ADL taking concerns to Ron Paul
The Anti-Defamation League plans to ask Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul to distance himself from extremist groups.
Paul, a U.S. congressman from Texas, has come under fire for the support his campaign has enjoyed from leading white supremacist and neo-Nazi groups.
His campaign reportedly has accepted a donation from Don Black, the owner of the white supremacist Web site Stormfront. Sites for several extremist groups also feature prominent links supporting Paul’s candidacy.
ADL’s assistant director of civil rights, Steven Freeman, told JTA his organization planned to communicate with Paul privately and urge him to distance himself from those groups.
“If he doesn’t do that, then we will decide what we’re going to say publicly about it,” Freeman said.
Paul thus far has refused to return the campaign contribution from Black. In response to a question from a reporter for Reason magazine, a campaign spokesperson said, “If people who hold views that the candidate doesn’t agree with, and they give to us, that’s their loss.”
The ADL previously has taken candidates to task for their ties to supremacist groups. Last year the organization slammed Larry Darby, a Democratic candidate for attorney general in Alabama, after he attended a meeting of the National Vanguard, a splinter group of the National Alliance. Darby was defeated.
In October 2001, the ADL commended New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani for rejecting a $10 million donation to a 9/11 relief fund from Saudi Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal. Giuliani, like Paul, is a Republican presidential candidate.
This article was made possible by the support of readers like you. Donate to JTA now.
Discussions About this Article Elsewhere
Comments RSS Feed Reader Comments
There are currently no comments to this article. Leave a comment below.
Leave a Comment
To comment on this article, you must first be registered with JTA.
Not Registered?
There are real advantages to a FREE registration with JTA.org:
- Make your voice heard through comments on articles
- Receive our e-mailed Daily Briefing, an invaluable quick-read
- Help decide what Jewish news matters most with interactive tools
Register Now
Already a JTA member?
- Budapest court disbands neo-Nazi Hungarian Guard
- Rowe seeks parental rights, over Nation of Islam
- Report of sale of Jewish bones likely false
- Palestinian swine flu cases rising
- Israeli army, Palestinians trade fire
- Clinton, Fayyad meet
- Lighting a Jewish fuse on the Fourth
- Regev: Halting natural growth is ‘prejudging’ final status
- The Chosen: Jewish members in the 111th U.S. Congress
- Jackson kids’ Jewish mother could regain custody
- Obama in Cairo: See conflict through eyes of the other
- Guard shot at Holocaust museum dies
- In endorsing two states, Netanyahu adopts popular Jewish position
- Canadian politician sues Jewish groups
- Some Jewish settlers turning against Israel
- Mass converts pose dilemma for Latin American Jews
Share
Email
Print
Trackback URL: http://jta.org/trackback/105349/
No trackbacks have been created for this article, be the first to create one.