Virginia gov race ad sparks outrage, portrays Gillespie supporter trying to mow down kids
1
November, 2017
Democratic
candidate for Virginia governor Ralph Northam is not distancing
himself from the controversial ad suggesting supporters of Republican
candidate Ed Gillespie are seen as Confederates who attack minority
children.
The
new opposition ad titled “American Nightmare” was released Monday
by Democratic group Latino Victory Fund (LVF) and is scheduled to run
through Election Day. The opposition ad shows minority children
seemingly being chased by a driver in a pickup truck, decked out with
a Confederate flag, a “Gillespie for governor” bumper sticker and
a “Don’t tread on me” license plate.
The
driver makes his way toward the scared children who shout, “Run!
Run! Run!” when they see the truck. The ad concludes with a scene
of a Charlottesville-like rally, with a narrator asking: “Is this
what Donald Trump and Ed Gillespie mean by the ‘American Dream?’”
Ed
Gillespie and Donald Trump promise the American dream, but can only
deliver an American nightmare. No more. Vote @RalphNortham. #GameOnVA
pic.twitter.com/mwpWXM47HZ
—
Latino
Victory (@latinovictoryus) October 30, 2017
Northam’s
campaign told Fox News Tuesday that the ad was “not shocking”
based on Gillespie’s campaign.
“Independent
groups are denouncing Ed Gillespie because he has run the most
divisive, fear-mongering campaign in modern history,” Northam
campaign spokeswoman Ofirah Yheskel said in a statement to Fox News.
“It is not shocking that communities of color are scared of what
his Trump-like policy positions mean for them.”
But
Gillespie said the ad was “an attack on” his “supporters,”
whom he
calls “good decent hardworking Virginians who love their
neighbors.”
VIRGINIA
GOVERNOR RACE: WHO ARE ED GILLESPIE AND RALPH NORTHAM?
“The
fact is, whether you disagree with people or not, in Virginia, we
respect civil discourse and this is a new low in politics here. It’s
a sad day,” Gillespie said on “Fox & Friends” Tuesday. “I
was glad when a couple of the Democratic members of our House
Delegates yesterday condemned the ad, but outrageously my opponent
has embraced it, and it reveals a disdain not just for more
supporters but for all Virginians, frankly, who want to have a
discussion about issues and policies in this election that I’ve
been focused on.”
Gillespie
added: “They [Northam campaign] don’t want to debate the issues,
and instead of debating the issues, they just demonize, they vilify,
they marginalize anyone who disagrees with them.”
In
a statement to Fox News, Gillespie’s campaign manager Chris Leavitt
called the latest ad part of “a desperate smear campaign” against
Gillespie.
“This
is no an attack on Ed Gillespie anymore. This is an all-out attack on
the people of Virginia,” Leavitt told Fox News. “This latest ad
gives us a clear indication of just what Ralph Northam and his
national Democratic allies think of all of us, and it’s sickening.”
The
LVF ad is not the only one drawing significant criticism in this
gubernatorial race.
Northam’s
campaign came under fire after a Democratic mailer showing Gillespie
and Trump, along with a photo of white nationalists carrying torches
in another Charlottesville-like scene. The mailer encourages voters
to “stand up to hate.”
Northam
has stood by the mailer and slammed Gillespie for not denouncing the
president “for not calling these white supremacists out for who
they are.”
“Because
the message is that we live in a very diverse society. That means
that we need to be inclusive,” Northam said, according to the
Richmond Times-Dispatch.
“The
Lieutenant Governor [Northam] was roundly rebuked for exploiting
imagery from the tragedy of Charlottesville for political points,”
Leavitt said. “Now his allies have reached a new low with a
disgusting, vile television ad seeking to instill fear in our
children with that same imagery.”
Gillespie
has also been criticized for ads that attempt to tie Northam to the
MS-13 gang. One ad accuses Northam of being “weak” on combating
the gang.
Northam,
who is currently the lieutenant governor of Virginia, has had a
star-studded roster of Democratic guests on the campaign trail,
including former President Barack Obama, former Vice President Joe
Biden, and a fundraiser in New York earlier this month headlined by
Hillary Clinton.
Gillespie, on the other hand, has had Vice President Pence with him on the campaign trail, and a fundraiser hosted by President George W. Bush. Gillespie has been endorsed by President Trump, who repeatedly expresses his support for the Republican candidate on Twitter.
See the justification for this video - from approx. the 40 min mark
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