October 28, 2010 - 5:06pm
Andrea
Mitchell on Thursday made no secret of the contempt she held for a new
ad Republican Sharron Angle is running in Nevada, deriding it as "beyond
the pale." The MSNBC host announced that so many people are "outraged"
over the campaign spot she slammed as a "Halloween show."
The commercial, which the senatorial nominee just began airing,
features images of illegal immigrants crossing the border and complains
about Harry Reid record. Mitchell, interviewing the Washington Post's
Dan Balz, fretted, "A lot of people say that this is the closest thing
we have this year to a Willie Horton or the Jesse Helms white hands ad
from that North Carolina race back in the day."
The
comparison to Helms is not surprising as Mitchell openly attacked the
then-Senator back in the early '90s. On November 6, 1990, election
night, she lamented the North Carolina conservative's reelection: "This
has really been a heart-breaking race....What happened here was a very
strong racial message from Jesse Helms in the closing ten days of the
race and it focused on something that we've found, found previously in
Louisiana with the David Duke campaign."
On Thursday, Mitchell played a clip of the Angle spot and scolded, "
I mean, it looks like a Halloween show. It is just beyond the pale by most lights." Perhaps getting to her real concern, the journalist worried, "Is it going to work?"
A transcript of the October 28 segment, which aired at 1:02pm EDT, follows:
1pm tease
ANDREA MITCHELL: In Nevada, Sharron Angle sparks outrage among Hispanics and others with her latest attack on illegal immigration.
ANGLE AD: Waves of illegal aliens streaming across our border, forcing
families to live in fear. And what's Harry Reid doing about it?
MITCHELL: Has she gone too far?
1:02
MITCHELL: And in Nevada, the Tea Party Sharron Angle has a slight edge over Harry Reid as she rolls out a controversial closing ad. Dan Balz is national political reporter for the Washington Post and joins us today. Let's talk about the ad in Nevada. A
lot of people say that this is the closest thing we have this year to a
Willie Horton or the Jesse Helms white hands ad from that North
Carolina race back in the day. What is your assessment of this kind of
attack and this kind of racial appeal this close to the election?
DAN BALZ (Washington Post): It's a very- as you suggest, it's a very
controversial ad but I also think that it says that Sharron Angle has
decided the strongest message she has in the final days is back to the
issue of illegal immigration, which we have seen in a number of cycles
is a very volatile issue and particularly in areas of the Rocky
Mountains and southwest. And she has gone back to that in these closing
days in an effort to try to pull this race out.
MITCHELL: Let's take a look at the ad itself and why so many people are outraged over it.
ANGLE AD [Video of illegal immigrants appear onscreen.] Waves of
illegal aliens streaming across our border, joining violent gangs,
forcing families to live in fear. And what is Harry Reid doing about it
voting to give them Social Security benefits, tax breaks and college
tuition. Voting against declaring English our national language twice.
MITCHELL: I mean, it looks like a Halloween show. It is just beyond
the pale by most lights. Rachel Maddow was in Nevada and asked Harry
Reid about it and you won't be surprised by his reaction. Rachel tried
her best to get to Sharron Angle but, of course, Sharron Angle wasn't
having anything.
HARRY REID: All she does is cause people to be afraid. There's no
reason to be afraid. We've got to work our way through the issue. She
has not issued one positive statement, one constructive statement about
what we do with the issue of immigration. It's something we have to fix
and we're willing to do that. But we can't do it with people like her
demagoging the issue. And now they are passing out literature in areas
heavily Hispanic saying don't vote. That's about as un-American as you
can get.
RACHEL MADDOW: Now, was that- in the television advertisements which
I'm aware of, that was not a Sharron Angle campaign effort, but you
think she had something to do with it?
REID: But, wouldn't you think that something as negative and
irresponsible and unpatriotic as that, wouldn't you think somebody would
denounce it? She has never said a single word, it's wrong what they are
doing. She's in the background urging them on I'm certain.
MITCHELL: Is it going to work?
BALZ: Well, I don't know whether it's going to work. We know this is
one of closest races in the country. We know there's about as much
outside money has poured into that as anywhere as well as money in her
campaign coffers. It is not clear who has a real edge at this point.
When you talk to people about that race, they think the Reid operation
has a pretty good turnout organization they can employ. We don't know
how effective hers will be but we know she has Tea Party enthusiasm. I
think this race goes right down to the wire.
- Scott Whitlock is a news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter