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Friday, September 24, 2004 11:10 PM CDT
U.S. Senate candidate Alan Keyes works for votes in Coles County
By DAVE FOPAY, Staff Writer
CHARLESTON -- Using the site of the one of the most famous political debates in history, U.S. Senate candidate Alan Keyes attacked his opponent Friday for the number of face-to-face meetings planned for their campaign.
The late-comer to the Republican nomination for the office said Democrat Barack Obama told Jack Ryan, the GOP candidate who withdrew from the race, he wanted to engage in six debates. After the revelations in Ryan's divorce proceedings that led to his withdrawal, Obama agreed to only two debates with Keyes, the nationally known conservative said.
"That was a clear indication that Obama did not have the confidence to face me in an open debate," Keyes said. "I came into the arena. He tried to get out."
A crowd of about 60 people gathered outside the Lincoln-Douglas Debate Museum at the Coles County Fairgrounds for the event, with visitors including the driver of a pickup truck hauling large replicas of the Ten Commandments and the Liberty Bell.
They heard Keyes' contentions about Obama's "fabricated image" as front-runner in a race where one recent poll showed the Democrat could get two-thirds of the votes come November.
Keyes spoke before statues of Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas and said the two political legends spoke on issues during their series of debates throughout Illinois instead of relying on polls to govern the themes of their campaigns.
"They addressed the issue that was the most important in public life," he said. "Some grab the bag that appeals to people."
Pressed on why, with his polar-opposite position with Obama on the issues, people would need more debates to decide on a candidate, Keyes said debates would let each candidate state what he thinks is right so voters an choose.
He noted that three debates are now scheduled — two in Chicago and one in Springfield — cities he called the home of "little cliques" of Democratic political insiders.
"He's leaving you out," Keyes said. "He's leaving out the people who don't live in that little empire."
No one from Obama's campaign office returned phone calls seeking responses to Keyes' comments.
In reply to a question about gay rights, Keyes labeled the phrase a "misnomer," saying distinctions can be made based on people's behavior and "we don't have a right to those behaviors." He then quickly turned to the issue of gay marriage, saying "the very idea is inconsistent with what marriage is about," namely encouraging bonds and relationships that can lead to children.
He classified Obama's abortion rights stance as "the slaveholders' position," likening the argument that a fetus isn't developed enough to be considered a person to that which slave owners used: that blacks wouldn't be able to care for themselves if free.
Keyes also defended his call for ancestors of slaves to be free from paying federal income taxes. He said slavery was "a special kind of injustice" that "taxed people at a 100-percent rate" and affected several generations of African Americans.
He told the audience that, along with abortion, the federal income tax has been the biggest issue of his political career. No income tax would free money for true economic development, he said.
"We should abolish it anyway, for everyone," he said.
Contact Dave Fopay at dfopay@jg-tc.com or 348-5733.
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Congrats! wrote on Apr 10, 2007 9:35 AM: