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Race, Ethnicity Give Rough Finish To Tennesse Rep. Cohen's Thursday

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  • Race, Ethnicity Give Rough Finish To Tennesse Rep. Cohen's Thursday

    RACE, ETHNICITY GIVE ROUGH FINISH TO TENNESSEE REP. COHEN'S THURSDAY PRIMARY
    By Rachel Kapochunas, CQ Staff

    CQPolitics.com
    http://www.cqpolitics.com/wm spage.cfm?parm1=5&docID=news-000002935693
    Aug 7 2008
    DC

    Thursday's primary in Tennessee's 9th Congressional District, in
    which freshman Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen is trying to fend off a
    serious challenge, will conclude a fiercely fought campaign in which
    race has been an inevitable issue -- and in which religion and even
    ethnicity issues have raised political tensions.

    The contest is the direct result of primary two years ago in the
    black-majority, overwhelmingly Democratic Memphis-based district,
    which five-term African-American Democrat Harold E. Ford Jr. had
    left open for a Senate bid that he narrowly lost. Cohen -- a Jewish
    state senator who was the only major white candidate in a field with
    several substantial African-American candidates, including corporate
    attorney Nikki Tinker -- won the 2006 primary with 31 percent of the
    vote to set himself up as the prohibitive favorite for a November
    general election that he won easily.

    Although Cohen had a mainly liberal voting record in the state
    legislature that he has maintained since coming to Congress, some
    black activists objected that the district should return to the black
    representation that had been provided by Ford for 10 years and by
    his father, Harold Ford Sr., for the previous 22 years. Among those
    voicing that sentiment was Tinker, who finished second with 25 percent
    in the 2006 primary and emerged as Cohen's strongest challenger in
    this year's much less crowded primary field.

    Tinker has hit hard in an effort to portray Cohen as unfit to
    represent a district in which about three-fifths of the residents are
    black. She began running an ad last week that featured an image of a
    Ku Klux Klan member with a burning cross. In the ad, former County
    Commissioner Walter Bailey contends that Cohen, as a Memphis city
    commissioner, was the only person who voted against renaming a park
    that memorializes and contains the remains of Nathan Bedford Forrest,
    a Confederate general who helped establish the KKK. The commercial,
    though, prompted a sharp rebuke from Cohen's supporters, including
    a group of black Democrats who held a press conference to denounce
    the ad as misleading and divisive.

    This was not the only attempt by Tinker's campaign to stir emotions
    with the theme, "Who is the real Steve Cohen ?" aimed at countering
    actions by the congressman that might burnish his appeal to his black
    constituents. These include a non-binding resolution sponsored by
    Cohen, and passed by the House last week, that offered a national
    apology for the past enslavement of blacks in America and for the
    subsequent "Jim Crow" era of legal segregation and discrimination
    against African-Americans that lasted for nearly a century. Cohen has
    also introduced a resolution to recognize the impact of soul music
    on American society and another to recognize the contributions of
    Negro baseball leagues.

    The voiceover in another Tinker ad states, "While he's in our churches
    clapping his hands and tapping his feet, he's the only [state] senator
    who thought our kids shouldn't be allowed to pray in school." The ad
    also states that "apologies," a reference to Cohen's House resolution,
    aren't always enough.

    Cohen, though, has a longstanding relationship with African-American
    voters stemming from more than 20 years served as a state senator in
    the Memphis area. He is the self-proclaimed "father of Tennessee's
    lottery," which has raised money for state education and scholarship
    programs that he says have benefitted.

    The field is much slimmer than it was in 2006, when 15 Democratic
    candidates entered the contest to succeed Ford. Still, there are three
    other contenders, all of them black, according to Cohen, vying for
    votes with front-runners Cohen and Tinker. This group includes one
    officeholder, state Rep. Joe Towns, Jr., who entered the 2006 primary
    but did not wage a serious campaign and received a tiny share of the
    vote. Towns is a cousin of 13-term New York Democratic Rep. Edolphus
    Towns .

    The contest has divided constituency groups of blacks and women who
    align with Democratic candidates. The Congressional Black Caucus
    (CBC), which rebuffed Cohen's efforts to join after he arrived in
    Congress, gave a $5,000 donation to Tinker's campaign. Other donations
    have been made to Tinker by committees associated with CBC members
    Stephanie Tubbs Jones of Ohio, Gregory W. Meeks of New York and Elijah
    E. Cummings of Maryland. And the powerful political action committee
    EMILY's List, which supports Democratic women candidates who favor
    abortion rights, has endorsed Tinker, as it did in 2006.

    Cohen counters with endorsements from significant African-American
    figures such as former NAACP executive secretary Maxine Smith and
    CBC members John Conyers Jr. of Michigan, Charles B. Rangel of New
    York and Jesse L. Jackson Jr. of Illinois, as well as from Planned
    Parenthood, which supports abortion rights, and the feminist National
    Organization for Women.

    The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has not played
    an active role in the primary campaign by running independent
    expenditures on Cohen's behalf, but he overall has enjoyed the
    fundraising benefits of incumbency, leading Tinker in total receipts
    by $856,000 to $407,000 as of July 18 and holding a cash-on-hand lead
    as of that date of $672,000 to $99,000.

    Amid all the clamor over race, an ancient issue of ethnic conflict
    halfway around the world has also emerged as an unexpected factor in
    the contest. Tinker's candidacy has received a number of donations
    and statements of support from Armenian-Americans who say the deaths
    of more than 1 million Armenians at the end of World War I was a
    genocide committed by the Ottoman Empire.

    Some activists have labeled Cohen a "genocide denier" for seeking to
    block a 2007 House resolution to commemorate the 100th anniversary of
    the mass deaths of Armenians. Cohen is a member of the Congressional
    Turkish Caucus, which seeks to promote U.S. relations with Turkey --
    the successor to the Ottoman Empire and a key U.S. ally in the war
    in Iraq -- a nation that portrays the Armenian deaths years ago as
    the result of an ongoing conflict that should not be characterized
    as genocide. A Turkish-American Web site identifies Cohen as having
    a grandfather who was born in Turkey.

    Race, Ethnicity Give Rough Finish to Tennessee Rep. Cohen's Thursday
    Primary The issue became personal on Wednesday, according to local
    news reports, when Peter Musurlian, an Armenian-American filmmaker
    and activist from California, followed a local reporter who had
    been invited into Cohen's home, prompting the congressman to shove
    Musurlian out the door.

    The winner of the high-volume primary almost certainly will enjoy
    a quieter general election campaign for which three independent
    candidates, but no Republicans, have filed to run. CQ Politics rates
    Safe Democratic.

    The best-known of the independent candidates is pharmaceutical company
    representative Jake Ford, Harold Ford's brother, who also ran in the
    2006 general election and received 22 percent of the vote, ahead of
    the 18 percent taken by Republican Mark White but well below the 60
    percent won by Cohen.

    Other primary contests: Thursday's primary will also determine which
    Democrat will stage a longshot bid to unseat first-term Republican
    Sen. Lamar Alexander in November. Former state party Chairman Bob
    Tuke is favored to take first place against five competitors,including
    former Knox County Clerk Mike Padgett.

    Democrats lost their top Senate recruit in November 2007 when Democrat
    Mike McWherter -- the businessman son of Ned McWherter, Tennessee's
    governor from 1987 to 1995 -- dropped out of the race, citing the
    taxing demands of campaigning.

    CQ Politics rates Alexander's re-election campaign as Republican
    Favored, which means he's likely to win but will face competition --
    and an upset, while unlikely, cannot be completely ruled out. Tennessee
    is one of the few Southern states where Democrats retain a strong
    foothold for major offices: Phil Bredesen , the state's second-term
    governor, and five out of 9 House members are Democrats.

    Nonetheless, Alexander is very well-known from his two terms as
    governor (1979-87), his stint as Education secretary under President
    George H.W. Bush and his unsuccessful bids for the 1996 and 2000
    Republican presidential nominations, and he will carry a daunting
    advantage in campaign funds into his fall contest.

    Crowded primaries are on tap for several House seats, with two
    Republican incumbents facing vigorous challenges.

    One is in the eastern 1st District, a Republican stronghold where David
    Davis won the crowded 2006 GOP primary to succeed retiring Rep. Bill
    Jenkins with 22 percent of the vote before scoring an easy general
    election victory that fall. This year, Davis' hold on the seat is
    being challenged by Johnson City Mayor Phil Roe, who placed fourth
    in the 2006 Republican primary with 17 percent. This will be Roe's
    second consecutive campaign for the northeastern 1st District seat.

    In the western 7th District, three-term Republican Rep. Marsha
    Blackburn is being strongly challenged by former Republican state
    Sen. Tom Leatherwood, but her reputation as a conservative lawmaker,
    as well as her advantages of incumbency, are likely to carry her to
    a win Thursday.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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