Stivers 'could not stay silent' on Steve King Continue to article content ...
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Rep. Steve Stivers' (R-Ohio), head of House Republicans' campaign arm, comment shook party leaders in the final stretch of the campaign. | Andrew Harnik/AP Photo
Steve Stivers had had enough.
In an extraordinary moment just a week before the critical midterm elections, the chairman of the House Republican campaign arm called out a sitting colleague for being racist.
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Stivers, who leads the National Republican Congressional Committee, had been briefed on racially-charged comments made recently by Iowa Republican Steve King, an immigration hardliner with a history of controversial and insensitive remarks. And so with not even a heads up to GOP leaders, Stivers went on Twitter and blasted his colleague.
He âcould not stay silent,â said one source familiar with his thinking.
âCongressman Steve Kingâs recent comments, actions, and retweets are completely inappropriate,â Stivers wrote on Tuesday afternoon. âWe must stand up against white supremacy and hate in all forms, and I strongly condemn this behavior.â
King has a history of racially insensitive comments, but heâs recently sparked even more of a backlash over his decision to endorse Faith Goldy â" a white nationalist running for mayor of Toronto â" and his latest criticism of liberal donor George Soros. In an interview with members of a far-right Austrian political party with ties to the Nazis, he tied Soros to the âGreat Replacementâ â" a far-right conspiracy theory describing a push to replace white Europeans with minorities.
King quickly pushed back on Stiversâ remarks, suggesting he was part of the âestablishmentâ wing of the GOP that had it out for President Donald Trump.
âAmericans, all created equal by God, with all our races, ethnicities, and national origins-legal immigrants & natural born citizens, together make up the Shining City on the Hill,â King wrote on Twitter Tuesday afternoon. âThese attacks are orchestrated by nasty, desperate, and dishonest fake media. Their ultimate goal is to flip the House and impeach Donald Trump. Establishment Never Trumpers are complicit.â
Stiversâ comment shook party leaders in the final stretch of the campaign. Voters head to the polls on Nov. 6, with House Republicans likely to lose their majority. They need every seat that they can get. But the NRCC wonât support Kingâs candidacy, according to Matt Gorman, the groupâs communications director.
"The NRCC and Congressman Stivers haven't been afraid to show moral leadership when the time calls for it,â he said in an interview on Fox News Tuesday. âWe believe Congressman King's words and actions are completely inappropriate and we strongly condemn them. We will not play in his race.â
King was projected to win his race but his Democratic opponent, J.D. Scholten, has seen a surge of fundraising. The Cook Political Report currently rates his seat âlean Republican."
Multiple GOP sources told POLITICO they did not know of Stiversâ intentions. Some were privately not happy about it. Others, however, praised Stivers on Twitter.
GOP leaders, including Speaker Paul Ryan and House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, did not respond on whether they agree with Stivers. But they will be pressured to weigh in and side with a controversial colleague or their own NRCC chairman.
Either way, Stiversâ tweet forces the party to confront sensitive matters of race at a politically precarious time, as Trump ramps up his attacks on undocumented immigrants and the country grapples with the worst anti-Semitic attack in American history and a string of bomb threats to Soros and top Democratic leaders.
On the campaign trail, race has come to the fore in places like Florida, where fringe Republican groups have run ads using the âNâ word again Democrat Andrew Gillum, a black mayor running for governor.
Trump on Tuesday called Andrew Gillum a âthiefâ without any evidence to suggest why.
And the controversy has spilled into House campaigns as well this cycle.
Religious leaders, Democrats and even a few Republicans have criticized the NRCC and Ryanâs super PAC, Congressional Leadership Fund, for attacking a black candidate in New York as ânot like us.â Both have run ads highlighting Antonio Delgadoâs past work as a rapper. And TV ads have played his old music and shown images of him leering into the camera wearing a dark hoodie.
Delgado, who is running against Rep. John Faso, is now a prominent lawyer, graduate of Harvard Law School and a Rhodes scholar.
King has long courted controversy. Last December, he tweeted that "Diversity is not our strength," adding: "Hungarian Prime Minister Victor Orban, 'Mixing cultures will not lead to a higher quality of life but a lower one.'"
King once called former President Barack Obama "very, very urban," and in 2017, he questioned whether "other sub-group of people contribute more to civilizationâ than white people.
In 2013, King infamously stated that some undocumented immigrants have "calves the size of cantaloupes because theyâre hauling 75 pounds of marijuana across the desert.â
Jump to sidebar sectionSource: Google News | Netizen 24 United States
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