Baines Johnson never existed."

Barton’s African-American history work is just one of several eyebrow raisers found among his nonprofits tax records. From 2005 through 2009, he raised $5.5 million for his nonprofit, which has essentially acted as his personal PR machine.

In 2009, documents show that Wallbuilders raked in more than $1 million. $100,000 of that chunk went to Barton and his wife's salaries, and another $233,052 paid employees' salaries. The organization spent close to $50,000 on Barton’s travel expenses, and he claimed an additional $702,000 in costs for his speeches, brochures, and African-American history lesson videos.

All of this money gets very little oversight. The nonprofit’s six-member board is dominated by Barton, his wife and his mother. "That’s bad," said Ken Berger, president and CEO of Charity Navigator. "You want to have at least five independent board members. You generally don’t want any relatives of the CEO on the board. Their ability to make objective decisions on, say, CEO compensation is questionable to say the least...You are sort of in the catbird seat when you want to have your salary set."

Barton did not return calls seeking comment.
 
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source: Huffington Post


Tea Party's Favorite Historian Claims Expertise In Black History


David Barton's Tax Records Boast Expertise In Black History

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r-DAVID-BARTON-large570.jpg
David Barton
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WASHINGTON -- David Barton, the Republican establishment’s favorite amateur historian, claims in tax records reviewed by HuffPost to be something of an expert on African-American history.

In filings with the Internal Revenue Service, Barton’s nonprofit, Wallbuilder Presentations, Inc., justified its tax-exempt status by highlighting among its "accomplishments" a video project “of the moral heritage and political history of African Americans."

It’s a curious claim for the Tea Party favorite, who has twice given speeches in front of white supremacist groups -- protesting later that he was ignorant of the groups' professed racist ideology.

But Barton can’t boast ignorance of his more controversial lobbying. The Texas-based former school principal once advocated that Thurgood Marshall be removed from the state’s text books and that Martin Luther King, Jr. got too much credit as a civil rights leader.

Barton has claimed that Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower was the powerful influence of the civil-rights movement. He argued that African-Americans couldn’t have had much impact since they weren’t the majority. “Only majorities can expand political rights in America’s constitutional society,” Barton has said.

“I call it historical creationism,” said Rob Boston, senior policy analyst with Americans United for Separation of Church and State. “All I can tell you is everything that Barton does is to promote ultra conservative politics and to persuade people to vote for extreme conservative Republicans.” It’s a strategy that has worked.

Barton’s selective editing of African American history hasn’t hurt his stock among the GOP elite and Tea Party favorites. In recent months, he has received the kind of backing not usually associated with amateur historians. Barton’s evangelical reading of history--arguing that the Founding Fathers never intended for a separation of church and state--and his trove of historical "documents" have proven catnip to the Tea Party generation light on history and policy experience. More established heads also find his right-wing document dumps credible.

"I think David Barton is one of the most knowledgeable teachers on American history," said Rick Tyler, spokesperson for presidential hopeful Newt Gingrich. “When he shares information about American history, it is more than likely that he held the actual document from [which] he got his research. We’ve done many things together over the years.”

Tyler added that Gingrich has sought out Barton’s advice and research. Barton serves as a board member in Gingrich’s evangelical nonprofit Renewing American Leadership.
Potential presidential candidate Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) championed Barton as a would-be Constitutional scholar for new members of Congress. Mike Huckabee and Glenn Beck have also given the man heavy rotation and book-blurb worthy endorsements.

In early May, the New York Times declared the 57-year-old former school principal had “built a reputation as a guiding spirit of the religious right.”

You can blame Barton’s guiding spirit for at least one recent Bachmann gaffe. Speaking before an anti-tax group in Iowa, the congresswoman claimed that the Founding Fathers worked “tirelessly” to end slavery. But she was merely channeling Barton’s own controversial and inaccurate writings.

There are, of course, more Barton ramblings on race that Bachmann and others have surely digested. On his Wallbuilders website, Barton devotes an entire section to African American history. In it, he disputes the relationship between Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings and argues that Republicans deserve true credit for the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

His history lesson essentially ends there. "The material that I’ve seen that he puts out aimed at African Americans is typical Barton," explained Boston. "It’s almost as if Lyndon Baines Johnson never existed."

Barton’s African-American history work is just one of several eyebrow raisers found among his nonprofits tax records. From 2005 through 2009, he raised $5.5 million for his nonprofit, which has essentially acted as his personal PR machine.

In 2009, documents show that Wallbuilders raked in more than $1 million. $100,000 of that chunk went to Barton and his wife's salaries, and another $233,052 paid employees' salaries. The organization spent close to $50,000 on Barton’s travel expenses, and he claimed an additional $702,000 in costs for his speeches, brochures, and African-American history lesson videos.

All of this money gets very little oversight. The nonprofit’s six-member board is dominated by Barton, his wife and his mother. "That’s bad," said Ken Berger, president and CEO of Charity Navigator. "You want to have at least five independent board members. You generally don’t want any relatives of the CEO on the board. Their ability to make objective decisions on, say, CEO compensation is questionable to say the least...You are sort of in the catbird seat when you want to have your salary set."

Barton did not return calls seeking comment.

Actually I like this guy. The appointed board members are at his discretion. In America there is no law against this process. It is at the owners free will to determine if he would like to be a non or for profit. If he was a for profit it would be a non issue. I set up a non profit a few years ago. Had a real good accountant who advised me to have those that I appointed to sign documents stating that they will not use their position to enrich themselves. Honestly, I appointed my friends but my accountant had a requirement that they were pillars of their community and had experience in what they were overseeing. Similar to what elected officials do.

That said I can see the authors point in that it just doesn't look good, appointing family members. It raises questions as such.

Many in New Orleans have gotten federal time in instances just as you posted. Using non-profits to enrich themselves on the backs of the poor. (Dollar Bill) Jefferson.
 
Actually I like this guy. The appointed board members are at his discretion. In America there is no law against this process. It is at the owners free will to determine if he would like to be a non or for profit. If he was a for profit it would be a non issue. I set up a non profit a few years ago. Had a real good accountant who advised me to have those that I appointed to sign documents stating that they will not use their position to enrich themselves. Honestly, I appointed my friends but my accountant had a requirement that they were pillars of their community and had experience in what they were overseeing. Similar to what elected officials do.

That said I can see the authors point in that it just doesn't look good, appointing family members. It raises questions as such.

Many in New Orleans have gotten federal time in instances just as you posted. Using non-profits to enrich themselves on the backs of the poor. (Dollar Bill) Jefferson.

Actually I like this guy. The appointed board members are at his discretion. In America there is no law against this process.

I would expect you to. Since when has a right winger put integrity over money?
 
Meet Grady Warren: Tea Party stalwart, presidential candidate, flaming racist


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"Two Nekkid Heads" To Dispel Tea Party Racism Myth

"Two Nekkid Heads" To Dispel Tea Party Racism Myth
http://theblacksphere.net/
Activist Kevin Jackson (http://theblacksphere.net/) and Joe "the Plumber" Wurzelbacher began their national tour to meet people and dispel the accusation that the Tea Party is racist.the black sphere2 nekkid heads

[FLASH]http://www.liveleak.com/e/b62_1307043348[/FLASH]
 


Ladies and gentlemen, here he is,
[1] "your boy,"
[2] that "tar baby,"
[3] the president of the United Sates, Barack Obama


  • The first title was bestowed upon Obama by political commentator Patrick Buchanan on Tuesday, August 9, 2011;

  • The second by U.S. Rep. Doug Lamborn on the Friday before last, July 29, 2011; and


  • The third by the American electorate in November of 2008.


If the first two seem to cancel out the third, well, that's the point. One hopes they will help the president understand something he has thus far refused to grasp about his political opposition.

Namely, these people don’t want to be friends. They don’t want to compromise for the greater good. They don’t want to solve problems unless by problems you mean his continued tenancy in that mansion on Pennsylvania Ave.


They have not been coy about this.

  • Rush Limbaugh said it ("I hope he fails") when Mrs. Obama was still picking out a dress for the inauguration.

  • Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said in November that, in a time of war and recession, his number one goal is to deny Obama a second term.

Yet somehow, the Obama brain trust, a term herein used advisedly, always seems caught off guard by the ferocity, velocity and fury of the response to him. They were surprised at the verbal and physical violence of the health care debate, surprised at the hardiness of the birther nonsense, surprised by the stiff defense of the Bush-era tax cuts.

Now, they are surprised the GOP would rather see the U.S. economy go off a cliff than surrender the aforementioned tax cuts for rich folks. So the debt ceiling gets raised in exchange for cuts to services for the poor, who shortsightedly failed to hire lobbyists.

It is time Obama quit being surprised by the predictable, time he understood this is not politics as usual, not Ronald Reagan and Tip O’Neill snarling at one another by day and having drinks by night, like that old cartoon where the sheepdog and the coyote punch a time clock to signal the beginning and end of their hostilities. It is not Bill Clinton living in a state of permanent investigation, nor even George W. Bush being called incompetent all day every day.

No, <SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">this is a new thing, repulsion at a visceral, indeed, mitochondrial, level. Obama’s denigrators are appalled by the newness of him, the liberality of him, the exoticness of him and, yes, and the blackness of him</span>.


“Your boy?” Really?

Sure. Why not. Didn’t Rep. Lynn Westmoreland call him “uppity?” Didn’t the ex-mayor of Los Alamitos, Calif., send out an email showing the White House with a watermelon patch?


See, here’s the thing: <SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">If, as is frequently said, Obama represents America’s future, what do they represent?</span>

You know the answer. Worse, they do, too.


Still, what matters here are neither their feelings nor his. No, what matters is homeowners dispossessed of their homes, workers who can’t find work, sick people who can’t afford health, American soldiers on patrol in hostile places.

The president is a basketball fan, so surely he knows it is sometimes necessary to throw an elbow on your way to the goal. This is one of those times. His instinct to compromise, to work with the opposition to solve problems, is admirable.

<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">But Obama needs to understand: As far as they are concerned, they have no problem bigger than him.</span>



189-20-PITTS-LEONARD-1.source.prod_affiliate.91.jpg

Miami Herald columnist Leonard Pitts Jr.

Leonard Pitts Jr., winner of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for commentary, is a columnist for the Miami Herald, 1 Herald Plaza, Miami, Fla. 33132. Readers may write to him via e-mail at lpitts@miamiherald.com. He chats with readers every Wednesday from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. EDT at Ask Leonard.


http://www.kansascity.com/2011/08/10/3063944/commentary-tar-baby-is-just-more.html



 
source: Think Progress


Tennessee Tea Party ‘Demands’ That References To Slavery Be Removed From History Textbooks

GWslaves.jpg

Tea Partiers would prefer students didn't learn George Washington owned slaves.

In 2010, the conservatives who controlled the Texas Board of Education caused an uproar when they made radical changes to the history curriculum for the state’s 4.8 million public school students. The changes included referring to the country’s first black president as “Barack Hussein Obama,” and requiring students to “contrast” Confederate President Jefferson Davis’ inaugural address with Abraham Lincoln’s philosophical views.


To whitewash one of the darkest practices in America history, conservatives proposed that textbooks refer to the slave trade as the “Atlantic triangular trade.”

Now Tennessee Tea Party members are taking their efforts a step further and trying to eliminate references to slavery in American history textbooks. Salon reports that Tea Partiers who fetishize America’s founders are “demanding” that students not be taught that many of them owned slaves:
For a bunch of people who worship the Founders and like to play dress-up American Revolutionary War, Tea Partyers sure hate knowing anything remotely reality-based about the Founding Fathers. Tennessee Tea Party groups have introduced a proposal to take what few minorities there are in American history textbooks out of American history textbooks, along with any negative portrayals of the wealthy white men who led this young nation in its infancy.


At a press conference, two dozen activists presented their proposals — I’m sorry, their “demands” — for the new state legislative session. Among them are sweeping changes to school materials that they probably have not actually read. [...]

Fayette County attorney Hal Rounds, the group’s lead spokesman during the news conference, said the group wants to address “an awful lot of made-up criticism about, for instance, the founders intruding on the Indians or having slaves or being hypocrites in one way or another.”
Many of America’s first leaders, including George Washington and Benjamin Franklin, owned slaves. Thomas Jefferson fathered children with his slave Sally Hemings, and James Madison actually brought a slave with him to the White House when he became president.

The framers also painstakingly avoided addressing the issue of slavery when they wrote the Constitution, which included a compromise that each slave be counted as three-fifths of a person for the purposes of representation and taxation.

But recently, conservatives have preferred to gloss over those ugly truths and deprive students of a complete and honest portrait of the imperfect men who founded our country. Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN), founder of the congressional Tea Party caucus, famously said that the founders “worked tirelessly” to end slavery. Several of the GOP candidates have even signed a pledge that claimed that blacks were better off under slavery than under President Obama.
 
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James Earl Jones Becomes Darth Vader and Thulsa Doom, and Calls Tea Party Racist

James Earl Jones Becomes Darth Vader and Thulsa Doom, and Calls Tea Party Racist

James Earl Jones, the voice of Darth Vader and avid MSNBC fan,
called the Tea Party racist.
Zo thinks that Jones might very be an expert racist himself.
Hear why.
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Re: James Earl Jones Becomes Darth Vader and Thulsa Doom, and Calls Tea Party Racist

I will not be responding to any more posts featuring any of these clowns. Punching down bores me.
 
Re: James Earl Jones Becomes Darth Vader and Thulsa Doom, and Calls Tea Party Racist

Just another self hating Kneegro who loves everything white and despises anything black. Fuck him and the OP too. :mad:
 
source: Think Progress

Tea Party Group Launches Racist ‘Obama Phone’ Ad


Late last month, conservative media lit up with a video of an African-American woman excitedly praising President Barack Obama because he supposedly gave racial minorities in Cleveland free telephones. The video received prominent placement on the pro-Romney Drudge Report and spawned a popular #Obamaphone hashtag on Twitter. Although there is indeed a federal program which provides low-income people with free or reduced-cost cell phones, it began in 2008 under President George W. Bush. The idea of providing subsidized phone service to low-income individuals originated with a program started under President Ronald Reagan.

Now, the “Obamaphone” woman is the star of an ad sponsored by the Tea Party Victory Fund suggesting President Obama’s policies have “enslaved Americans“:


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It’s difficult to view this ad as anything other that an appeal to the visceral reaction its very enthusiastic star is likely to inspire in a certain kind of voter. The ad will run in three Ohio counties — Lucas, Summit, and Mahoning — all of which are predominantly white.
 

Tea Bagger Movement Not Racist? Judge for Yourself

Arkansas State Senator Jason Rapert
speaks on the issue:



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"GOP Struggling To Keep Up With America"
Rachel Maddow
March 8, 2013



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Re: James Earl Jones Becomes Darth Vader and Thulsa Doom, and Calls Tea Party Racist

James Earl Jones Becomes Darth Vader and Thulsa Doom, and Calls Tea Party Racist

James Earl Jones, the voice of Darth Vader and avid MSNBC fan,
called the Tea Party racist.
Zo thinks that Jones might very be an expert racist himself.
Hear why.

15th+Annual+Screen+Actors+Guild+Awards+Red+ypt6l-uxyqcl.jpg


Married since 1982.


MASTERBAKER and Zoe are A-Holes!
 
Black conservatives need to understand that their politics puts them in bed with vile humanity like beck, palin, ron paul, limbaugh, Hannity, the tea bagger, foxnews, koch brothers, etc. they need to understand that the conservative movement is anti-black. the contridiction would be laughable if it wasn't so sad. Go luck with your delusions.
 
Yep, add FoxNews, and Sarah Palin don't speak for us! Ron gives the full answer @ 2:36

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Us, -----, lol. I see why u was in that government don't create wealth thread pushing an agenda that will further cripple this republic through the cycles of fake crisis, war & debt. When ur fellow conservatives say us & we they are not talking about u negro.
 
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Us, -----, lol. I see why u was in that government don't create wealth thread pushing an agenda that will further cripple this republic through the cycles of fake crisis, war & debt. When ur fellow conservatives say us & we they are not talking about u negro.

Really appreciate your contributions to this forum, but please read the Rules of the Board -- especially Rule Number 3.

Peace



.
 
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source: Huffington Post

Ken Emanuelson, Texas Tea Party Activist, Calls GOP Black Voter Comments 'A Mistake'

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A Texas Tea Party activist is in hot water over comments charging that the Republican Party doesn't want black people to vote because of tough odds.

Audio posted by Democratic group Battleground Texas on Tuesday has Ken Emanuelson, a leading state Tea Party figure, answering a question about black voters at a May 20 Dallas County GOP event.

“I’m going to be real honest with you,” Emanuelson said. “The Republican Party doesn’t want black people to vote if they are going to vote 9-to-1 for Democrats.”

LISTEN TO THE AUDIO (Via Battleground Texas)

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Later on Tuesday, Emanuelson backtracked on his remarks, clarifying that it "was a mistake" and nothing more than a "personal opinion."

"I hold no position of authority within the Republican Party and it wasn’t my place to opine on behalf of the desires of the Republican Party," Emanuelson said, according to the Dallas Morning News. “What I meant, and should have said, is that it is not, in my personal opinion, in the interests of the Republican Party to spend its own time and energy working to generally increase the number of Democratic voters at the polls, and at this point in time, nine of every ten African American voters cast their votes for the Democratic Party."

In late April, an analysis conducted by the Associated Press found that black voters surpassed white voters in turnout for the first time during the 2012 election. If rates had stayed at the 2004 level, GOP challenger Mitt Romney would have narrowly defeated President Barack Obama, the AP found.
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source: Raw Story

Tea Party opposes Cruz-backed OK candidate who’s half black, half Native American

T.W.-Shannon.png


In staunchly conservative Oklahoma, three major candidates are running in Tuesday’s Republican primary for a U.S. Senate seat, two have a shot at winning and one is gathering attention because he is half black and half Native American.

T.W. Shannon, 36 and the youngest speaker of the House in Oklahoma, is a member of the Chickasaw Nation and represents a bit of diversity that has captured the attention of the national Republican Party looking to expand its base of white voters.

But polls show U.S. Rep. James Lankford, 46 and a former leader of a massive Christian youth camp, slightly ahead of Shannon in the race that has exposed rifts within the tea party branch of the Republican Party.

Tea party darling Ted Cruz, a Republican U.S. senator from Texas, has endorsed Shannon, calling him a “conservative fighter, while an Oklahoma tea party group has rejected Shannon, saying in an open letter he has “too many masters to serve,” including Native American tribes.

Both candidates have been running as hard-right conservatives who will defeat the Obama administration’s agenda.

If neither gets a majority, the two head to a runoff in August, with the winner emerging as the favorite for the Senate seat due to the Republican dominance in the state.

More so than in other states, Native Americans have ingrained themselves into Oklahoma’s social fabric, making up about 9 percent of the state’s population.

This has created some backlash from ranchers who feel land grants to tribes have been exorbitant. Social conservatives dislike the casinos on Native American lands, seeing contributions from the tribes to Shannon’s campaign as tainted.

Shannon has said his roots have helped him bring unity.

“Chickasaw values are Oklahoma values,” he said in a recent TV appearance.

Outgoing Senator Tom Coburn, a Republican who is retiring, has been seen as keeping the playing field level, criticizing aspects of both campaign he sees as unjust.

One reason Lankford has the edge is that he comes from a larger constituency and is seen as better with national issues due to his time in the U.S. House, said Oklahoma States University political science professor Brandon Lenoir.

“The fact that Shannon is Native American and African-American will be an appealing factor for a sector of the population, but traditionally, African-Americans and Native Americans do not vote Republican,” said Lenoir.
 
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