Did Rocky use 'racist tactic'?
James Evans, chairman of the Salt Lake County Republican Party, said he plans to ask the Salt Lake City Council to reprimand Anderson for using the word "slavish" to describe his support for the Bush administration.
Anderson, in an e-mailed response, called Evans' claim "characteristically, absurd" and suggested that people read his speech and "determine for themselves whether there is any basis for James' twisted interpretation."
Some minority community leaders and a political scientist said Anderson's words may have been ill-chosen, but they're not aware of any incidents of racism involving the mayor, who has worked extensively to build bridges with the minority community.
During a speech Wednesday opposing the Iraq war, Anderson said: "So James Evans and these folks who financed this massive radio campaign these last few days, let them understand that blind faith in bad leaders is not patriotism. A patriot does not tell people who are intensely concerned about their country to just sit down and be quiet; to refrain from speaking out in the name of politeness or for the sake of being a good host; to show slavish, blind obedience and deference to a dishonest, war-mongering, human-rights-violating president."
Now, Evans said Anderson is "basically saying James Evans is a slave to Bush."
Evans is among Republicans who had publicly criticized Anderson's plans to speak at the anti-war rally held on the same day as President Bush arrived in Utah. However, the advertisement was financed by the state Republican Party. Evans said he would have been fine with political rhetoric from Anderson, and his dispute was with the mayor's use of a single word.
"The moment he links me as a slave, what he is trying to do is debase me as a human," Evans said. "That's no different than the segregationists of the South."
In his e-mailed response, Anderson said he believed Evans' complaint is politically motivated in an ongoing disagreement between the two.
"In the past, James Evans has gone to great lengths to attack me in the most partisan manner, but never did I think he could stoop so low and get it so wrong," Anderson said. "I didn't even refer to James or the Republicans who financed the recent radio campaign against dissent in my written speech but was moved while delivering the speech to make reference to them because of their partisan support of this disastrous presidency. "




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