Daves: I won't bow to national GOP

Linda Daves, chairwoman of the N.C. Republican Party, says she will not bow to pressure from the Republican National Committee or John McCain to pull a new ad the state party has prepared linking Democratic gubernatorial candidates Beverly Perdue and Richard Moore to Barack Obama's controversial preacher.

"This is not about the RNC," Daves said, reports David Ingram. "It is about North Carolina, our values and two Democrat candidates who are out of synch with the values of North Carolina."

Caroline Valand, executive director of the N.C. Democratic Party, said the ad represents a return to the Republican Party's "Southern strategy" of using race to appeal to white voters.

"They don't have the money to put behind it," Valand said, "so they're using old, Southern, racial politics."

Daves said the ad is not race-baiting.

"The accusation of race-baiting is one of the oldest-used tools to try to drive a wedge between the people of North Carolina," she said.

Perdue's campaign issued a statement calling the ad "gutter politics that voters will see right through."

Update: Moore's campaign issued a statement — "Richard Moore stands by his endorsement of Sen. Obama and believes Sen. McCain's rebuke of the NCGOP's ad is on target."
 

Denver bound

Democratic Party officials from around the country checked out Denver hotels yesterday, in preparation for the '08 convention.

Caroline Valand, executive director of the N.C. Democratic Party, asked one of the more popular questions of the day, the NYT reports.

"How late does the bar stay open?" asked Caroline Valand, executive director of the North Carolina Democratic Party, as she strolled through the Denver Marriott South.

It was one of the more popular questions.

"After coming back to the hotel around 10, people want to sit around and talk about a great speech they might have heard, and maybe have a drink," Ms. Valand explained. "Or two."

Conventions aren't all about bylaws and state pins, you know.

 

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